Quantcast
Channel: Inside CSM – 1 Granary
Viewing all 93 articles
Browse latest View live

leaving a dark carbon footprint: 2nd year BA Jewellery puts on a sustainable show

$
0
0

The result of month-long pondering about the concept of ‘bodily adornment’ (Cultural Studies essay writers, we feel you) isn’t really what outside-of-art pals expect when one tells them they study Jewellery design. “So, err, what kind of rings and necklaces do you make?” Stop imagining Breakfast at Tiffany’s and start imagining ice-cuby snuggies for your head, re-interpretations of newspaper-wrapped Corpse Brides and breadcrumb necklaces.

 

Every year, the second year BA Jewellery design students do a sustainability project; their brief gives a load of freedom for personal interpretation of the concept. For last night’s show, they collaborated with the fashion design students who did the White Show last year. Altogether, it’s serenity meets insanity.

2014_csm_ba_jewellery_second_year_show (14)

2014_csm_ba_jewellery_second_year_show (8)

2014_csm_ba_jewellery_second_year_show (4)

2014_csm_ba_jewellery_second_year_show (12)

2014_csm_ba_jewellery_second_year_show (6)

2014_csm_ba_jewellery_second_year_show (9)

In case you’re wondering who ate the bread… It wasn’t us, we swear! But, if you get hungry for more Jewellery articles, you can have a bite here.

The post leaving a dark carbon footprint: 2nd year BA Jewellery puts on a sustainable show appeared first on 1 Granary.


EDWIN MOHNEY- He’s the shit. So take a wiff.

$
0
0

Our ‘as nuts as a Snickers’-writer Harriet Verney is back with more inside chitchat from Granary Square. Last time, Harriet spoke about Korean fashion and drinking six cups of tea per day with second-year BA Print student Goom Heo (who allegedly was one year old at the moment she was born), this week Harriet interviewed New York native Edwin Mohney.

Who is he?  A 22-year-old womenswear student in his Second Year.  From: Buffalo, New York. Loves: Tie Dye and rubber. Hates: Cheesy Milk.

2014_central_saint_martins_1_granary_csmstudents_harrietverney (3)

Harriet: How much money do you have in your bank account?

Edwin: (Long Pause)….Like…enough!

Have you done any internships yet?

A short one in NY. And I just finished a 6 month one with Craig Green. Craig was really good. It was just after the previous show with all the tie-dye. I went to the interview and they were like: “So, basically you’re just going to be tie-dying a lot.” We did 350 meters of tie-dye! Good tunes, nice people- we kind of beat the crap out of some fabric.

How was the other internship?

Shit.

Why?

It was a small start-up company in New York.  She made everything out of rubber.  It was all fetish, I mean, that’s what she did on the side, to pay for things. Then she did a collection that was more… ‘wearable.’ It was all in the back of her studio apartment, and everything was, like, super dodgy!

Okay… So did you have to try them on and test them out or….?

No! It was weird. We had doctors and lawyers come over, and she also had these fetish parties, where they’d strip butt-ass naked in the studio…

…and you’d just be there sewing….

Yer and gluing… She left a lot of ball gags and things around. Lots of weird sex toys.

Erg. Did you have to clean them?

Oh no, she had a slave! Like a submissive partner once in a while. I’d hear stories… “so and so is coming over and they just LOVE cleaning my bathroom!”

Gosh!  It would be quite nice just to have a slave to clean your loo…

Yeah, just to wipe your ass…

What are you going to do after Central Saint Martins?

My goal has always been to work for myself, to start my own company. It’s such a broad and cheesy cliché thing to say…

Do you think that it will happen?

Yer. I’m determined it will happen sometime in my life. Whether it will happen straight away or not, I don’t know.

Where are you going for placement year?

Don’t know. Placing my bids wherever… I want to go somewhere really… nice?!  Trying to find the balance between good experience and a good name. Balenciaga, Louis Vuitton…

Drugs and fashion: how do they mix?

Oh god, I’m such an uptight person! If I have a spliff, or a line or anything my body goes into (imitates a sicky burp heart attack). It all gets sloppy!

What are you afraid of?

Two things.  One’s a deep meaningful life-thing; the other is just plain weird.

Okay the weird thing first…

I’m petrified of Cheesy Milk(silence)

And the other?

I don’t want to be forgotten.

Gotten curious about Edwin’s tie-dye experience? Have a look at Craig Green’s SS14 collection here or have a look at the straight-outta-MA interview we did with him in 2012.

The post EDWIN MOHNEY- He’s the shit. So take a wiff. appeared first on 1 Granary.

Felicia Swartling’s black beacon of hope: FESWA jewellery

$
0
0

“You know when you see something, and get that tingly feeling in your stomach?” To say that Felicia Swartling is just a little passionate about her craft would be an understatement. The softly-spoken Swedish jewellery designer is currently finishing her BA degree at Saint Martins, but already sells her line, FESWA, through stores like Case Study alongside long-established labels like Issey Miyake and Rick Owens. We spoke to Felicia, and talked Leigh Bowery, jewellery, and Michele Lamy- among other things that don’t end with a ‘y’.

inspitation

First of all, tell me about yourself, where are you from, exactly?

I’m from Sweden, Stockholm to be precise. I grew up with my family -mum, dad, little sister- and I suppose I had a ‘normal’ childhood apart from a few life-changing, eye opening experiences that may be the answer to me always being the black sheep. I quite often hear from others that I’m an enigma, and hard to fully figure out unless you manage to get through all of the layers. I suppose I’ve always been a bit of an outcast, which I’m more than okay with, or I can’t- nor want to- do anything about it. The ‘norm’ never fit me anyway.

Where does your interest in jewellery come from?

I think it was about five years ago when I  picked up a torch for the first time and started to play around with some silver, and simply fell in love. I can’t really put it into words, but I remember feeling like I had finally found my material. At that time I was studying a foundation course in Sweden’s countryside, where I got introduced to different art [mediums], such as sculpture, woodwork, textile, painting and ceramic, but when I started working in the metal workshop I was hooked. Since then, my obsession, love and hunger for jewellery has grown beyond anything I’ve ever felt before, to the point where jewellery has become more than something that you just wear. It has become a part of me, almost like a language through which I can express myself.

final2

I noticed you’re doing some work with film as well. Why did you choose to work with this particular medium?

Film in particular is a very interesting medium, as it gives you the ability to extend the conventional relationship we have with jewellery. So incorporating film, for example, into my work or presentation gives me the opportunity to enhance my vision, and aesthetic beyond jewellery’s limits. It enables me to direct, and further control how my objects will be perceived.

Your inspirations are quite broad and conceptual, from distorted bodies to images of Michele Lamy and work by photographer Elizaveta Porodina. What aesthetic would you say influences your work most?

Apart from seeing the finished object in front of you, I find the research stage one of the most rewarding stages. To find new designers, [and] artists to draw inspiration from is just so satisfying. You know when you see something, and get that tingly feeling in your stomach? Ha, it sounds like I’m talking about love, but this is how I sometimes feel when I find something that sort of depicts it all.

I get addicted. I think we all possess a ‘bank’ of specific aesthetic[s] that, in a way, sums up and stands for each end everyone’s personal characteristics. Of course I look at jewellery, but not so much for inspiration, rather to keep me updated on what is out there. So, when it comes to inspiration for a new collection or piece, I tend to look at a variety of architecture, cultural tribes, fashion, sculpture and juxtapositions, alluring and over-sized shapes and silhouettes, and [have] an important awareness behind the choice of material.

To name drop a few would be: Marlene Dietrich, Kembra Pfaler, Rick Owens, Rei Kawakubo, Edith Louisa Sitwell, Louise Nevelson, Nicolas Allan Cope, Luigi Moretti, Nicolas Moulin, Ricardo Bofill, Paul Virilio, Richard Serra, Brancusi, Louise Bourgeois, Michele Lamy, Issey Miyake, Basquiat , Marcel Duchamp.

inspiration

Are you trying to communicate a message with your work?

Apart from generating beautiful and alluring objects, I want to make people re-evaluate the idea of what jewellery is. I want to open up, question and provoke people’s preconception[s] about what jewellery stands for, to show that jewellery can be -and is- so much more than just bodily adornment.

Is it hard to bring stories across with such a small object?

Who says jewellery has to be small? I wouldn’t exactly say that any of my pieces are small. Although I guess it depends on what you see or count as jewellery, and where you’d draw the line for what jewellery [is], or what clothes are, or even what’s sculpture. For me it’s all merged.

Michele Lamy once said she loves to put on as many rings and bangles as possible, so that it’s present not only visually, but aurally too. What are your thoughts on that? Would you like jewellery to be silent, or loud?

I’ve always been annoyed by the sound of a hanging, dangling key-holder, but when it comes to the sound of jewellery, stacked bracelets, [and] multiple rings clinking and clanking, or pendants clattering to the beat of the walk, I’m more forgiving or even the opposite. So I can’t say anything, but to agree with Michele Lamy. The weight is an important  feature.

FESWArings.2

What is your definition of beauty?

My objects? I believe beauty has to come from the inside to be true. Where no amount of fashionable, or luxurious layers can, nor will make up for what emits and seeps through from the inside… that mixed with individuality, and a touch of craziness.

I’ve seen several posts featuring Leigh Bowery on your blog. What is it about him that excites you?

It’s not Leigh Bowery specifically, there are others too. I’d say it’s more that I’m drawn to that type of character. I think it’s the mentality, and attitude towards the conventional that attracts me; the “fuck you, I don’t care about what’s appropriate, or what everyone else thinks, I’m doing this because it makes sense to me.” There is something in me that is unavoidably drawn to those types of people… perhaps because I can relate to it.

What internships have you done so far?

Before I moved here, I worked for Maria Nilsdotter. She is amazing in every single way. I learnt so much and I still help out whenever I’m in Stockholm. But I want there to be more, as I gained so much knowledge from seeing and working with someone who does what I want to do in the future, so I’m looking forward to more exciting internships after I graduate.

FELECIA LAYOUT final-11

 What does studying at CSM mean to you?

My second home, CSM, has given me a lot of new perspectives that have helped me figure out and realize what I am, both in terms of design and on a personal level. Just being inside these walls is an amazing opportunity, and I have met so many amazing people during my years here, which I will forever be grateful for. Though it comes with a lot of hard work, sleepless nights and over-analyzing everything in your surroundings. In a way, studying here has given me more confidence in what I do and stand for, both from getting feedback, tutorials and live projects with established jewellery designers and businesses. Yet, also by seeing and realizing that no one does what I do, or sees things in the same way that I do.

What are your three favorite films?

Shanghai Express (or any movie with Marlene Dietrich!) Also Princess Mononoke, and Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.

Do you have any special projects coming up that you’d like to share with us?

Yes, my final collection. Come and see it!

Your eyes just can’t get enough? For endless scrolling through great visuals, visit her Pinterest and Tumblr pages. 

 

The post Felicia Swartling’s black beacon of hope: FESWA jewellery appeared first on 1 Granary.

At Central Saint Martins, ideas come ten a penny

$
0
0

We’re speaking with pattern cutting tutors Patrick and Esme, who explain the CSM way about archiving (they don’t, because they too involved with new ideas) and the ‘crazies’: “Really great companies have got their R&D departments, where they put the ‘crazies’ in. They can do what they like, they can call the management shit if they like to, the CEO, but their job is to generate thoughts that nobody else would think of.”Yasu (12)

1 Granary: Does Grayson Perry stay in touch with most of the students that he works with?

Patrick: Well, everything is archived. The students have to put their names in, so they make their own labels. They print or embroider them, with the date. And obviously, if the garment has a name, they will write the name of the garment in. So he actually has records of who did what, and he’s also got the photographs of him wearing it.

1G: Do you keep an archive here as well?

Esme: No.

Patrick : Oh we’re terrible here…

Esme: Well Grayson has all the dresses, and we didn’t photograph them.

Patrick: They are, but we don’t keep it. Very funny department here, I must say. I know that in some institutions, everything is archived and catalogued. But I think it’s because we’re so involved with ideas, and for us, ideas come ten a penny. You don’t hold onto them. They come, they’re realised or rejected. Move on to new ideas. But, we don’t keep them.

1G: Ideas come and go.

Patrick: Yes! Like with Grayson’s collections: we don’t keep copies of toiles, or copies of the patterns. We start from scratch, so it’s always starting from a basic shape of his body, and then developing from there. So I think it’s something unique about CSM, we don’t obsess about archiving things; students ideas. Because we don’t, we just generate ideas. That’s where we’re different from other colleges, we’re not obsessive. It’s just ‘idea – great, idea – horrible, what’s next?’.

Han (2)

1G: It’s like that attitude is something more suitable for this college, rather than LCF for example.

Patrick: Well I think all colleges are different, I’m not going to say anything bad about the LCF, we all have our ethos. But the public do not understand that, and neither does the industry. Because they think: bit of research, bit of idea development, lineup, the theory of ‘how to be a fashion designer’. There are so many crap books out there about how to be a fashion designer, and that’s what they see. But that’s what designers do when they’ve got the job. And every company works in a different way, they have a different requirement. We are simply about ideas/concepts. You know, ‘new’, that’s what we’re all about. If we were about ‘commercial’, then we’d be pattern cutting and sewing with rule. Noting the top-stitch length, ‘set at such and such, you need this thread for that, this thread for the overlocking’. That’s what we’d be obsessing about, but we don’t. Yes, the product has to be fabulous, look fabulous. But it’s about the idea. I always say things about the “crazies”. Really great companies have got their R&D departments, where they put the “crazies” in. They can do what they like, they can call the management shit if they like to, the CEO, but their job is to generate thoughts that nobody else would think of. Then, behind them, you have the technicians and the brains, who take the ideas away from them and go and make them work. I always think at CSM, that’s what we do. As Willie [Walters - head of Womenswear] once snapped at somebody: ‘We don’t follow trends here, we set them’. And, in a way, that’s it. But sometimes with trends, you don’t know it’s a trend, it becomes so odd and weird, that you dismiss them. But everything here, even with Grayson, it doesn’t matter how silly and trivial it is, if it’s taken seriously, that’s the difference. When we challenge the students and talk about their work, it’s because we’re taking it seriously and we want them to come back to us and tell us what it’s about.

The post At Central Saint Martins, ideas come ten a penny appeared first on 1 Granary.

1 Granary Magazine: the second issue is out!

$
0
0

They say making a magazine feels like being in labour, and hell that’s true, but Louise Wilson helped us to give birth to our second print issue, and we will be forever grateful for her help, support and wisdom. This issue, we wanted to focus entirely on students, and therefore Louisa Ballou – fashion design student – is gracing the cover, dressed in Christopher Kane, the designer who we managed to feature in our issue with the help of Louise. We dedicate this issue to the woman who fought for this cover, who battled for better education and left behind a legacy of legends.

Can we tantalize your fashion taste buds? Here’s some namedropping, of what can you expect from issue two: Interviews with Christopher Kane, Lee Swillingham, Simon Foxton, Dylan Jones, Alex Fury, Joe Wright, Alistair O’Neill, Craig Green, Antonio Berardi, Quentin Jones, Grayson Perry, and photoshoots by Nick KnightLaurence Ellis, HART+LESHKINA,  Nikolay Biryukov, Kirill Kuletski, and Rachel Chandler-Guinness. And… that’s just a fraction.

Issue two is for sale on our website now and exclusively in the SHOWStudio shop from tomorrow, the 28th of August. It will hit the newsstands and other shops starting from Monday  1st of September. List of all stockists coming soon. 

1 Granary Magazine Central Saint Martins Age of Innocence Cover small

Photo by Laurence Ellis

TEAM LETTER

Being a creative is hard at the moment, right? With the highest university fees on record, investing in yourself as a creative is pretty risky business. In light of sweeping cuts to arts education, and indeed to the arts as a whole, it’s not looking like the best time to commit to a career as an artist or designer.

What then for the waves of people who still hold hope of making it in the creative industries today? It’s certainly not the easiest route. But where there’s a will, there’s most definitely a way. Tough challenges breed the greatest victors. The pages in issue 2 are a testament to that, featuring the first generation of Central Saint Martins students, who fought through money issues to produce something original, and do something new.

However, it’s important to remember that it’s not always about the money. More often, fighting difficulties for a positive outcome is actually about support. It’s about the people who recognise the times that we are in and are in a position to stand up and help creativity flourish. We started 1 Granary as a platform to try and bring established artists, image-makers and designers together with us, the students. But this magazine’s not about how we do it, but why we do it: to be able to have a graduate collection seen and shot by Nick Knight, and styled by Simon Foxton; to have up-and-coming Central Saint Martins designers sit alongside Christopher Kane; to be able to just shoot the collections of, and talk to the creatives whose work we respect. Thanks to those individuals’ support, we’ve been able to do just that and create our own space for creativity to prosper. For that, we’re grateful. Thank you to those who have helped us and to those we’ve featured.

Love, Team 1 Granary

The post 1 Granary Magazine: the second issue is out! appeared first on 1 Granary.

Jessica Denyer: Architecture student at Central Saint Martins

Inside The Central Saint Martins Studios

Inside The Central Saint Martins Art Studios


Inside the Central Saint Martins Fashion Studios

$
0
0

The Central Saint Martins graduate shows will happen in less than one month… What are the final year BA Fashion Design students working on? What fabrics are they using for their collections, which will be unveiled on the runway on the 3rd of June? What do their workspaces look like? And what are the new kids on the block creating, who are just finishing their first year at CSM? 1st year BA Graphic Design student Ollie Vanes grabbed his camera and set out to explore and document the fashion design studios.

Tosh Bung – 1st year BA Fashion

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_039 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_038 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_035 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_036

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_0341granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_032 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_0331granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_037

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_tosh_bung_ba_fashion_1st_year_031Rozalina Burkova – final year Fashion Design with Marketing

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_rozalina_folm_fashion_design_and_marketing_final_year_028 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_rozalina_folm_fashion_design_and_marketing_final_year_029

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_rozalina_folm_fashion_design_and_marketing_final_year_026

Markus Wernitznig – final year Womenswear

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_markuss_wernitznig_womenswear_final_year011 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_markuss_wernitznig_womenswear_final_year012
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_markuss_wernitznig_womenswear_final_year014 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_markuss_wernitznig_womenswear_final_year010

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_markuss_wernitznig_womenswear_final_year009

Gilda Balass – 1st year Knitwear

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_gilda_balass_knitwear_1st_year_005 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_gilda_balass_knitwear_1st_year_003 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_gilda_balass_knitwear_1st_year_002

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_gilda_balass_knitwear_1st_year_001

 

 

The post Inside the Central Saint Martins Fashion Studios appeared first on 1 Granary.

Work In Progress / Inside The CSM Fashion Studios

$
0
0

With the clock ticking the countdown to the press show, we walked around the fashion studios and shot the work of two students on different courses. One will show his collection on the runway tomorrow, the other is carefully padding, cutting and stitching away for a graduate diploma. While Joshie thinks his project needs a dustbin, and Linyou’s needs some love, they can both agree — according to our question cards — that with any luck they’ll be alive next year. Not long now before the final unveiling…

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_joshie_ba_fashion_knitwear_4th_year_013 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_joshie_ba_fashion_knitwear_4th_year_0101granary_csm_central_saint_martins_joshie_ba_fashion_knitwear_4th_year_011
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_joshie_ba_fashion_knitwear_4th_year_0091granary_csm_central_saint_martins_joshie_ba_fashion_knitwear_4th_year_0121granary_csm_central_saint_martins_joshie_ba_fashion_knitwear_4th_year_008
Joshie, Final Year BA Knitwear

scan0001

 

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_linyou_zhang_graduate_diploma_1st_year_0011granary_csm_central_saint_martins_linyou_zhang_graduate_diploma_1st_year_0041granary_csm_central_saint_martins_linyou_zhang_graduate_diploma_1st_year_003
Linyou Zhang, 1st year Graduate Diploma


scan0002

  Photography by Ollie Vanes

The post Work In Progress / Inside The CSM Fashion Studios appeared first on 1 Granary.

Shadowing The Great

$
0
0

As part of the MA Fashion Communications course in UNIT 1, the three pathways – Fashion Journalism, Fashion Critical Studies and Fashion Communication and Promotion, came together this year for a collaborative project – the Shadowing Project where students essentially “shadow” MA Fashion Design students from the start of their collection until London Fashion Week, where some chosen designers get to showcase their final pieces. With the Central Saint Martins MA Fashion design alumni being arguably the most well known in the world, it sure has made for an interesting project to follow since its conception.  

We sat down with Roger Tredre, course leader for MA Fashion Journalism to discuss this now legendary project, while showcasing the visual Shadowing project of Gilbert Braun, a student in the FCP pathway who photographed the final work of designer James Theseus Buck.

How did the project come about? When did it start?  

I can’t remember the exact year. The Fashion Journalism pathway was originally part of MA Fashion until this year, in fact, so there is a very long closeness between Fashion Journalism and the Fashion Design course. The Fashion Journalism pathway was launched in the early 1990s at Central Saint Martins and I started teaching in 1999. So it was there from the very beginning I believe. One of the most clever things about it from the point of the view of the college — I don’t know how deliberately it was planned like this, perhaps not, but it worked out very effectively for Central Saint Martins — was that these designers were all becoming, in many cases, famous through London Fashion Week, and the journalists knew them already, having studied alongside them and maybe even shadowed them at CSM. So there was a brilliant kind of symbiosis between the designers and the journalists. Both sides were building their careers at the same time and the journalists were kind of playing a promotional role, although journalists might not like to think of it in those terms. So  it was a good close link between the journalists and the designers. However, most of the time they didn’t have much to do with each other. So the creation of a project, where right from the start the journalists were shadowing the designers through to the MA Fashion show or the exhibition made that link stronger.

Did the project change quite a bit this term because of the involvement of the FCP students? 

This year  the Fashion Journalism pathway changed from being part of the MA Fashion course to being a part of the MA Fashion Communication course. My major concern when  it was first discussed, was that we would lose the shadowing project and the link with the designers. So I went to Louise Wilson and discussed it with her, and she was very supportive and said “Absolutely, we continue with it!” She was very enthusiastic for it to be continued. There wasn’t any worry so after that I said ‘great, if it sits within Fashion Communication, that is fine. If we are going to involve more people, including the Fashion Communications Pathway students and the Fashion Critical Studies students, then maybe we need to structure it a little more, because up until now it was a very free form kind of project. It wasn’t considered part of the grading for MA. Students were encouraged to do whatever they wanted, really. They could turn it into a scrapbook, a diary. What has happened now is that we have tried to retain that freedom of interpretation of how you shadow the designer, but give a little bit more structure to it in order to make it part of Unit 1.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_james_buck_gilbert_braun_03

An excerpt from the James Theseus Buck shadowing project, written by MA Fashion Journalism student Cezary Koralewski.

Absent-minded things

Plasters, flowers, Christmas chains, pillow feathers, rubber bands and a couple other materials might sound “weird”, but these are now as familiar to James Buck as yarn and needle. You might expect a precise and deliberate selection of these, but for the designer it’s quite the opposite. “It’s all about what’s available. It could be anything. It’s an absent-minded thing. I layer it up and wonder what it may become.” 

His handmade textiles – hand-woven rubber bands, solidified liquid latex or just a thousand plasters stuck together – can create an impression of being anti-couture, or more about fine art, but that’s not the case for Buck. However exquisite his designs would be, he mixes them with pieces from his everyday wardrobe. He makes clothes, not sculptures. “It always takes a different form. Pressed flowers become a coat and rubber bands become a knit. That’s what I like in fashion – everything you do is somehow related to the body.”

Collection this complex, in both its visual and philosophical layers, sharpens our appetite for a wonderful fairy tale about the character that’s going to wear it. But Buck has no such character in mind. “There’s no one specific idea in these pieces. They are not telling a story and I don’t want them to. The collection has enough things for people to interpret on their own. They don’t need me to tell them what I thought. They can make up their own mind. I think it’s more about me, it’s a way of showing what I think should already exist, but it doesn’t.” 

Casting couch

Apart from flowers from his mother’s garden and plasters, a significant part of the collection was made with the use of rubber. “It’s a liquid thing, sculptors use it to make moulds.” These include a shirt, coated pants and jumpers, trainers painted on sheer socks and a couple of pairs of moccasins that look as if they stepped into a latex paddle. There is also a cast of a suit jacket that retains the details of its every stitch and button. “I knew nothing about casting. I have been probably doing it completely the wrong way, but if somebody else did it I would never find out all these things that come up when you make a mistake,” says Buck, comparing his method to photography, where one can take more interesting pictures if one doesn’t understand the camera and is not distracted by frame or exposure. “It’s so important for me to make everything with my hands so I can understand it. I find a way by my mistakes.”

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_james_buck_gilbert_braun_01

We had Kathrin Huesgen acting as a mentor through the entire process this year. What was the rationale there?  

This year, we wanted to  make it more rigorous. One of the important things from the journalist’s point of view is the ability to understand exactly how a designer works. So just to be thrown out there to shadow the designers and hope that they gain some technical knowledge was maybe a bit too simple. So we invited an experienced womenswear designer – Kathrin Huesgen, a German designer who has worked for many leading fashion labels in Germany, including Boss woman, which Jason Wu now designs. Because Kathrin was living in London at the time, she agreed that she would work closely on this project to help the journalists appreciate the technical aspect of what the designers were achieving and to ask the right questions of the designers in a way that perhaps I wouldn’t be able to do. I think that added a new element to it. What we have also done is encouraging students to collaborate, so for journalists to work with Fashion Communication students and to make it a final piece of work that is not only written in an interesting way, but is also visually appealing. I’m quite excited by what we have seen this year, although I think it is a bit of a trial year. I think next year and the year after, we’ll see something even better.

I remember you telling us that Louise would not even look at the visually unappealing projects, so was it her suggestion that we should collaborate with FCP? 

Well, the funny thing was that Louise actually wasn’t very interested in the end results unless they looked beautiful. Since she never thought they looked beautiful, I never showed them to her in the end. I kind of gave up. But she agreed with the principle and what we were trying to achieve. She understood that fashion journalists were primarily focused on being writers and editors, not directors. She understood, and Fabio understands as well; he has been very supportive. They understand that what we’re trying to achieve is something that really helps the journalists to understand how designers’ minds work. It is good for them to be forced to talk about their work sometimes. It is a good process to go through. I know some of the designers definitely appreciate that. Some of them are very wary at the beginning and they have to be talked around and encouraged. In some cases, journalists have ended up being life long friends with the designers that they have shadowed, or maybe they are writing press releases for them, and helping them in all kinds of different ways.

Sometimes, of course, I think back to the Greek fashion journalist who shadowed someone like Christopher Kane. What a thrilling opportunity that was for her. Of course, he was just another student here but she had picked the right one. So that was a brilliant piece of talent spotting by her because the journalists make the approach to the designer. They are not assigned a designer to shadow.

There must be a lot of those in the archives from the alumni.  

We don’t keep all coursework. That would be impractical. However, I have certainly been careful to keep really good coursework that comes across my desk. I make sure I keep it and eventually pass it on to the library. So, having said that, I really wonder whether I have got the Christopher Kane one somewhere. It is possible I gave it back to the student. So it may not be there unfortunately.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_james_buck_gilbert_braun_04

Do you recall any interesting things that have happened over the course of the shadowing project? 

I think there are 2 things. One is obviously the details that you learn about the collections, and I love it. It’s my favourite time of the year when the shadowing projects come in. I love reading them because it’s fascinating. But apart from talking about the collection that the designer has created, there is also the human element that the journalists are invited to explore as well. We want them to kind of be a fly on the wall at every stage in the process and the big human drama every year is which students get into the show, and which don’t. I’m obviously talking about Louise Wilson, course director of the MA course for so long: her ‘showdowns’, confrontations, love ins with the designers over the years have produced extraordinarily powerful, dynamic, exciting, alarming, disturbing, thrilling copy. Brilliant. Most of which can never be published unfortunately. It’s highly confidential. That was always the understanding of the shadowing project. If you were going to have complete freedom to wander around the MA studios and listen to Louise having an argument with a student and then write it all down, it could never be published anywhere. So there are some pretty tough moments in there, and it is interesting from a human perspective to see how the designers have responded to the challenges put to them by their course director. It hasn’t always ended happily. It’s not like right at the end Louise and the designer reach an understanding and have bonded in a powerful way. That often does happen and that was magnificent when it did. I’m sure the same thing happens with Fabio as well. But there are also times when it doesn’t end happily and it’s quite upsetting actually to read the shadowing project if it really goes into the details of what went wrong, either in the collection or in the relationship between the designer and the course director, whether they are philosophical if they didn’t get in the show or whether they are bitter and hurt. So the shadowing project is fascinating on a number of levels which I think is brilliant. Just a shame they can’t be published.

Are they in the library though? 

That’s another reason why I have been very careful about not putting them in the library. But I do believe that once time has passed, there is no need for these things to stay completely confidential. Maybe they could be put in there someday.

Words by Kriti Ashtana

Photography by Gilbert Braun

The post Shadowing The Great appeared first on 1 Granary.

Welcome to the Central Saint Martins Degree Show Two

$
0
0

As we pass the end of term and reach the official beginning of summer, the halls of Central Saint Martins once again transform into a larger-than-life degree show, exhibiting the results of several years of hard work from across the disciplines and departments of the school. Whereas the Degree Show One laid its predominate focus on fine art, the Degree Show Two, opening today, presents an expanded range of critical practices – from architecture and industrial design, to communication design and curation, and of course, fashion in all its variety.


csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_019Xin Guo

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_024Young Ra Jun

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_026
csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_027

Roisin Johns 

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_038 Marta Monge

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_048Daniele Giannetti

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_050Sandee Usanachitt

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_052Agata Likina

One of the striking things when exposing such a vast amount of work, is the number of different approaches to cultural production. At times, ‘design’ is understood as communicative, sellable or functional; with students focusing on problem-solving or business innovation. During several occasions in the show, we encounter seemingly market-ready products  – communication systems, news apps, magazines, coffee-makers, what have you. Product designer Julie Roland, for example, presented an exquisitely manufactured leather-pouch for colostomy patients – a project that breaks taboos while bridging the gap between medical products and design.

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_054

Jim Hu

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_059Gabriel Castro

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_055Martin Hanly

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_056

Stefan Cooke and Anna Goswami

At other times, contribution to a critical discourse or debate seems a primary concern – often involving a further degree of abstraction. Here, design is understood through its dysfunctionality – or its ability to critically examine real-life issues through an abstracted lens of design. In jewellery design, M. Ren Ishii showcased body-inhibiting structures that exemplified the natural violence of ornamenting the body – and in communication design, Davide di Teodoro constructed an interactive Kardashian meme-generator to critique how images are circulated and distributed over the web. Meanwhile at the Culture, Criticism, Curation course, an electrically powered finger mechanically tapped ‘like’ on one Tinder profile after the other; an art piece representing the digital sign of times.

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_084Lucy Streule & Ellen Mercer 


csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_064Magdalene Theodorou
csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_074 Marta Bordes

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_072Ilaria Bianchi

csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_076Jordan Soderberg Mills


csm_central_saint_martins_1granary_graduation_shows_2015_078Venice Rish

And of course, there are all the moments when abstraction and functionality meet and transcend what we understand as design – when a beautiful garment pushes innovation within 3D printing; when a typeface criticises the contemporary surveillance society, or when utopian ideas of communal living materialise as an actualizable student housing project. CSM proves that critical practice is located in so many varieties of cultural production – and that the future of design lies in the merging of these spheres.

Words by Jeppe Ugelvig

Photography by Phillip Koll

Featured images: Sofia Aronov and Olesya Lipskaya

***

Opening times:
Wednesday to Friday: 12 noon – 8pm
Saturday to Sunday: 12 noon – 6pm
(last entry 30 mins before closing time)
 
Product, Ceramic & Industrial Design (BA Ceramic Design, BA Product Design, MA Design: Ceramics, Furniture or Jewellery, MA Industrial Design)
Culture and Enterprise (BA Criticism, Communication and Curation, MA Innovation Management)
Drama and Performance (BA Performance Design & Practice, MA Character Animation)
Fashion (BA Fashion, Graduate Diploma in Fashion)
Graphic Communication Design (BA Graphic Design, MA Communication Design)
Spatial Practices (BA Architecture, MA Architecture, MA Narrative Environments)
Jewellery and Textiles (BA Jewellery Design, BA Textile Design, MA Material Futures)

The post Welcome to the Central Saint Martins Degree Show Two appeared first on 1 Granary.

This New Feeling: Metamodernism

$
0
0

Twice a year, Central Saint Martins opens its doors to the public. This is not an open day for prospective students, but rather, an art fair of sorts, where every discipline from furniture design to communication design is on display—Degree Show Two, as it’s known around the college.

Earlier this week, the public ascended concrete flights of stairs at the private view. A stream of people, probably rushing to the bar, stumbled upon THIS NEW FEELING, the exhibition curated by a group of BA Culture, Criticism & Curation students. The project spanned across the students’ entire final year and was not a compulsory project; those involved were passionate about getting a professional experience in exhibition-making, publishing and event organisation.

Held in the second floor room C202, it’s the first classroom that visitors see when entering the college, as though it’s the arch of a viewing bridge – a vast space with two glass walls, almost as if the room is a reflection of everything that enters and exits the building.

The exhibition’s concept, Metamodernism, has been explored through the oscillation between digital and traditional art practice. Pieces that are seemingly handmade have been digitally rendered whilst others used digital methods to represent traditional techniques. The exchange of information in the transparent room enabled the curators to design a show where they established Metamodern connections outside the exhibition room itself, with the wider college and exhibitions on display.

At the entrance to the show sat Tully Arnot’s The Lonely Sculpture (2014), continuously tapping ‘LIKE’ on countless profiles a minute on Tinder, as if approving every guest that entered the space. As guests weaved between four central plinths, they were constantly between pieces, occupying space where the pieces established a dialogue with each other and the audience. Being in the room allowed them to also occupy a liminal space within the college itself, as the space is simultaneously a mirror of, and a window to the students’ university experience. The curated oscillation of movement within the space ties into Metamodern theories of a constant back and forth between Modern and Postmodern states of feeling.

Visitors seemed immediately affected by the work, exchanging knowing smiles as they observed The Lonely Sculpture, with one spectator mentioning that they immediately “felt a deep sadness and nostalgia” when viewing Mastering Bambi (2010) by Persijn Broersenand and Margit Lukács. A familiar score coloured the exhibition space and other works, coming from a barren landscape where Bambi once lived. This piece emphasized the drastic environmental and social changes occurring, which creates a desire for the return to the grand narrative. A piece of our beloved childhood had been recreated in an eerie, futuristic landscape.

The curators situated Mastering Bambi right next to #INTRODUCTIONS (2015), by LaBeouf, Rönkkö & Turner, in which Shia LaBeouf stands in front of a green screen emotively expressing BA Fine Art student’s motives behind their work. The piece was a collaboration between the collective and CSM BA Fine Art’s Degree Show One. The students wrote the manifestos behind their works and LaBeouf sincerely delivered them to the viewer against a backdrop of the artists’ work, punctuating the livestream which served as a critique and engagement with the graduate’s work, led by students from BA Fine Art and CCC. This juxtaposition of a grown-up Disney star next to an extinct Bambi reveals the environmental, economical and social changes central to This New Feeling.

LaBeouf, Rönkkö & Turner will be joined by Robin van den Akker, co-author of Notes on Metamodernism and co-founder of Metamodernism.com on Friday 26th June for This New Feeling: What is Metamodernism?, a discussion organised in the LVMH Lecture Theatre at 5:30 PM, in tandem with the exhibition. For more information, visit thisnewfeeling.com

#INTRODUCTIONS from LaBeouf, Rönkkö & Turner on Vimeo.

Words by Katarina Kostich

Photography by Ruby Boddington

Featured image artwork by Valentin Dommanget

The post This New Feeling: Metamodernism appeared first on 1 Granary.

Dashing Tweeds x Central Saint Martins: a textiles match made in…

$
0
0

For their ‘live’ project — designing for the industry — second year BA Textile Design students from the weave pathway were given a menswear project to design tweed, taking inspiration from the Spitafields area of London, considering the history and culture as well as visual inspiration. The suggested theme was ‘Urban Movement’, which can include migration and mapping. The client was Dashing Tweeds, tweed textile and menswear company based in the prestigious Savile Row in Mayfair. The company was founded by photographer Guy Hills and Woven Textile Designer Kirsty McDougall.

Weaving is designing from scratch: it is the first step that leads to the production of masterpieces such as Jackie O’s Chanel’s jacket, and a discussion on weaving in Britain is incomplete without the mention of tweed. Coco Chanel, pioneer of tweed, was first introduced to it by Brit extraordinaire Duke of Westminster in the 1920s. The fabric is so ingrained in British culture that Guy Hills once referred to it as British denim.

For the Textile Design students at Central Saint Martins, this project was their initiation to the world of this now iconic British fabric. The students from the pathway all put their own spin on the project, and below you can see the work of 5 selected students.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_antonio_castro_031 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_antonio_castro_005 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_antonio_castro_001
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_antonio_castro_017 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_antonio_castro_003 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_antonio_castro_007
António Castro

Castro’s starting point was a vintage tailored blazer bought in Spitalfields market. He then unpicked the blazer and tried to infuse the narrative of Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Picture of Dorian Grey’ in it.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_amber_yinjue_chen_0801granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_amber_yinjue_chen_074
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_amber_yinjue_chen_0731granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_amber_yinjue_chen_077

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_amber_yinjue_chen_079

Amber Chen

For Chen, inspiration struck when she saw the ‘Return of the Rude Boy’ exhibit in Somerset House. From then, it was all about contrasts for her, whether it was the dull, grey English winter interspersed with bright colours from the streets, or the history of Spitalfields market with the new-ness of the people that reside there.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_eleanor_henson0321granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_eleanor_henson043
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_eleanor_henson0391granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_eleanor_henson034

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_eleanor_henson046 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_eleanor_henson033

Eleanor A Henson

For Henson, customer comes first. She was designing for young professionals in the creative industry that subscribe to the work-hard-play-hard mantra and go from work to social gatherings in that precise period of time which is dusk hour.

She imagined them wearing the same clothes all day, clothes that go with their lifestyle. As they dash from one place to another, they don’t take in anything properly, but just get snapshots of their surroundings and by the end of it, afterwards or maybe later on, they get jumbled up images of things they absorbed during the day. She then used double exposure photography with colours that get picked out at dusk, colours that she finds nostalgic — a twilight-y grey that brings out the pinks and oranges of the sky for her tweed.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_chika_iwenofu_1091granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_chika_iwenofu_113
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_chika_iwenofu_1101granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_chika_iwenofu_120

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_chika_iwenofu_115

Chika Iwenofu

Middlesex street in Spitalfields is famous for its array of fabric shops, a lot of them carrying traditional African prints. Merging them with traditional British patterns like checks and stripes, Iwenofu tries to represent how immigrants try and create their own new identity when they move to a new country, interweaving their own heritage with their adoptive country’s.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_dashing_tweeds_tasnim_begum_140

Tasnim Begum

Begum used this project as an opportunity to explore her Bangladeshi roots. Her grandfather was one of the original Bangladeshi immigrants to the UK in the 1900s that moved to London to do silk weaving, but ended up moving away to Brick Lane and created their own little community due to the language barrier. A lot of these immigrants started to open restaurants offering traditional Bangladeshi cuisine. Begum’s project is titled East India, after her grandfather’s restaurant.

Words by Kriti Ashtana

Photography by Ollie Vanes for 1 Granary

The post Dashing Tweeds x Central Saint Martins: a textiles match made in… appeared first on 1 Granary.

Jan Bigg-Wither: sculpting artisanal mannequins

$
0
0

Jan Bigg-Wither has been the guardian angel of many Fashion Design students at Central Saint Martins for the past decade, most notably thanks to her wide understanding of different students’ design vocabularies and offering solutions for many of their problems. One problem, however, has been on her mind for the past five years: the mannequin stand as normally found on the market. She has crafted her own solution and with her artisanal, sustainable Japanese hand-made mannequin stand, she is offering a more true reflection of the model’s body on the western runway that will facilitate designers’ creation processes.

Together with 1 Granary, Jan will be making a series of tutorials that will help solve a number of frequently recurring problems, starting with How to take a pattern of a garment without taking it apart: shirt, which will go live on our website this month. Get to know the pink-haired woman behind the videos and fashion’s newest problem-solving-mannequin.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_jan_bigg_wither1

What are your main interests and main motivations for doing the job that you do?

I really enjoy problem solving. I love coming up with solutions and methods to help people achieve their creations. With pattern cutting, most of the time you need to provide more than one option, and you certainly need to do so for production. I also like to make things fit really well, so people can move around in the garments.

Does it bug you a lot seeing clothes being mass produced by all the high street stores nowadays?

Not really, but sometimes, for example in films, I would be looking at the clothes and be like: “Goodness the sleeve looks terrible!” But a lot of my own clothes don’t fit perfectly, no one has the time to tailor-make everything now. So you just have to live with it, sometimes I just have to sit on my hands to stop myself from trying to solve all the little mistakes.

Where did you study?

I studied in Cleveland and York and I didn’t do a degree. After I did my A-levels, I did a two-year GAD, I went on to specialise in fashion in my second year. My Tutors didn’t want me to do fashion, instead they wanted me to do sculpture. But I love fashion and I saw it as more of a suitable career path for myself. The head of college at that time thought that I was a three-dimensional artist, and he didn’t want me to do silly little drawings – that’s how they viewed fashion. But pattern cutting is three dimensional, they were right about me but they just didn’t see fashion in the right way. I spent a further year studying Fashion at York Arts and Technology  and then I stopped for a while I found the interaction between students unpleasant and didn’t want to work in that kind of an environment, but then I missed creating garments. I attended a day release course for industrial sewing techniques at Jacob Kramer Art and Design college in Leeds; while I was there I was offered a job teaching fashion design to 6th form students followed by a position teaching design to HND  fashion students for several months while their tutor  was having treatment for cancer.

“The level of research CSM students do is amazing, it really gives their work greater depth and pushes them to be more original.”

How old were you when you started being a tutor?

I was only 23, but I have been making garments since I was 13 and at that time I was a design tutor, not a pattern making tutor. I had also been selling my clothes in little boutiques but I didn’t have actual experience in the industry. At the end of the job in Leeds I was asked to apply for a full-time job in Doncaster, but I didn’t think I had enough experience. I wanted to be a tutor able to answers student’s question, or at least point them towards the right direction for experimentations. I think it’s important to be able to give starting points to students.

So what did you do after that?

I moved to London. I was only planning to stay for just 5 years but now I have been here for 25 years. I wanted to gain experience in the industry and then move back up north and teach, but it’s very difficult to start — especially coming from the smaller colleges in the provinces outside London. I spent a long time waiting tables; there was a recession going on, and the agents wouldn’t take me on because I had no experience. But fortunately I took a training job as a grader, and then I became a designer- pattern cutter for a supply company, we made party-dresses for Debenhams. (laughs) I worked for this company for a couple of year but the pattern work was not very challenging. I went to work for lady offering a pattern cutting, grading and sampling service, after a while I became her business partner and then took over the company. We worked within many areas of the industry  Ladies, Men’s, teenage and children’s wear producing collections for designers and manufacturers. We worked with brands like 6876, YMC, Tristan Webber and Harvey Nichols’ own menswear line, Pringle of Scotland or even bridal companies; too many to list.  When I got married in 2001 I decided to take a step back I was producing so many collection the hours were becoming overwhelming and due to the fact that we covered such a wide range of markets we never really had any quiet times for me to be able to recharge my batteries. I wanted to have a family and the responsibility of 13 members of staff and regularly working 70-90 hours a week was just too much so I decided to close the studio.

I still had a small studio at home and worked for a few designers I enjoy pattern cutting  too much to stop.  Then one day David Kappo called me, he knew about my situation and asked if I would be interested to come in to do some teaching. That’s how I ended up at Saint Martins. I have been here for 10 years now.

Do you think it’s a problem that CSM focuses so much on 2D work?

Different colleges aim at different areas of the market. The level of research CSM students do is amazing, it really gives their work greater depth and pushes them to be more original. Many other colleges work more closely to existing garments. Yes, some of them have a more technical input, and it’s great to have both sides balanced, but with the budget and scheduling, I can’t see how it can be done. It also depends on what career path you see is suitable for you. CSM students are known for being very creative, although graduates who have their own labels may need to employ someone to cut the patterns for them, original ideas are the most important asset of a designer.

“I often have to go around the class of  students using 10 different teaching methods, because different students have different levels of experience and confidence.”

Do you think students have changed a lot throughout the 10 years?

I think in the last couple of years, the expectations of students have changed. When the fees went up, students looking  more closely at the contact time they are receiving. In recent years, students started to ask questions. As tutors we have no control over it, we are all under time table and budget restraints. When people were paying less for school fees, they were more relaxed.

What exactly does your work at Central Saint Martins entail?

I work closely with the design tutor to helping pull out the potential from students in a three dimensional capacity. Students are often quite scared going from 2D to 3D. They need guidance to make things less scary; to go from one stage to another. It’s really difficult for a student to look at the design they want to achieve and see how they can get there. So it’s my job to provide the starting point, and to guide them through stage by stage. Once they get through the half-way mark, they often get more confident and brave. It’s about teaching students to be more confident in their abilities  to solve problems and to experiment on their own.

I believe there’s a huge difference in being a good pattern cutter and a good pattern tutor?

When I first started my trial at Saint Martins, David Kappo told me some pattern-cutters were amazing, but not able to communicate the information it to students in a way they can understand; you do need a lot of patience. (Laughs) I often have to go around a class  of students using 10 different teaching methods, because different students have different levels of experience and confidence. You can’t use one method and think it would work for every student, even more so when working with artists, because everyone is wired very differently. You have to realise that as a creative pattern cutting tutor. I really enjoy teaching and helping students find the method of 3D development that works for them. You have to spend time to calm students down, and to pay attention to how they react, in order to make the learning experience more enjoyable and effective.

What problems did you find in old mannequins that pushed you to start this new mannequin business?

One of the main problems would be the flatness of the armhole area; it affects how dresses sit. It’s annoying when you have spent days making a beautifully tailored jacket on the stand, and when the fit model comes in at the end of the week, it doesn’t fit her any way like it fitted the stand. It’s very expensive as well to keep on making alterations. I was just thinking “How hard can it be to have a  mannequin the right shape?” The inspiration for some of the features of the mannequin have been derived from teaching at Saint Martins, for example to put clear guidelines for students like the shape of the armhole, the shape of the bust and guidelines on the cups because students often struggle a lot when creating the cup shape. So I wanted to give them something to follow on the stand. Another problem is that the shoulder blades are too flat on old mannequins, which misleads students to make wrong alterations because of the wrong anatomy of the stand. I hope my stands would give more visual information to users, and would make it easier for students to use and to learn things correctly.

“Some companies use total body scans to produce mannequins, the results in my opinion are not good. The company we are working with has a more artisan approach.”

Why did you decide to produce them in Japan?

Unless we were able to set up our own factory, it’s really difficult and expensive to make them here in the UK. A friend of mine was at an exhibition in the Far East and he knew I was interested in creating a mannequin and picked up a catalogue from the Japanese company, and I started sending them emails. The chief executives saw my emails, and he thought we really understood the western body shape, so they were interested in working with us. David,  my husband,  and I went to Japan to meet them and built a fantastic working relationship with them. They have responded in such a positive way to our ideas and share our passion for producing beautifully handcrafted mannequins from recycled materials such as paper, wood pulp and coffee sacks; all the glues are natural and as you can see in the process video, the ladies working there don’t have to wear masks.  The main torso is biodegradable and the metal base and pole can be recycled. It is important to  consider  the environmental impact of any product.

Some companies use total body scans to produce mannequins, the result in my opinion are not good. The company we are working with has a more artisan approach, which is a much better way for me to work. I sculpt and alter the prototypes in plaster myself, during the next stages of the process the Japanese shaper make the prototype perfectly symmetrical their skill level is amazing they are absolutely fantastic to work with, they are so precise and the people working in their factory are so happy; I expected Japanese people to be more ‘serious’. I love that everything is made by hand.

How long did it take?

I have had the idea for about five years, and finding the company and sorting everything out took about 2 years. I am so excited and pleased to get this done. And there will be more mannequins in the range very soon, I need suggestions from 1 Granary about naming the men’s mannequins [Editor’s note: leave your suggestions below in the comment section!]

Are you helping new emerging designers who just started their business?

Not at the moment, it’s just that they are not in contact with me. I have done in the past, but last couple of years, I have been focusing on my mannequins. But I am hoping the little films we are going to do together are going to help people to solve problems. Obviously I need to make a living, but I do want to help new talents.

Words by Derek Cheng and Rozalina Burkova

All videos courtesy of Design-Surgery

Development

Plaster mold


Papier-mâché 

Finishing

Covering

Final mannequin

The post Jan Bigg-Wither: sculpting artisanal mannequins appeared first on 1 Granary.


Fashion Week through the eyes of Central Saint Martins students

$
0
0

We dislike show reviews. We don’t need somebody to tell us that a blue jacket is blue and that it’s made of leather. We are not blind, in fact, we’re pretty well-educated when it comes down to fashion behind the seams. So, after fashion weeks worldwide have come to an end, we wondered what the dead-honest opinions of CSM’s Fashion Design students were. We sat down with a six-headed panel, and looked at some of the best shows of this season on VogueRunway.com, with an iPhone voice recorder on the side capturing praises, discussion and disbelief. Let’s introduce our speakers…

Words and panel leader: Matilda Söderberg

Illustration by Olivia Davies

(1) Silver Fox: In the backstage area, behind the glossy surface of any big fashion event, you’ll most likely find Silver desperately trying to get into a pair of three numbers too small Margiela’s just seconds away from the catwalk. Travelling between the most powerful fashion centres of Europe, this androgynous veteran knows the ins and outs of the busy fashion system from a hard working model perspective.

(2) Pat Ternmaster: After years of education within the complex art of pattern cutting, this dedicated Yamamoto-enthusiast from the classical venues of Vienna knows fashion down to the thread. Obsessed with garments, and with a cutting-edge expertise in fabrics, construction and tailoring, not a sloppy stitch will be safe from this sharp eyed master of clothing.

(3) Purple Rain: As with the sweet vocals of Prince, Purple will become your best friend and stick with you through the hardest of times. With an outcast upbringing in a gangster family, this lonely soul searched for comfort with a far relative that happened to be a skilled programmer. As their friendship went on, this soon-to-be hacking underdog finally made peace with the world through digital enlightment. Purple explored the far and beyonds of this new viral sanctuary, which have made this Purple into one of the most vigorous digital trend spotters as we dig deep into the gutters of Vogue Runway.

(4) Mango Margoushka: This lovely being will enchant you with allurement and fascinate you with intelligence. Behind a sweet surface you’ll find layers and layers of knowledge that are built on a foundation of wiseness and insight.

(5) Steve: Ever wondered who your strange neighbour is that seems to be carving out instruments out of vegetables? Well, look no further.

(6) The pop-up: Popup or pop-up could refer to: Batted ball, a type of hit ball in baseball; Hidden headlamps, also called pop-up headlamps; Pop-up book, or movable books; Pop Up (album), a 2007 album by Yelle; Popup camper, a type of recreational vehicle; Pop-up restaurant, is temporary restaurant; Pop-up retail, short-term sales spaces; Boilie, a buoyant fishing bait also known as pop-ups.

Proenza Schouler

1: I’m usually crazy about Proenza, but I really feel that this collection is quite simple if you compare it with the amazing layering techniques they usually have. They’ve also taken a step back when it comes to print and colour. And the coats! Where are all the good coats?

2: I really enjoy the draping of the folded tops though, and the cow print is just amazing. But, at the same time, doesn’t it feel like everyone is a bit influenced by Céline at the moment?

3: I was actually just about to say that. To me they do look a bit like a little sister to Céline!

4: I actually wouldn’t been able to tell it was Proenza if I didn’t know it from before, it’s almost like they’ve lost a bit of their identity. So, it’s not only that they’ve simplyfied it.

5: Yes, exactly. I mean, I do like bits and pieces and generally it does look quite nice. Some of the materials are great for example, but as a whole it’s not that rememberable.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Proenza
Gucci

1: This collection really excites me. Considering the slightly more subtle aesthetics they had before Alessandro went on board, this collection takes a totally different direction. They’re way more interesting now, with all the prints, the variety of textures and even all the different techniques they use. The collection has a strong theme and you can definitely tell they’ve been loyal to their vision, it really tells a story, you know.

2: I’m not so sure I’d agree with that point. To me each look feels like they belong to a different collection, I can’t really see a line running through the whole body of it. Indeed, you can tell there’s some sort of identity in there. He’s brought the 70’s heritage back and I’d guess he’s been working a lot with the archive, which has also brought a different costumer than before. But the garments themselves don’t speak as much to each other I would say.

1: Really? Because I can defenitely see the connection, they’re a lot more focused on the overall style. I would even say think they were quite forced on going back to a strong aesthetic, the identity of the brand was about to lose itself along with the sexy catwoman. There are so many designers doing that already. Like, leave that to Versace.

3: Yeah, they are really pushing their theme, which I’m quite in love with. Clumsy, cute, quirky, so wrong and so right. There’s a nice two dimentional sense to the collars, and the ties are like the best thing ever that happened to this season. I mean who wouldn’t want a sparkly ladybug the size of an overgrown hamster on their chest?

5: I’m having a hard time with the brocade floor. Is that really necessary? Presentation-wise it just seems really confusing.

1: Wasn’t Alessandro the accessory designer of Gucci before? I think there might be a reason why they’ve focused a lot more on details than usual, I mean, there’s no finishing in sight that’s not impeccably made. But, with that said, I also think he hasn’t focused as much on the silhouettes as on the prints and the textures. He hasn’t really experimented with shapes in the same way he’s been working with the materials.

2: Exactly, they are constantly repeating their silouettes. But, that’s not too surprising once you’ve considered the numbers of outfits. Is there really any point to have, like, 70 looks? You are just draining the essential content of the theme until it means nothing. It’s not sustainable for anything really, neither the planet nor the brand.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Gucci

MM6

3: Obviously the casting was amazing on this one, it’s like having a pathway meeting! I love Kate with the little blue hands to go with her fringe.

1: The shoes and all the sequin stuff are gorgeous, but besides from the obvious ”art school night out” references I wasn’t the biggest fan of it to be honest. Like, the shapeless blue plastic jersey mashup, I mean. I get trashbag couture, but this is litteraly a trashbag!

4: But even though it’s really messy and sparkly and trashy, it’s still kind of wearable at the same time. I like that.

5: Is that a thong?

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_MM6

 

Marc Jacobs

3: I see an American flag, I see a starfish…

5: I really dislike this skirt.

3: … American flag colours…

5: I do appreciate Matty Bovan’s print on this piece, but I’m not really fond of the silhouette. It almost looks like a hoodie or something…Yeah, it’s a hoodie.

3: … Baseball jackets…

5: Ah, no. I really don’t like those jackets.

2: I can’t believe that we have to go through 40 more looks.

5: No, this is really pointless. I think they went for a mismatch thing, but just got it really wrong. It literally just seems like they’ve produced loads of random stuff, turned them into red and blue and called it a theme.

1: Well, they’ve done this one grey dress.

3: … A pair of swans?

2: Must be a different intern.

3: Let’s just leave the last couple of looks and move on.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_MarcJacobs

Rick Owens

2: I think the garments are quite strong, and he’s magaged to maintain the identity of the brand while updating the looks. The drapings are actually really amazing. As with the dresses, the shapes, the continuous color scheme that is running through the whole collection. White, blurring into a creame, merging into orange and then back to black and grey.

1: And you can feel that his method is pouring into the whole performance. But, was it more about the fashion or the statement? I was shocked at first, like, how could they actually manage to carry the other women? For a glimpse of a second I actually thought the women they carried were dolls.

5: They’ve managed to make it look really casual, though. Do you think they were trained?

2: No I think they were performers, like the ones they had in the SS14 show.

3: Some of them just looked like normal models though, like really slim and small, I swear I just saw one look and I thought ”omg she’s just a little model carrying a full grown woman on her back!”. And it was also, like, really secure. I think they even had just 2 straps attached to them or something, which was quite interesting conceptually. In a way it reminds me of Comme’s six-armed garments — the disfunctionality in it.

5: What was meant to be the concept behind this?

2: Well, according to Style.com [now VogueRunway.com] it was on showing the strength of a woman, the physical weight of putting on other people’s burdens, or even beings. Carrying children, nurturing others, the difference of a ”strong woman” and female strength. It’s a physical experience, which is quite interesting since carrying garments is a physical experience as well. Fashion is performance!

1: I did find it kind of disturbing when putting this in a fashion context though, couldn’t this be read as turning a human into a fashion accessory? In a way the subject is also forced upon you, you can’t really avoid to opiniate about it.

2: In a way I think the whole act challenges the way that fashion is presented in general. While in a presentation you have a much wider opportunity to explore different themes, I’d say there’s a much more limited space to do something different in a show, since it always depends on the models walking. So they’ve really been pushing the boundaries of the fashion show.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Rick Owens

Vetements

1: Somehow Vetements manages to always make it about the fit, without it being about the fit, you know? It’s a calculated, oversized non-fit, that always looks really good.

3: Well, the thing is that you can also get that without actually having to buy Vetements. It’s the same with the writing they do on their sleeves, there is loads of stuff like that already.

2: That’s so Margiela.

4: Yeah, they all worked at Margiela before, didn’t they?

3: You know, Vetements is meant to be like the coolest brand in the world, but I’m not sure they can keep that title for long. It’s began to translate into popular culture so quickly, it hasn’t even been underground for very long. Like, every now and then Rihanna is spotted in their hoodies, and internet exploded when “Bitch better have my money” got out where she’s wearing their boots.

2: In a way it mirrors popular culture, actually. They’ve gone a lot more sporty and a lot more about branding, I think it’s quite short-living.

1: Well, it bears its hype, but after a few seasons it’s a lot more forced. I mean, how many collections can they do before you’ll know exactly what to expect?

3: Oh, well, I think that happened to them last season.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Vetements

Sacai

3: This is not how I remembered Sacai at all. They have the exact same prints and the exact same colours in the first five looks. Not even the silouettes are that different from each other.

1: I really like their winter collection though, they’re really good when it comes to coats and stuff. But, I think Sacai has been getting so much attention lately that they’ve needed to focus on the garments that people actually buy. So, I guess they’re definitely getting a bit more commercial. Not that commerciality is nessecarily a bad thing, but as soon as you introduce the idea of capitalising on a product, you’re always facing the risk of becoming more calculating and less risk-taking. And thus, less exciting.

2: We really got it all in the first look, which is not a good thing. The first look should give you a small insight into what you could expect, and make you curious about what is to come.

1: I really think it is just a bad collection, otherwise I really do like Sacai. I think they’re better on fall/winter, I mean their coats and jackets were really amazing last season.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Sacai

Noir Kei Ninomiya

1: Is this really that innovative? It’s pretty, but it’s ‘obvious’ pretty. It’s doesn’t really surprise me enough, and it feels like they haven’t really explored anything.

3: This is the guy that Comme used to work with, right?

4: The textile manipulation looks really good though.

1: It is a beautiful collection, but it’s not really that exciting. Black and transparency is really safe, it always works, but this is a bit too uniform.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Noir

Comme des Garçons

2: For a brand that has such a huge influence on the rest of the fashion industry as Comme does, it’s really great that they only have 16 looks. Every outfit is a story on its own, different from each other, which is a concept Kawakubo’s been working with for quite a few seasons now. Since it’s being so sculptural it’s really questioning the essence of a garment.

3: She’s afraid of nothing, and it’s a cultivated brand as well. She can do whatever she wants, not a lot of big businesses can do that. Even Yohji has to stick to something. I mean, the great thing about Comme’s pieces is that they’re actually sold in stores and worn like actual pieces on the streets, like how they were presented in the show. But I think that depends a lot on their credibility and context, I’m not sure anyone else could convince someone to wear a huge red bow scarf to their office even if they were paid.

1: That’s true, these garments are very theatrical I guess. But what really gives me goosebumps are those pieces that have a strong visual impression, but are more wearable and less theatrical. Like Celine, they’re very good at translating clothes like Comme’s into something more subtle and classy.

6: This collection is really interesting, but I don’t think it’ll stick with me. To be honest, I’m not quite sure one can produce collections with such heavy visual impact each season. Not because it’s not beautiful or anything, but because of the actual creative content in it. Within the frame of half a year, you’re not given the proper space to research and explore as much as you’d need to reach those new creative heights, as Comme des Garcons are experts in visualising. If you’re forced to adapt your work according to the hectic fashion-scheme, you’re eventually making garments with the same ingredients as always – and the variations aren’t endless.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Comme

Thom Browne

3: This is very Thom Browne, I would never have thought of it being someone else. The installation, the shapes, the silhouettes.

5: Oh, is that a fish bag? Is it a fish? I like the bag!

1: I love the Kill Bill soundtrack, and I like the proportions and overall look, but I’m not that excited by the show to be honest. Does he really bring anything new to the table? Like, these kinds of suit things he’s been doing for seasons and seasons. It is a bit expected.

5: I really do like these fish bags.

3: Oh they have these little stumpy things on their shoes!

2: And what are those things on their heads?

5: Are those fishes on their heads? Please say yes! Are those fishes? Oh, no. They’re braids. I thought they were fishes.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_ThomBrowne

Valentino

1: I really like Valentino. I think they’ve changed a lot from their RED period and have something really romantic about them, it reminds me of old paintings and I just like their poetic atmosphere. But that’s not everyone’s cup of tea of course. I also believe that the styling and the kind of music they pick for the show is a really important part of it all. It puts it in a context.

5: I think the silhouettes are repeating themselves a bit, everything’s just long!

1: They do have very many looks. But I think Valentino is becoming a brand that is being bought a lot more, so they’ll need a huge variety of options. At the same time I can still see it as one collection, where there’s one team working with it during the whole process. They’re quite strong at the moment. I also believe they’ve stepped up their game when it comes to prints. Generally I really enjoy when the designers let their aesthetics pierce through their whole body of work, like in the case with Rick Owens. I’m not his biggest fan but I can still appreciate that he has his own little world that appears in every single collection. And I think it’s the same thing with Valentino now.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Valentino

Miu Miu

1: I think Miu Miu will always be about the young 60’s lolita. They’re chic, cool, and their show is always so exciting, every single time. They’re really strong when it comes to prints, the silhouettes are beautiful and the layering is just amazing.

5: They do have a really strong team. This even makes me like cute little flouncy things.

2: But aren’t they a bit off proportion?

1: Well, then again, styling is a really strong part of their show. They’ve done a lot of research on the presentation. If you were to see each piece separately they wouldn’t have that big of an impact I think, but when you see all of them together it’s just amazing. Like, you can really see the little sister of Prada in this.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_MiuMiu

 

Undercover

5: Oh wow, that looks like a backpack. I love those buckles. And this one, it’s like a blazer, on a shirt, on a backpack. I kinda wish that someone would walk into uni like that.

3: The sleeves are great as well. I think Undercover makes most of its money out of leather and bomber jackets to be honest, which means there’s always gonna be a good bomber in there.

4: Even though Dries van Noten did them last season I still love those tulle half skirts.

1: Doesn’t this seem a bit like a fucked up version of Vetements?

Acne

1: Is this the collection with that amazing pink coat?

6: Or is this the feminist collection? Oh, no, right, that was the men’s. Have you seen it? They had like sweaters with patches that said ”Radical Feminist” and ”Gender equality”. I literally thought that was such a strange thing to do. They put an important social movement into a fashion context, and turned it into a trend more than anything else. It washes out all the actual content.

3: Yeah, it reminded me of Karl Lagerfeld’s fashion demonstration.

1: But you can’t really think of it like that, eventually trends normalise ideals.

6: I don’t think moving forward is the same thing as turning politics into a fashionable gimmick and commercializing on it. It’s not that I don’t approve a feminist approach to fashion, but you can’t really expect any substantial change to occur during the time span of a single season. If fashion really supported feminist ideals, it would require for the whole system to change radically from what it is today.

1: But they’ve made a really good job casting with diversity this season though. Way more coloured girls than before, which is also something we can see happening with many brands at the moment.

3: I actually like this collection.

5: I don’t know though, some of these prints just look like a dodgy tie-dye, or a foundation student learning pattern placement in photoshop. Most of it just feels a bit random.

1: It’s kind of sad though, I would actually wear those looks if it weren’t for the guitars.

5: And it’s a dick head guitar as well!

3: Somewhere I might think that they did that on purpose, I think they’re pretty aware of what’s cool and not. So they just choose to be really uncool. (Since that’s very cool.)

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Acne

Dior

1: They always have very good set design. And the cropped knits remind me a bit of Margiela’s knitted sweater in his oversized collection, it’s very raw.

6: I don’t know, in general I think it’s not that substantial. Like, they have this lace thing that is really overused in the whole collection. There’s really not that much in it.

3: Yeah, it’s so Zara. Just products really.

3: But still, I’d look good in a Dior suit.

1: Yeah I mean it is a sellable collection. Like, I love this coat. But why? Because I can wear it. Or sleeping in it. ”Just gonna put on my Dior pyjamas!”

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Dior

Hood by Air

3: Look at the faces, they’ve put on all the contour without blending it! Oh, everything I’ve learnt from those Youtube tutorials. What good are they now?

2: Nipslip!

1: But they did that the last season, it’s always the same cut ups. But I guess a brand needs to have their codes as well.

3: Oh, is that like a pillowbag? Like a bag, in a pillow? That’s so clever, why has no one ever thought of that before?! I can’t even begin to think of the numbers of hard working fashion students that would benefit from that invention.

5: I like these last kind of Backstreet Boys-looks.

6: Doesn’t everything feel a bit health goth?

3: I think that their sportswear is a lot more authentic than anybody else’s though, now when everyone’s been starting to make this sporty shit. Like, HBA did actually start up as a t-shirt brand.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_HoodbyAir

Jil Sander

3: Who’s doing Jil Sander now?

2: Some guy in weird shorts.

6: I’m not sure if it’s just because they are the first prints that actually show up, but I think they’re quite interesting. I’m having a hard time making peace with those hats though, I don’t really get them. Maybe it’s because of my life long feud with the fedora hat.

1: I think everything would get a bit boring without them though, no?

2: I really like the cut outs and the garment construction. They have some nice and subtle details, they’re not too obvious. You slowly discover them one by one, and they make you become even more interested. It’s not that they’re trying to force themselves onto you or anything.

1: That’s true, it’s very sophisticated. Everything stays really true to Jil Sander. Like, it’s not gonna be the most exciting or spectacular show you’ll ever see, but it’s the standard of it. You can really see that there’s some good quality in there.

2: In that sense they’re definitely more exciting than Hood by Air.

5: Pfft, nah. I’m not that into quality.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Jil Sander

 

Marques Almeida

1: Doesn’t this remind you a bit of when you forget one of your nose tissues in the washing machine?

3: I love the fact that it looks like they’ve bought all of their fabrics from Shepherd’s Bush Market. And I think they’ve done well in not using that much denim anymore, once you’ve gone there you’re in a pit that’s hard to dig yourself out of.

2: But at the same time everybody’s still wearing it. Although it’s true, it’s hard to get away from that reference. If you’re wearing a piece of frayed denim there will always be someone going ”ah, Marques!”

3: I would hate to intern there though. Day in and day out with all that fraying?

2: I think the fraying’s been done with a machine. Wave and say hi to 2015!

1: I’d say it has some Ann Demeulemeester over it. The hair, the make-up, the style. Ann-Demeulemeester going a bit more crazy, with a touch of Valentino.

2: I’d definitely say there’s some Belgian influence in it. It also felt a bit more humble than usual, they even played ”Thank you for your love” by Anthony and the Johnsons after the show.

3: I’m not that sure about Valentino, in that case you could say any designer that’s ever done a tool dress.

5: I don’t know enough to make any comments. Literally I don’t think I’ve seen this many garments at once as I’ve seen in my whole life.

1: Well, if the first looks were about leaving one tissue in your laundry, this is me when I have the flu.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_fashion_week_ss16_Marques Almeida

The post Fashion Week through the eyes of Central Saint Martins students appeared first on 1 Granary.

Craig Barnes, the man who owns a spaceship house

$
0
0

The Futuro House is perhaps one of the most poignant incarnations of the utopian spirit of the 60’s and 70’s and its downfalls. Conceived as a ski cabin, it embodies a time where technological advancements seemed to have promised a future of leisure and economical prosperity. However, it was hated by the public, and most of the units were destroyed. Artist and CSM alumni Craig Barnes bought and renovated one of the few remaining houses, and set it up first at Matt’s Gallery, and now on top of Central Saint Martins. In our definitely less optimistic times, we met him inside the Futuro House to talk about his relationship with it.

“If you stay in the same place time after time, year after year, you are what you are and you don’t question it.”

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_027
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_025

You were a student at CSM, how does it feel to be back?

I was entirely at Charing Cross, so geographically and physically this is odd. Because I know a number of the individuals, I know the sense of the institution, but everything is different.

Does it still feel like the same university when you’ve never experienced the new building in your school years?

Yeah it does. Initially, it felt very alien. Four years ago, when I came to see the first end of year shows, I really didn’t want to hate it, but I hated it. It felt like a badly transplanted organ. But you need to spend a bit of time getting under the skin of any big complex thing. There’s been a really concerted effort to try and identify what the details that make up Central Saint Martins are, because you have to, in order to inhabit this space. You have to go, ‘well, what are we?’ There is that level of questioning. If you stay in the same place time after time, year after year, you are what you are and you don’t question it. So yeah, I do like it here.

Let’s talk about the house itself. How did your fascination with it start? Where does your interest in this piece of architecture come from?

This is something I saw from a very small age. My parents originate from South Africa and we would go there to visit my extended family. There was a spaceship house in the small seaside town in which we would gather. Every time we would go, we would say ‘can we see the spaceship house?’ It was a private house on a quiet residential backstreet. You couldn’t go into it, you couldn’t go up to it. So it has been ingrained in my mind from when I was three years old.

Then there is my adult fascination with small scale architecture, modular systems and how an object embodies faded ideals or spirits. I’m interested in the romantic beauty of this spaceship. It looks very shiny now, but I’ve tried to make it timeless. There are subtle things I’ve done in the restoration process where I have not wanted it to exist as a historical artefact. There is a discussion to be had around what is it that drove the creation of this in a certain time and era, and how we can reflect upon that or harness some of the spirit in the here and now.

“I haven’t spent the night in it. I think that one might go mad quite quickly.”

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_021
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_007

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_019

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_010
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_011

What do you think is the type of spirit that created this house?

It is a sense of optimism and possibility. Although it was built by an architect working with a plastics firm, for me, it is an amazing piece of art. It wasn’t successful as a product, but it was one belligerently seen through until the end. In many respects it didn’t work, but it also did because it encapsulated something of that time. But I like it not being too rooted in a specific era. There are associations with that aesthetic, but there are elements that are very contemporary. I hope it can be used as a vehicle for starting back up a way of thinking. Some kind of optimism about a sense of possibility, about being able to do things.

I am interested by the fact that you keep calling it a spaceship, because it was conceived during an era where space exploration really represented a utopian tomorrow. And now space exploration seems to come back in the conversation. Are you excited by this return?

Yeah, but also terrified at the same time. We just discovered water on Mars, but no one seems worried about the excess of melting water on the planet we inhabit now. I think that it is one of these things where we, as mankind, defined ourselves, conquering new worlds, especially in the era from which this house originated. For various reasons we didn’t continue that journey. In the beginning there was that sense that we just needed to do it to prove we could. I think that the reality of the world today is that we’re not necessarily looking at the possibilities of space with quite such an optimistic outlook. It’s a very different world we find ourselves in, 40 years down the line.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_018

It’s quite a pessimistic world right now, whereas this was built to be a leisure house, it’s such an optimistic object.

I can talk about the utopian ideals of this until the cows come home, but actually it’s an incredibly impractical and uneconomical way to live. It’s almost like the myopic vision of one person. The man who built this wasn’t even interested in the cultural tide of the time. He was interested in mathematics. He went to his grave almost annoyed that it was coopted in this cultural movement, this plastic space age utopianism. For him, all he was interested in, is that you can draw a mathematical formula for this house. It’s twice as wide as it is high, and whenever possible, as much as possible, that shape is repeated throughout it. For him that was it: it’s a mathematical shape. And there is something more poetic in the simple beauty of that outlook. It’s the pursuit of an ideal, and if that ideal is mathematical perfection as architecture, this is what you get. Maybe more mathematicians should build buildings.

What are the concrete benefits students can get from having a structure like this within the school?

I have worked with the university to devise three ways in which the space can be used. Students and staff can write a proposal that responds to the protocols created for it. If it is hitting the right touchstones, then your student thing can happen in here. Then there’s a slightly broader curatorial possibility where applications can be submitted through the college for exhibitions, performances and events. And then the college is inviting the outside world to come and use it as they might imagine it be used for them.  At that point it starts becoming commercial. I want it to be of use for all and sundry. Also all the rules are different here, it is not somewhere where you can hang a painting, or just plug into an overhead projector. I think that’s the challenge and the excitement.

“The man who built this wasn’t even interested in the cultural tide of the time. He was interested in mathematics.”

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_003

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_spaceship_017

What interested you in opening this space to others?

On a selfish, personal level, I am very interested in the experience of space, and how anything that happens in here is affected by the space. Because it’s not like anything else that is commonly accessible. Whether we’re conscious of it or not, one’s experience of space on a daily and hourly basis affects how we think about the world, our moods, how we react to others.

My sort of underpinning idea is quite basic, it is to enable people to have access to this, and for me to take a step back and see what that does. I think for me the best projects are when you set up a scenario and you see what happens. It’s just letting things take their course. And we’ll see what comes back in a year’s time.

Have you lived in it?

No.

Would you try?

Yeah, absolutely. Maybe we should do a residency here. Maybe I should be the first resident. But then, I haven’t spent the night in it. I think that one might go mad quite quickly.

Words by Alexandre Saden

Photography by Oliver Vanes for 1 Granary

The post Craig Barnes, the man who owns a spaceship house appeared first on 1 Granary.

Inside the Central Saint Martins Fashion Textiles Studios

$
0
0
There is one area of the fashion studios that is slightly shrouded in an air of secrecy: the fashion textiles studios. Tucked away in the back of Central Saint Martins, it is the birthplace of self-made fabrics. We decided to wander around the place where looms seem to be in constant motion, and captured some of the best works-in-progress.

Photography by Oliver Vanes for 1 Granary

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_0231granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_003
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_024 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_004
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_025
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_006 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_010
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_002 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_016
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_005
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_019 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_018
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_020 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_013
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_022
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_0071granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_012
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_0111granary_csm_central_saint_martins_knitwear_studios_014

Featured students:

Eleanor Henson BA Textile Design 3rd year

Sheetal Shah BA Textile Design  3rd year

Finally O’Keeffe Textile Design 3rd year

Shanelle Park BA Textile Design 1st year

Sally Cheung BA Textile Design 2nd year

The post Inside the Central Saint Martins Fashion Textiles Studios appeared first on 1 Granary.

Who Will Make The Cut? Exploring a CSM Womenswear project.

$
0
0

After three weeks of intense pattern making, draping and sewing, the Cutting Project came to an end and it was time for the crit. From researching 20th century designers, focusing on silhouettes and cutting techniques, the Womenswear students had to develop ten designs and more than a hundred drawings over the summer. The brief pronouncedly stated ”NO SURFACE DECORATIONS”, and the aim was clearly to have the students look at different ways of how to construct a garment. As the second years got back from their holidays, they were given a new mission: to create three different looks out of someone else’s summer project.

The students were split up in three groups and were handed three sketches which varied widely in style, cut and shape. On the day of the crit, 120 fitted mannequins were cramped up in the Womenswear studios together with 40 pieces of dark-eyed, weary fashion students. As they presented their garments, the young enthusiasts displayed intricate constructions, tricky seams and successful solutions. They lifted up sleeves, moved around layers of stringy trousers and ruffled skirts, demonstratively waving and pointing in the air like a cry for help after the 48 hour insomnia they had just experienced. The skilled pattern cutters who had been following them during the project, was thoroughly inspecting their final achievements…

”So, this was the last thing you started up with. Am I right?”

Horace Page, Emma Louise Peer and Joël Quadri are three of the students who partook in this three week short cutting marathon.

What was the biggest challenge in this project?

Horace: Probably time frame. I mean, you work with other people’s designs, which you may not like. But that’s probably one of the best things about it as well. You basically need to be more driven and inventive in order to work within those restrictions. It definitely made me a lot faster, and it put some of our first year projects in a totally different light. Like, we had one month to make one garment in some cases. Sometimes when you have loads of time you just mess around, but end up doing the idea you had in first place anyway. It definitely teaches you to compromise your time and just do it.

Emma: The good thing about it was that we didn’t have any time to waste. There are other projects where we can research practically anything, and you end up walking around for several days not really knowing what to do, not getting anywhere. This was the complete opposite. We had to make, what was it? Like, seven garments in three weeks, which is more garments than I’ve made in my entire life. So, at the beginning it was very daunting. You just had to decide on what to do and just get on with it. The annoying thing, though, was that we weren’t able to create anything of a very good quality. The garments we made weren’t of enough standard to relate back to, since they were part of a learning process of cutting techniques we couldn’t entirely master. It wasn’t thorough enough. If we’ve had slightly more time, then maybe we could have perfected things, and be able to look back at what we did and learn more. It was an unbelievable amount of pressure, even for the people who felt comfortable in pattern cutting and making.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner10 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner11 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner6 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner9
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner5 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner12 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner7 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner8

Photography by Olivia Langner for 1 Granary

Model:Model: CSM student Ana Andrade wears Juliette Bro’s and Lisa Jiang’s designs, made by Alek Lassement, Samson Leung and Desiree Laidler

After having done an apprenticeship with a renowned tailor in Switzerland, Joël Quadri has several years of clothing craftsmanship tucked up in his sleeve. At the crit, fashion course director Heather Sproat commented on Joël’s work:

“You’ve gotten to the point where you can cut what you see. Now you need to be more ambitious with experimentation, and that doesn’t just mean hard work. You need to get there through frustration, sweat and pure exhaustion.”

Joël: I had to challenge myself a lot more on the creative side rather than from a technical point of view in this project. I definitely realised you still need to be creative even when you’re just making a pattern or a toile, and in how you choose to interpret the design you’re given. I struggled a lot with a big coat I had to make. The drawing was not very detailed, and quite vague, which left a lot of space for me to fill in. It was also hard to judge how much time you could balance out between the more experimental part of it and the final garments. Sometimes you will need more time to work very roughly to achieve a better toile. You need to drape and sculpt, instead of spending a lot of effort to create a flat pattern. I think I got better at making desicions and being a lot more pragmatic.

Emma: I gained so much confidence from this. It was probably the first time I ever drew a flat curve and went ”ok, let’s try this on a stand and see what happens.” The tutors were constantly telling us ”just sculpt, just cover something up with material, just get on with it”, which I think was really healthy for me. Before, I was thinking about patterncutting in a more mathematical way. Always measuring, always making sure I was looking back in all the textbooks. If you’re insisting on always working with two-dimensional patterns, you’ll eventually get stuck.

So, you’re receiving an education renowned for its creative agenda, and get stuck creating someone else’s design. How is this project relevant for an art course?

Emma: It’s quite tough to be at an institution where you’re pushed to be as creative as you possibly can, in everything you do, and have someone tell you that you will be producing someone else’s work within a limit of three weeks. It allows no room for your own creative space, you know. So, it’s like getting back into A-levels. Like actual education, where you’re instructed to mimic a task someone else is practising. It was the same thing with the research part of this project, which challenged everything they’ve ever taught us before! We’re constantly told to develop our own unique ideas as far as we possibly can, and avoid to collect inspiration from what other designers are doing. I’m glad I stuck with it though, I really learned a lot, and having done it, it’s been really useful. But for me, personally, I think it was kind of creatively destructive since you really had to remove yourself from it. I think this was a wake up call for me, since I’m not really sure I want to go into fashion design. I decided at one point that I would actually rather clean toilets than do pattern cutting and sewing, haha.

Joël: It’s a course full of contradictions, even coming from the same person. They contradict themselves so many times. So yes, in terms of inspiration, this is a really dry project. And the fact that you have to produce other people’s garments doesn’t really help. It’s a bit tricky since we weren’t really encouraged to have a dialogue with the designer about the design, as the project was about your ability to create solutions derived from your own initiatives. You don’t know the design, you don’t know the person, you don’t know what they want, or what they’re after. But as a cutter, you still need to have some taste – good taste is a must to become a skilled cutter. That’s what the training is all about.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner_crit5 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner_crit2 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner_crit4
1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner_crit3 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner_crit1 1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_2nd_year_cutting_project_olivia_langner_crit8

Photography by Olivia Langner for 1 Granary
1granary_2ndyearwomenswear_cutting7 1granary_2ndyearwomenswear_cutting41granary_2ndyearwomenswear_cutting9 1granary_2ndyearwomenswear_cutting21granary_2ndyearwomenswear_cutting6 1granary_2ndyearwomenswear_cutting1

Crit photography by Anna Nicole Ziesche

The future career many of the current fashion students have in sight, is probably one that only a small percentage of them will be able to accomplish. While fashion courses are already overcrowded, the business grows even more competitive. When counting over 8.000 fashion design graduates in the UK each year, the industry won’t possibly be able to provide designer employments to each and every indebted hatchling escaping their nests. While many are forced to put their dreams on hold, working as a pattern constructor in a company could be a good alternative to gain real life experience from working in fashion. What in college is sometimes overlooked as something you’d normally leave to the technicians, could after graduation be a one-way ticket into the industry and a good opportunity to nurture your skills.

Horace: I really think this is a good practice since it’s one of the only slight realistic projects that we’ll probably have during the course. After graduation a lot of people will be doing this for a while. You’ll be given a sketch, someone will go ”ok, finish this”, and then you will have to solve it by any means possible.

Emma: I always think the fact of how much they expect from us on this course is quite amazing. We have to be able to draw, we have to be able to patterncut, we have to be able to sow, we have to be able to think about ideas, to do sketchbooks and research. We have to find fabrics, be aware of textiles and do fabric manipulations. I don’t think that anyone comes into this course particularly good at everything. People have areas where they’re definitely better. It’s obviously beneficial to have many different skills, and you will certainly have a better understanding of fashion if you’re aware of the many different sides to it. But at the same time, it’s a lot to expect from a single person, while you won’t even do all of these things when entering the industry.

Joël: I think this really teaches you how to compromise with your dreams and your skills, and that is something you’ll need to get used to. It’s always a fight between these two things. What you would like to achieve, with the time, the money, and the skills. You can have an image of where you’d like to be in the future, but if you don’t have any of the means to do any of these things yourself, you won’t go very far.

Words by Matilda Söderberg

The post Who Will Make The Cut? Exploring a CSM Womenswear project. appeared first on 1 Granary.

Rumoured: CSM students don’t want to work for big luxury houses anymore.

$
0
0

London is cold now, there is no doubt about it. You can see your breath when exhaling and Tesco is offering meal deals on mince pies. For students in their final year, the thought of the oncoming holiday doesn’t bring just cheer. Looming dissertation deadlines and the final collection are all formidable factors leading up to graduation. Life outside the concrete fortress that has sheltered us from the real world is now fast approaching. Four years have flown by, and now students are beginning to wonder what happens next? The placement year that most people unquestionably take, offers a taste of the so-called real world, but provides the safety net of University life to fall back on in just 12 short months. There is one question in particular that has been circulating around Central Saint Martins, and that is: are graduating students reluctant to work in big fashion houses? To answer these pressing questions, we interviewed several students about their placement year and more importantly: their future careers in the fashion industry.

Our first interviewee, dressed in a powder-blue and white striped shirt, tucked into matching trousers with a recognizably sleek black bob and fringe, was Carmen Chan. As a final year student in Fashion Print, she has recently returned to CSM from her year out, during which she worked at Lanvin (pre Alber leaving).  

1G: How did you find working at Lanvin during your placement year?

CC: It was really good, I learned loads. But I didn’t do clothes at Lanvin, I was doing art direction. I didn’t know what the fuck art direction was, but it was really great. It was lots of random things. It is basically everything that has to do with fashion, just not clothes. Like styling, spaces, campaigns, press drawings, show lighting, show food. It is the lifestyle. I did everything.

Is art direction at Lanvin something you’d potentially want to go back to?

Yes, for sure. I didn’t know it existed. I thought fashion was clothes. I enjoy sewing; I just didn’t know there was so much more. But after those six months, I actually did clothes; I worked for Ashish in London. Lanvin is quite bourgeois and Ashish was different. It was nice to work at the polar opposites.

What type of brand can you see yourself working at in the future?

I don’t know, I am quite adaptable, which is a good quality. I just want to be happy. Whatever that means.

What is your opinion on the fact that students are saying they do not want to work at high fashion brands?

I don’t know. That’s a bit of a generalization. I have a lot of friends who still want to work at big brands. I think people want to go there because they want a paycheck. But at the same time, people want to start their own thing. It’s just a bit stressful: pre-collection, main collection and couture, it is never ending. I’m sure you can say the same thing about every profession. My parents always say: once you start working, you literally don’t stop until you retire. It’s true. This is maybe why people do not want to go into high fashion brands, because the pace is very fast. If you want a chill life, it’s not the place to be.

What are you working on now to prepare for the final collection and graduation?

We are just doing the pre-collection now, building up to the final collection at the end of the year. But it is not life and death, like some people think. A lot of people put so much pressure on themselves to get into the Press Show, but you know, when we are forty and have a mortgage to pay off, we aren’t going to be like ‘Damn-it, the press show, I didn’t get in. That ruined my life.’ It’s not going to be like that.  I’m just spending time with my classmates and friends, God knows where we are going to be next year, and that makes me so sad. We may not even be in the same country! 

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_luxury_houses_students7

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_luxury_houses_students4

Working alongside Chan at Lanvin in Paris was the Argentinian Fashion Print student, Santiago Garcia Trias. With his smart black turtleneck and small gold earring, Santiago began telling us about his goals for the short term and long term future.

1G: You worked at Lanvin last year during your placement, how did you find it?

ST: Yes, I was working at Lanvin, and previous to that I worked at Alexander McQueen and Craig Green. It was very cool to go to Paris, because it is completely different. I didn’t know French at the time, so it was very hard at the beginning.

Do you have any idea about what you want to do after graduation?

That’s a good question, and I am still trying to figure that out. I think I am going to apply to the MA. In the future, I would like to have my own brand. I think the MA is cool, because it gives you the chance to find a strong identity. I think I am not ready just after the BA to jump in and create my own brand.

Would you want to work here in London after the MA?

Yes I think so; for me as an international student everything is more expensive. But related to the opportunities, I think London has many, and I know a lot of people. When I was working here, I got the chance to meet lots of people in factories, and through my internships I now have contacts. Starting my own company is very tough and very risky, but I came from so far away, that I would like to take the risk and see what happens.

What is your take on why students are veering away from careers at high fashion brands?

That’s funny, because after I worked at different luxury companies, I realized that I am more interested in the smaller ones. The main reason is that when you start working at the massive companies, you are just a tiny tiny part of the whole system. I feel that when you work closely with a small company, like I did at Craig Green, you get so much more out of the experience. It’s like an intensive course of everything. If I have to work for some period, I will try to choose an emerging company. But like I said, I want to start my own brand. Being close to a designer gave me the chance to understand how everything works. I tried other things, but I liked this. It takes such a long time to arrive anywhere in a luxury company, because you have all these people working there for like 20 years. It is a different way. I have also realized that the small emerging companies have such big talent. They have these new ideas that luxury houses are actually searching for, at the end of the day. That is why, you know, in the case of J.W. Anderson: LVMH wanted it.

Another Fashion Print student, Paula Canovas Del Vas, speaking softly and in a melodic accent, had much to say on the subject of future careers.

1G: What do you plan to do once you graduate? And would you say your internships helped you choose what career you would potentially want?

PcdV: I don’t really have a plan. When I picked my internships I wasn’t really looking for a future job, but for the experience. I worked for Gucci, which is a quite corporate environment, and then I had an internship at Margiela, which is still big but less corporate. I then worked for Ashish, which is a smaller London-based brand where you have loads of responsibilities. They all gave me different experiences, and that was really what I intended to gain when I went on my year out. It’s the same now, I don’t think there is a point for me to be like ‘oh I want to work there’ or ‘I want to do that.’ I would never create my collection just to please a certain company, in order for them to hire me once I do graduate.

Are there certain brands you are more inclined to work at?

There are brands I feel more related to. Some aesthetically, and some in terms of sustainable environment. To be honest with you, when I was preparing my year out, I had certain internships set, but in the end everything changed because I got another offer. It is all kind of more organic, and in this industry there is no point to think so far out, because you don’t really know. We will see what happens.

What is your opinion on why students may not want to work at luxury brands anymore?

When you work for a smaller company, you have more responsibility, but in my case I thought it was extremely interesting to see how a more corporate company works. So I would advise people to go work for big companies, because you do learn a lot about the inner structure of brands. But there is no right or wrong, I would never tell anyone ‘oh don’t go there,’ because everyone has completely different experiences. I interned with friends at the same brands and if you ask both of us, we’d have completely different takes on it. So I think you just have to go for it, you never know. I, for one, never wanted to work at a corporate brand, but felt very good at Gucci.

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_luxury_houses_students6

1granary_csm_central_saint_martins_luxury_houses_students8

To gain more insight on this new epidemic of students enjoying the smaller, more intimate companies, we chatted with Maria Nishio to see if this rumor held some form of truth.

1G: As a tutor, can you tell us what the general consensus of students is, as they come close to graduation?

MN: I cannot speak for everybody, but I think there are less and less students wanting to go to luxury brands directly afterwards. They are still not sure what they are trying to do. So they are taking their time to make their decisions. I think it is totally healthy to have that mindset, because everyone’s values are changing so much. That’s how I felt after I did my internship at Vogue in Tokyo. I admired Vogue so much, but when I worked there, I just could not believe how intense the whole experience was. I decided to go to a Monastery for three weeks to see what level of happiness you can have. Because at Vogue you have so much material, but you are never happy. You are always looking for something new. Whereas if you go to a Monastery, they only have two robes in their whole life, yet they are the happiest people. That’s when I started looking into the value of happiness.

Do you think students are more inclined to look for a job based on where they did their placements?

I think generally if you have a good experience at the big companies, you feel happy to go back. But sadly not everyone has a great experience. We also have to be open about the big labels taking advantage of young designers, so while wanting to work for that label, they end up working really crazy hours.

As Santiago said, within bigger companies it is harder to climb the ladder, is that one of the reasons why students are more open to go to smaller labels?

Yes, but also you have to think about why you want to be in that position. If you have that as your goal, I think it is perfectly fine. But if you are going there just because it is considered a successful company, it is different. It depends on what you want to get out of it. 

The chatty and tall Andrew Totah from womenswear was our next subject. Just back from a two year placement, during which he helped set up a new womenswear label, and was voluntarily stranded on a deserted island for a period of time.

1G: Did the placement year help you decide on a future career?

AT: It gave me a lot of perspective. I grew tired of working in the industry, kind of. You know, taking a step back during my travels made me realize I want to do something a bit more sustainable and community orientated. Is working in high-end fashion and couture gratifying? No, not gratifying enough, in a way. You kind of eat shit to get somewhere, but then you realize you actually had other options, and you’re like ‘fuck this!’ But it depends, really, on what happens after final year. You never know what opportunities will come up. I may say one thing, and someone might offer me a cool collaboration and I might be like, ‘fuck yeah, let’s do it.’

What do you see yourself doing after graduation?

I want to go to South Africa and maybe collaborate with people outside of fashion. I hope to do something sustainable with the community, it could be fashion orientated. It would not be high-end fashion; it would be much more about the people I am working with, than the actual final products. But then again, it might all go to shit, depending on what happens at the end, if I get into the Press Show or if I do a good collection. You never really know.

What are your thoughts on whether or not students are more inclined to work at smaller fashion brands?

I think it is a real mix today, but if you look at when I started school, you would never hear such talk between students. It is much more open. This seems to be a general sensation going through the industry, it is a ripple effect going directly to the students. Generally, I think that students kind of feel less obligated to end up in high fashion, you know, before it was like you couldn’t say no, but now people have a bit more strength to go in a different direction. 

1granary_andrew_totah

Luxury brands and emerging labels are both alluring for very different reasons. Big labels can offer you a view into the corporate world, and possibly a good paycheck. Smaller brands give you more responsibility straight off the bat. It is all based on your values and what your personal goals are. Whether you want to be one of thousands working on a specified job, or one of a select few working on every aspect of the collection. Ultimately it all goes back to what Chan and Nishio both said: we all just want to be happy.

Words by Misha Skelly

Photography by Giovanni Corabi for 1 Granary 

The post Rumoured: CSM students don’t want to work for big luxury houses anymore. appeared first on 1 Granary.

Viewing all 93 articles
Browse latest View live