The brand is inspired by the likes of Keira Knightley, Lily James and Daisy Ridley — “the English rose with a twist” — and to this end, Archer’s designs are luxurious and feminine, but she tempers the ladylike quality by including casual, everyday silhouettes.
Read MoreIn Dublin, a Photographer Turns His Lens on the Street
Until two years ago, the photographer Eamonn Doyle, whose new work “End.” goes on show at London’s Michael Hoppen Gallery this May, was not known for his photographs. After graduating art college in 1991, he founded a record label and a festival in his native Dublin, immersing himself in the local music scene for almost 20 years. It was after the economic crash in 2008 that, feeling burned out and in need of a change, he bought a camera and began to photograph life on the streets around his home.
Read MoreFashion Brand to Know: The Year-Old Label Inspired by ‘Adult Babies’
Liushu “Shushu” Lei and Yutong “Tongtong” Jiang, the designers behind the new women’s wear brand Shushu/Tong, cite the Japanese singer Kyary Pamyu Pamyu as one of their greatest inspirations. For the uninitiated, she’s a star of the colorful J-pop scene — cartoonish, lurid, hyper-cute.
Read MoreAt the Armory Show, Little-Seen Works by an Acclaimed Photographer
To say that the photographer Masahisa Fukase has new work at the Armory Show this week wouldn’t be entirely accurate: His series on display, “Hibi,” was created in the early 1990s. But soon after, the artist fell down the stairs of a bar in Tokyo, entering a coma that lasted until his death in 2012. As a result, his international reputation, which had flourished in the years before his accident, suddenly stalled; while he lay in a coma, his archive was held by a gallery in Japan, and it became near-impossible for European and American galleries and publishers to borrow original prints. “Hibi” was only exhibited by the artist for one evening in 1991 (and is still marked with pinholes from that show), and has never before been seen outside Tokyo.
Read MoreThe Making of Mary Katrantzou’s Elaborate Tulle Skirts
“A lot of work goes into it that you wouldn’t even see at the end,” Katrantzou said. “The way it’s created, I think, is really modern — especially because tulle skirts aren’t really the epitome of modern, so it was interesting to find a way to bring that into today.”
Read MoreIn London, One Designer’s Playful Take on the Museum
Faustine Steinmetz, a French designer who presented at London Fashion Week today, has never been interested in runway shows. “Fashion became a little bit too much about the front row, and who’s sitting there, and who’s modeling, and that kind of crap,” she told T earlier this week. “And I think a presentation really brings it back to ‘objets d’art.’”
Read MoreA Prolific New York Photographer Comes Back Into Focus
“You could almost say he had a lifetime of being continually rediscovered,” says the New York gallerist Margit Erb, referring to her friend, the photographer Saul Leiter. Leiter — who died in 2013, just shy of his 90th birthday — had a varied seven-decade career, and gained his most significant recognition in the last years of his life, with the 2006 publication of his book “Early Color.” “I think his rise back to fame was because people just couldn’t help stumbling over and over him, and realizing that the world needed to know him,” Erb says.
Read MoreFrom One New Brand, Unisex Shirts and Pottery
In the airy reception room of a townhouse in London’s Chelsea, Arthur Yates has arranged a rack of vibrant unisex shirts next to a display of hand-painted milk urns. The two elements are unlikely halves of the same project: Bruta, his fashion and homeware brand that launched quietly last year. “There wasn’t some master plan,” he recalls. “I was just doing them in my bedroom with help from my girlfriend. And now it’s growing into something a little bit more serious, and people are taking interest.”
Read MoreA Quiet Women’s Label Focuses on Men
If it’s possible for fashion labels to be described as extroverted or introverted, 1205 is firmly the latter. Gerbase says she has “always wanted it to be about silence. I was really frustrated that so many people were making so much noise, and I always felt that it was quite empty noise.” A couple of seasons after launching 1205, she bumped into the critic Sarah Mower. “She asked me where my jacket was from,” recalls Gerbase. “I said I’d made it, and she said, ‘Who are you? I’ve never heard of you.’ And I said, ‘Oh, that’s exactly what I want.’”
Read MoreAt Paris Photo, a Wide-Ranging Mix
Beginning today, 147 galleries and 27 art-book dealers and publishers will gather in Paris’s enormous, glass-domed Grand Palais for Paris Photo, the world’s largest photography fair.
Read MoreInside the Denim-Filled Studio of Marques’Almeida
2015, according to Paulo Almeida, has been “full of good things and crazy things.” In May, he and his design partner, Marta Marques, were awarded the LVMH Prize, giving them a year of mentoring and 300,000 euros for their now four-year-old London-based fashion brand, Marques’Almeida. Since then, life is looking very different.
Read MoreInside Zandra Rhodes’s Kaleidoscopic London Home
Zandra Rhodes is dressed casually for our interview — but “casual is always with jewelry and makeup,” she says. “Always.” Her makeup consists of a thick circle of blue eye shadow paired with a dark red lipstick — the same every day, because she has no time for trial and error. She wears it all night, removes it each morning and applies a new layer in its place: “I only look at myself once a day,” she says.
Read MoreIn London, a Fashion Show Becomes a Sandwich Factory
In a presentation space at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts, the designer Molly Goddard is turning a group of models in party dresses into a no-nonsense sandwich-production line.
Read MoreSimone Rocha on Her (Very Personal) First Store
It’s been five years since Simone Rocha first showed at London Fashion Week, when she was just a promising Central Saint Martins graduate with a familiar last name.
Read MoreA Belgian Men’s Wear Designer Expands in New York
“The thing that I really love to put in my clothes is a feeling of being at ease – I don’t like the obstruction of too many details and hard shapes,” says the Belgian designer Jan-Jan Van Essche of his eponymous line of beautifully crafted, understated men’s wear – which includes everything from supersoft marled blazers to linen-blend drawstring trousers.
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