A Cold Kick Start For Budding Fashion Designers
It’s not easy for
budding fashion designers to get a good start from the blocks. With so much
talent around you have to run many laps before you hit the finish line. But
then you have to start the race all over again, every season. It’s a bit like
kick starting a Triumph Bonneville on a cold morning. Perhaps these old
machines were not so functional but certainly poetry in motion, even at a stand
still. Inspiration can come from anywhere at any time, be prepared.
All you budding
designers get hold of a triumph photograph and pin it on your studio wall. It
will be a constant source of inspiration as you delve deeper into its
mechanics. This machine encapsulates all the elements of good design, in
principle, proportionately perfect, mathematically correct. Shapes will emerge
and you begin to hinge onto an almost forgotten era. Wretchedly poor workers
stooped on cold factory floors. While the middle classes clung like barnacles
to their own self importance as the light began to dwindle on class
distinction.
Bowler hats,
swank cufflinks, three piece suits, drab silk ties. Everything seemed to mirror
the bleakness of an industrial revolution drawing to a close. When designer
brands seemed as futuristic as putting a man on the moon and fashion
accessories for men never heard of. And then came the Beatles and things were
never the same.
Mimicking other
designers will only weaken your own creativity. If all the trend setters go east,
then you go west. It worked for Vivienne Westwood. There’s enough inspiration
in a single triumph to create a whole wardrobe of styles, from working to upper
class. And even the brand name is their, Bonneville or variations of, it sounds
a little Scottish. So you could throw in some tartan. Bring back the flat cap
and caw blimey trousers. All you have to do is delve deeply into its mechanics,
which will reveal an era of unique styles
Here is an
interesting anecdote from that era: 1969Nutters
of Savile Row opens on Valentine's Day and unleashes the Tommy Nutter/Edward
Sexton style on swinging London. Backed by Cilla Black and The Beatles' record company Apple's
executive Peter Brown, Nutters of Savile Row dresses the entire social spectrum
from the Duke of Bedford and Lord Montagu to Mick and Bianca Jagger and The
Beatles. Nutters is the first shop on Savile Row to pioneer 'open windows' and
wild displays executed by Simon Doonan. Mount Street bespoke tailor to the stars Douglas Hayward dresses Michael Caine
in the infamous gangster caper The Italian Job. Caine's skinny suits and
tone-on-tone white shirt and tie combinations set a cocky, sharp tailored style
that resonates today.
To dampen your
enthusiasm: Fashion is business so if you don’t have business acumen amongst
your skill set, then find someone who does. Otherwise you’ll jut be another
little sapling struggling for light amongst all the tall trees
It’s easy for us
to talk up these subjects, but we’re kind of talking from experience, because
we’re at the front end of retail, online shopping, and provide an avenue for
budding designers as well as a few big names like Westwood , Everest and
Flaherty.
If you want to
be part of it you know where to find us.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Purveyor of finely crafted men's fashion
accessories: designer silk ties, handmade silver cufflinks & leather wallets,
by British Designers, like, Vivienne Westwood, Timothy Everest, Ian Flaherty, Veritas
Gifts, LBB London and Victoria Richards, Patrick McMurray and Shane McCoubrey
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