6.23.2011

designer files -azzedine alaïa interview

 
I adore Azzedine Alaïa, and he shows why in this wonderful interview by Eric Waroll for Virgine Mag.

Talking about Dior, what do you think of the Galliano case?
I don’t know enough about it really, but it’s sad. As I said many times, the fashion world, its system, can be disturbing. The system imposed Galliano, and others, to make four collections for him, four collections for the house, four for men, and four for women. When you have one idea per year, it’s already a miracle! Now, it has become crafty fiddling at a breakneck pace. That’s not the essence of fashion. How can you really be creative under these circumstances? For the young designers it’s very hard, and for the more mature, they drink more, take more drugs… what I am saying is that the system is not right. We have to see the work from another angle. The system is too stressful: too many collections, too much pressure. As in other fields, if you want to do a good creative job, it takes time. What’s the point? I’m working 24 hours a day. I have had a house in Tunisia for 20 years, and I never have time to go because there are collections, fittings….


How do you feel about Karl Lagerfeld?
I don’t like his fashion, his spirit, his attitude. It’s too much caricature. Karl Lagerfeld never touched a pair of scissors in his life. That doesn’t mean that he’s not great, but he’s part of another system. He has capacity. One day he does photography, the next he does advertisements for Coca-Cola. I would rather die than see my face in a car advertisement. We don’t do the same work. And I think that he is not doing a favor to young stylists who might think it works that way. They’re going to fall before they retire.


You have some problems with Anna Wintour?
I said it before. She runs the business (Vogue) very well, but not the fashion part. When I see how she is dressed, I don’t believe in her tastes one second. I can say it loudly! She hasn’t photographed my work in years even if I am a best seller in the U.S. and I have 140 square meters at Barneys. American women love me; I don’t need her support at all. Anna Wintour doesn’t deal with pictures; she is just doing PR and business, and she scares everybody. But when she sees me, she is the scared one. [Laughs.] Other people think like me, but don’t say it because they are afraid that Vogue won’t photograph them. Anyway, who will remember Anna Wintour in the history of fashion? No one. Take Diana Vreeland, she is remembered because she was so chic. What she did with the magazine was great, with Avedon and all the great photographers. Vogueremains while its fashion editors come and go.

Read the rest here.
 
 

6.22.2011

designer files - gareth pugh


vicemag:
Back in 2005, Gareth Pugh was living in a squat in London when all the important UK fashion magazines attached themselves to him like a Fred Perry-clad tumor. Fresh out of fashion school and an internship with Rick Owens, he was soon a style-page wank fantasy, representative of the type of hijinks English fashion clamors for. It was all justified.

Gareth’s first shows featured inflatable outfits and light-strewn garments. Everyone in attendance over the age of 30 offered mealy-mouthed praise—like it was all very well and fun and diverting but ultimately fey and immature. Attendees under the age of 25, however, cheered the models and clothes down the runway, feeling like somebody had finally reinvented fashion for the 21st century and rescued us all from retro regurgitation.

Six years on, fashion sites are overflowing with photos of androgynous kids addicted to black who look just like Pugh. His line garners the type of attention and praise usually reserved for the vaunted and dusty old guard. He shows annually in Paris and New York, working and hanging out with all the ritziest fashion people, like Karl Lagerfeld and Mario Testino. We’ve known him for a while, though, so we persuaded him to take a few minutes for the following little chat.


Read the rest at Vice Magazine: GARETH PUGH - Vice Magazine

6.09.2011

thursday inspiration




sometimes you just need a little thursday push to get to the end of the week...

                                                                                     Title: Törst
Magazine: Rodeo Spring 2011

Model: Jenny Sinkaberg

Photographer: Julia Hetta

Stylist: Tekla Knaust (New Blood)


6.06.2011

garden wear


as i continue with my closet cleanout and cleanup, i'm realizing some of the major fails of my current wardrobe that i want to kick into shape.  lately, i have been struggling with what to wear for work. basically,  i'm in a jeans and t-shirt rut, and i need inspiration to get out of it.  

i'm a landscape designer and i run my own studio so i spend the majority of my days around plants and soil, building materials, and contractors.  i'm in and out of construction sites and wholesale nurseries, but i'm also around clients, going in and out of design meetings and site visits and i don't want to look like a slob.  at the end of the day, however, my shoes are dirty and my fingernails are too.  there is no room for dainty or precious (or white!) in my day to day, but i need to look sharp and pulled together (even when covered with a layer of fertilizer)... "dirty chic" as i like to call it.

i'm quite intrigued by what i have read and seen about landscape designer (and vogue contributor) miranda brooks pictured above.  not only is she a very talented designer, but she has great style.  i even read that she has been known to get down and dirty weeding out her flower beds in her manolos...

(images of miranda brooks and her designs)

6.05.2011

wardrobe

image of my future dream wardrobe via archzine

my life is feeling very chaotic lately and i hate it.  i'm overcommited at work (thus the lack in posting) and i need the rest of my life to be as easy and and organized as possible so i don't feel so overwhelmed.  a simplified and better organized wardrobe (and living space but i'll get to that in a later post) is going to do wonders to my mental well-being.   i've already started "the great closet clean out of 2011", but i feel that i need to go deeper than just editing my clothes and really develop a strategy to organize it better.  do you have a system for your wardrobe?  do you organize by style, or color, or fabric, or designer?  do you keep photos on your shoeboxes? or offer up any other ocd tendencies??  seriously, i need help!