Paradoxes of Mastery: Nao Serati codifies a design expression of complexity and effortlessness

When I think of the sheer dynamism that it takes to evolve a fashion label authentically in accordance with its designer’s own evolution – I think of Neo Serati Mofammere’s brand, Nao Serati. With a slight alteration to his birth name, Neo becomes Nao – and within this landscape of a ‘brand’, or rather a artistic enclave,  Neo shapes a world in which he can seek continual creative solace – and hurdles – exhuming his creative viewpoint from all the known and unknown crevices that such creative energy lays in wait, for us to take it up and channel it towards its rightful place.

Nao Serati’s origin year is often written as 2014 – but as Neo tells me, he feels its actual origin is perhaps a few years later. Another fact often attached to Nao Serati is the term ‘athleisure’ – a realm in which Neo’s initial design dexterity first appeared – the functionality and boundary-dissolving aspects of this category, later used as formidable assets for Neo’s ascent as one of the most indelible garment constructors that I have seen in some time. This is where the dynamism comes in; for Neo, it’s not about shedding an ‘athleisure’ tagline – rather, it’s about taking those formative codes, and applying them to his present, changing viewpoint. I’m talking pieces that instantly strike one as arising from complex patterns – cut-outs, collaged fabric, oversized and billowing sleeves, the symmetry of those seams – and yet, in its final form, every Nao Serati piece is effortless. To strike at the heart of effortless and complex, from a design viewpoint, is the route to mastery. To me, a mastery that Neo is fast approaching.

“I must admit, 2014 is probably when I was in third year – so I was a bit too ambitious, maybe, but the concept for Nao Serati had definitely been born by then, at least – I was entering competitions then, I think. It’s probably only a few years later that the brand became a fully-fledged business. I went to art school, and after I was finished – I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do. We had fashion shows at the school, and it was one of the experiences I loved the most about art school. Around that time, 2011 and 2012, was a really exciting time for fashion – I think what we are experiencing now in fashion in the country, it’s important to remember it was seeding during those years.” Neo says in our conversation – and I ask him what his perspective has been, seeing fashion shift from a decade ago to where it is now, “I think our world has become much smaller. There is more within reach and closer to us than ever before – so many designers we know and have access to have gone overseas, and done amazing things internationally, and it’s made the world seem so much closer. Your customer isn’t just in South Africa, they’re everywhere. The South African fashion industry is still a very small environment, but I think everyone is excited to learn new things – I’m seeing a beautiful synergy among older and newer designers, all pursuing new ways of designing and selling. Thula Sindi has a store now – those things are possible.” 

Neo is that unusual fashion force for which styling and design are pathways of mutual experience; you will find his garments moving, and his styling work breathtaking – this is rare. In this year’s summer of Dazed Magazine’s quarterly print – Volume V – Neo was the stylist behind ‘The Law of Desire’, a poignant essay-meets-interview on Desire Marea; singer, sangoma and visionary. The spread, written by Nkgopoleng Moloi with vivid images shot by Tatenda Chidora – Neo’s styling suffused his own brand with Prada, Thebe Magugu – YSL – and all in conveying the richness and texture of Desire’s story. Reflecting on this moment, Neo says “That specific shoot was an important one for me. I was at school with Desiree, and we’d always sit and edit out our school uniforms – it was an incredible moment of affirmation of who I had decided to become, and for both of us, actually. Being able to do that with a close friend – it was an exceptionally full circle moment. I also think seeing it in print – a rare format, these days – made the work so alive and special in the world.”  

Another full circle for Neo has emerged in the form of a collaboration with Reebok – released in October, and as a celebration of South African Pride Month. In this way, the codes of athleisure are always on hand – and pulling up codes of formative years for later year’s work, exemplify Neo’s ability to channel the Nao Serati lens in multiple ways. On this, he says “Just as I was about to sort of quit fashion – Reebok called me and were like, ‘hey, do you feel like doing a little thing?’. This was before COVID happened, and we ended up working on it throughout the pandemic. I think this was a collaboration I needed, especially for my confidence and a hug of recognition. When you run a small business, it’s easy to forget the world – or to really know who sees you and appreciates you – the daily routine of staying afloat. It was never really my goal, but working with Reebok on a global level, brought a new framework for how I can go forward seeing the brand exist.” I ask Neo about his current perspective on the fashion industry right now and his role in it, “Everybody that’s ever tried to intern for me, I’ve been clear that I don’t take interns – it’s not how I work – but I will definitely become friends with you, and have a coffee with you and share the things I’ve learned. I think because I feel like I am still learning, I’m not ready to sit down and say ‘here’s a handbook’ on how to do it.” As for the future of our industry, Neo says “We need more fashion professionals. We need people to take fashion as a part of their career – we need fabric developers, technicians, journalists – we have so much room in South Africa and Africa. The more the merrier. We also can’t all be good at the same thing. A friend of mine was saying that they work in the embroidery department at a big fashion brand – I’m like, is there a whole department dedicated to embroidery? That’s how nuanced the roles can become in this industry.”

Nao Serati doesn’t follow seasons or a collection schedule – one of the freedoms that Neo has given himself, a timeline in which work happens as it comes; a collection will take place, he says, as a way to solidify the ever-evolving vision of the label. I know, no matter what it is, that it will deeply assert Neo’s journey towards wonderful things – and secretly I hope that he will never quit fashion. At least not for a long time.

Written By Holly Bell Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Pinterest, Moodboards & The Spell of Curated Lifestyles

It happens like clock-work in the evening – after a long day of work, I try to envision a myriad of ways to detach from being online, to put the ‘screen’ far out of reach and try to be fully present, or fully a person. Convincing myself that I am not enslaved to my phone – that I really live in this world, that maybe I could finish all those books I have begun and discarded – for lack of attention. Yet, every evening, I find myself, at some point,  scrolling endlessly through Pinterest, Instagram and TikTok – oscillating and switching between these three apps, drinking in with a bizarre kind of sensory-dehydration; images, reels and videos of who I wish I was, the way I wish that I looked; the moments that I wished I had experienced. As a self-confessed accomplice in the entirely, and eerily new, landscape of social media presence; there is rarely a ‘story’ or a static post (which I only post once every few months, possibly to maintain a sense of ‘nonchalance’ over my grid) that I have not considered.or My overarching thought process when posting, is always to maintain the version of myself that  I want others to see – whether subconscious or conscious. Social media, and digitally curated lifestyles, are the perfect veneer between who we want to be, and who we really are. I think the truth is somewhere in between. 

I have been thinking a lot about this lately – the role social media plays in my existence, and in all our lives. The way it is shaping the experience of ‘reality’ – which is no longer a fixed, single point maintained in the physical world. Rather, there are multiple, possibly infinite, realities taking place online; and the paradox of this all is the absolute joy that can be found online, and the horror too. 

In an incredible piece on Vogue.com by Clementine Pendergast, she analyses the Netflix docudrama The Social Dilemma, saying,The film argues that social media is highly addictive and manipulatively designed based on what’s called an attention-extraction model to control our behaviour and keep us scrolling and wanting more. In doing so, it exploits our human desire for the connection to and validation of others, giving us a dopamine hit every time we get a like or reply without ever actually fulfilling our deep human needs. This can lead, as the documentary argues, to a whole host of negative emotions, which drive us back to social media for that quick fix. As argued by the film’s protagonist Tristan Harris, a former Google design ethicist and founder of the Centre for Humane Technology, this is a huge danger to our mental well-being—and it is only going to increase due to the lack of regulation in place for these companies.” These words clarify my feelings entirely; the guilt I feel when I ‘come to’ and realise it’s been two hours, and I have just binged intensely at the altar of curated lifestyles; the clothing, styling – the shoes – the meals, or clips of curated dinner parties – even the regenerative homesteaders escaping society; I pour over their chickens laying eggs or pruning their garden; because somewhere, deep inside of me, the beautiful life I have doesn’t quite feel like enough. I could always have more – more of the ‘things’ I want, the wardrobe I need to ‘express myself’ – the experiences or travels, or organising perfectly- there is a niche for every flavour of the void that I have inside of me. This harsh truth is one we must all face; and those who have been in therapy, or recovery, might know it intimately; nothing external can fix or heal our internal state of being. In an age of uncertainty and globalisation, how can it be that we are more connected than ever, yet perhaps more disconnected than ever? Are human beings meant to process information on the grand scale that we are required to, today? 

 

Recently, I heard about ‘BeReal’ a French social media launched in 2020 as a kind of antidote to the problem of curation – I understand its purpose in theory, but I can’t help but think how bizarrely contrived it is to attempt to solve a social media phenomenon with another social media app. We know we are going about relatively normal days and moments – do we need apps to prove this?  There’s an app for everything you can imagine – a kind of digital dystopia that our grandparents’ generation could never have fathomed. In and amongst it all, beauty standards and expectations might be more perpetuated today; and yet, there is a sense of openness and choice, too. At one time, not so long ago, the very coded scripting enshrined in magazines and on TV were our only sources of navigation in this world – now, there’s an online niche, on any app, for almost any person or interest. On TikTok; The intersectional discourse girlies fight the fascist / conservative fools – the highly curated luxury girlies are tempered by the ‘dinner party club’ groups – Book-Tok is an incredible community of literary aficionados, and in between it all? Top-tier banter, from all over the world. It’s a smorgåsbord of live, laughter and love – in the most bizarre, insatiable doses. 

 

I’ve started walking in Newlands Forest as often as I can, taking my dog, Frankie, and the experience has elucidated just how normalised social media or digital content is; I had to train myself in the beginning not to have a podcast playing in my ears. That, actually, I can walk among the trees and be immersed in the world that IS – the natural world – and be a part of it. This is something I might have lost a long time ago, the idea that it’s okay to be present; that it’s safe – and it really started with my obsession with Tumblr every afternoon and evening as a teenager after school. Endless images to capture the zeal and angst and vivid colour of being a teenager! Two truths can exist simultaneously; these beautiful worlds of digital moodboards, collages of ‘self’ and designed self-expression, can be both immense sources of creative outlets – and they can also function as far-off and illusionary goals; a state of being we may never reach – our most perfect selves. The way I relate to the world, or perceive myself and others, doesn’t always have to be through a screen; a curated lens, or portrayal of longing that we all engage in. I argue that balance is the only way we might ever integrate the functional and fantastical ease of digital communication, to be complementary to our lives. 

Social media facilitates our need for connection, and offers endless information and inspiration – TikTok has proved to be the funniest, most ‘meta’ experience I’ve had outside of doing psychedelics – a reminder that we are just human beings, weirdly situated on a planet with no real certainty of anything, but that we are all here together. Reminding myself that my value and future doesn’t depend on any mood-board or pinned pair of Margiela Tabis – a girl can dream, and we as humans will always dream, no matter the format. Currently these dreams seem to take root as pixels, first. 

 

Written By Holly Bell Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Felix Laband releases second single ‘Snug Retreat’ ahead of his latest full length album, ‘The Soft White Hand’

Snug retreat is the second single taken from Felix Laband’s latest full length album “The Soft White Hand”. The track ventures into unusual territories for Laband, exploring the alternative pop sounds of bands such as The Cure and New Order to name a few. Music that had a deep influence on Laband during his teenage years in the late 80’s has been re-interpreted in the year 2022 resulting in the simple yet beautiful track “Snug Retreat”.

 Released by Munich-based Compost Records, the 14-track album is Laband’s first full-length offering since the critically acclaimed Deaf Safari in 2015. It is heralded by the single “Derek and Me”, and is being pressed on vinyl for distribution globally.

In The Soft White Hand Laband works with source materials that will be familiar to those who know his previous four records – Thin Shoes in June (2001), 4/4 Down the Stairs (2002), Dark Days Exit (2005) and especially Deaf Safari which reached deep into the South Africa scene and its political culture to inspire its vocal and music sampling. However, the disengagement he felt from his homeland during his latest album’s creation – an abiding sense of untethered-ness to place and space, exquisitely rendered in tracks like “Death of a Migrant” – is perceptible in Laband’s desire to illuminate instead aspects of his own life.

 “For this album, my source material became almost autobiographical as opposed to African statements I’ve worked with previously,” says the artist. “I have sampled a lot from documentaries from the 80s crack epidemic in impoverished African American communities and believe my work speaks unapologetically for the lost and marginalised, for those who are the forgotten casualties of the war on drugs. In the past, I have had my issues with substance abuse, and I know first-hand about the nightmares and fears, what it feels like to be isolated and abandoned.” 

 Few artists have managed to air these intimate aspects of their life so luminously as Laband does in tracks like “5 Seconds Ago”, “They Call Me Shorty” and in the strange and meditative “Dreams of Loneliness”. “I’ve been building this weird, autobiographical story using other people talking. It’s kind of humorous but it is also sad and beautiful,” says Laband.

Yet, as in all of Laband’s recorded output, the delineations between emotions are never starkly drawn and The Soft White Hand is also shot through with beauty. Nature appears in recordings made in his garden in the intimate early morning hours, whether as in the calls of the Hadada Ibis and other birdsong in “Prelude” or of the vertical-tail-cocking bird in “Derek and Me”. The last is a wonderful track with Derek Gripper, the South African experimental classical guitarist of international renown, whose 2020 song “Fanta and Felix” imagines a meeting between Fanta Sacko and Laband.

Laband’s eloquence in reinterpreting classical composers such as Beethoven in “We Know Major Tom’s a Junkie” is another thrilling aspect of the new record. “I’ve been properly exploring classical music on this album,” explains Laband, “taking melodies from classical compositions and reinterpreting them”.  A fresh quality comes to his work through this sonic adventuring: the tender manipulation of the mundaneness of the computer’s AI voice to reimagine and reinvent iconic lyrics and melodies in strange and unexpected configurations. The Soft White Hand is Laband’s most cohesive body of work to date. Yet it remains, in its sheer artistic scope, impossible to describe fully. Darkness abuts the gossamer light. A song that summons the sunrise and all the hope of a new day could also be about the final dipping down of the sun that portends a troubled night ahead. Interludes are invitations to expand outwards or shift inwards. Mistakes and “weird fuckups” in the sound are cherished as convincing statements against what Laband calls the “grossness” of perfect sound in modern music.

 For this world-leading electronic artist, the boundaries are unfixed. He is inspired by the German Dada artist, Hannah Höch, who memorably declared: “I wish to blur the firm boundaries which we self-certain people tend to delineate around all we can achieve.” His music consequently reflects a primal artistic impulse that is also visible in Laband’s considerable visual art output as seen recently in several solo exhibitions such as that held in the No End Gallery in Johannesburg in 2019 and in the works he produced during his 2018 Nirox Foundation Artists Residency. “My music is always about collage, as is my art,’’ he affirms. “Everything I do is collage. It is a medium I find very interesting because you are taking history and distorting it and changing its meaning and turning it upside down and back to front.” In her book Recollections of My Non-Existence, Rebecca Solnit calls collage “literally a border art”; it is “an art of what happens when two things confront each other or spill onto each other.”

With The Soft White Hand, Laband is confirming his singular ability to achieve this in both art and music, melting the divisions between the two creative disciplines until they become one. He is also affirming his belief that an album of music should be more than a collection of unrelated tracks, but should unfold a fully integrated, cohesive story as in the song cycles of the great classical composers. In doing so, he claims his position as one of the most significant artists working today. 

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

REFUSE Speaks Truth to Culture – alongside an exclusive release of their AW23 editorial

Luxury and streetwear are now fully integrated terms – and a full scale concept, executed more and more on the runway, both locally and internationally. Recently, SA Fashion Week returned with another standout showcase of the best designers and labels in the country – and this season, REFUSE Clothing brand, founded by Malcolm Mokgope and Minenhle Memela proved among stars of the week, winning the ‘Scouting Menswear 2022’ competition. As alumni of Durban University of Technology renowned Fashion & Textiles department – which I argue is one of the best fashion schools in the country – Malcolm and Minenhle are forces to be reckoned with in African sartorial story-telling through a contemporary lens. Post-DUT, the duo are heading towards scaling REFUSE in Joburg; and their vision for Zulu-enriched streetwear is set to form a critical part of our country’s immense ascent in fashion. We are incredibly honoured to share the first look at their winning AW23 collection, and with REFUSE archiving and creating culture simultaneously – I caught up with Malcolm to discuss the brand’s origin, winning the prize and what lies ahead. 

In Chapter 06 ‘The Ascent of Streetwear’ of Interlude – our monthly fashion column – I noted the mysterious nature of REFUSE, albeit incredibly intriguing, saying, “Refuse boasts some of the most intriguing and varied array of garments we have seen in a while – with an editorial and brand identity that is incredibly strong. The design nuances of their collections in the last few years have seen the brand drop suits, bags, shirts – alongside streetwear staples like tees and trackies. Their discreet brand story leaves the brand a mysterious enigma in the local scene – whatever the story is, it’s working overtime.” and it turns out, the mystery was the brand’s behind-the-scenes build up to this year’s AW23 at SA Fashion Week. I remember when writing Chapter 06, how distinctly REFUSE stood out as well-fabricated and constructed streetwear offering – now, with the knowledge that both Malcolm and Minenhle are trained designers emerging from DUT; this is not simply tees and hoodies territory- REFUSE is laying down a realm of accessible, luxury ready-to-wear conveyed through their viewpoint of streetwear. 

“Minenhle and I started seeding this idea in varsity, at DUT. During our first year, we each had our own brands – but it became clear that if we partnered, we could build something great. The name itself, ‘REFUSE’, is a play on what people view as trash. We started thrifting in varsity, but as a way to investigate garments – we would deconstruct them, open them up and see how we could apply our findings towards other garments. We like to challenge the notion of channelling trash to luxury – you know, taking the principles of perfectly great clothing that’s been thrown away, and elevating it. The name is a double-pun too – ‘REFUSE’ is also our statement against what society tells us we should be, or how we should be. We want our label to push originality.” Malcolm explains, and offers a sense of clarity around why REFUSE comes off, instantly, as an expression of streetwear that is technically advanced from a construction standpoint. Defining themselves distinctly as streetwear, REFUSE is honing on their set of design codes that invest in high quality – with the vision for Malcolm and Minenhle asserting itself alongside Palace, Daily Paper and Rhude. Regarding the label’s roots in KZN, Malcolm says, “The brand originates in Durban, but we are slowly moving the brand to Joburg. Durban is quite slow when it comes to fashion – and there’s nothing wrong with that, too – and so much of our viewpoint was enriched by Durban and KZN. I think where we see the brand heading – nationally and then internationally – we want REFUSE to be a South African brand as a whole, and not confined to one part of the country.”

Regarding perseverance – a key asset of any designer heading towards big things – REFUSE stunned at SA Fashion Week in late October, winning the ‘Scouting Menswear 2022’ competition. Interestingly, Malcolm tells me, this win comes at a major shift that he and Minenhle had to make – refining the label’s position and story-telling, “We entered the competition last year, and we didn’t win. I don’t like defeat – I take it as a challenge to do better, and get better. So we had to do it again. We fixed our loopholes and came back with a stronger story – we showed up much better prepared. Last year, we were very anxious – so this year, we came in with a renewed confidence, and I think the clothes really speak for themselves.” With a key focus on story-telling – a defining feature we are seeing of leading designers like Thebe Magugu, Wanda Lepotho and Lukhanyo Mdingi – REFUSE have spent the last year, leading up to this season, honing in on what they aim to communicate with their clothing, “When we went up this time around, we unpacked our culture in a really deep way. With REFUSE, we tell a KZN story – specifically Nguni, Zulu – so each garment represents a Zulu / Nguni story, and then the larger story of the collection. We wanted our culture to form the codes of the collection, and the theme of the competition was “sports” – this gave us a space to translate our cultural expression through a very functional, clean canvas of sports and utility dressing. Last year, we focused on sustainability in our collection as quite literal – this year, we showcased sustainability as ‘designing for the future’ – what about cultural and community sustainability?  With sustainability defined by long-lasting, quality fabrication.” 

 

The pieces themselves are reflective epitaphs from Malcolm and Minenhle to their ancestry and lineage – with knitwear developed to honour Zulu King, Cetshwayo – and another traditional knitwear, Ingwe, which is worn during events like weddings and gatherings, on this Malcolm says, “We wanted to see these aspects of our culture be able to exist in a contemporary, modern way. There’s another two pieces in the collection, featuring ancient Zulu Kings and Queens – and I made it abstract, so you wouldn’t be able to tell unless you knew. I also put us, our team behind REFUSE, into the print – to unify us with our lineages, as we are leading for the future like kings, too. During SA Fashion Week, we had an amazing response – with buyers talking to us about what the steps would be to get this to Paris and London.” With the brand seeing through a path from runway, to being stocked at Merchants on Long (luxury, South African design’s favourite home) – it feels like the journey is incredibly powerful and clear for Malcolm and Minenhle. South African sartorial consciousness & streetwear – soon to be seen as a jewel in the crown of African design, all over the world. REFUSE Clothing Brand reminds me why I return to fashion, again and again. 

 

Editorial Credits:

Creative Directors:

Minenhle Memela 

Malcolm Mokgope 

Art Director:

Minenhle Memela 

Lungelo Shezi 

Photographer:

Tatenda Chidora 

Videographer:

Emihle Dlamini

Styling:

Mfundo Memela 

Khanyi Mdletshe 

Makeup:

Aime Lekota 

Talent:

Onke Mpokeli 

Clifford Zulu 

Moshito 

Thami Ndlovu 

 

Written By Holly Bell Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Yndian Mynah drop ‘Gestalt’ – the last single leading up to the release of their much-anticipated album, “The Boys Scribbled Like Mad”

“Gestalt is a play on the idea of togetherness being more powerful than the individual. The feeling we get when we play, and write music together makes us feel part of something special and bigger than ourselves as individuals. The song is a play on American and British rock themes, from American intervals to brit-rock themes found in Stone Roses. The song is built on simple structures that everyone plays, but together sounds big and uniform. Adding the human element to an electronic structure as a nod to the original foundation of the theory in Gestalt teaching.”

Influenced by DIY culture, Yndian Mynah started off by playing tightly packed intimate floor shows and quickly elevated to festival stages across South Africa. In 2019, they released their debut album ‘Velvet Youth’ – recorded, produced and released through their own independent label, Mount Wave Studio. Singles from the album, including ‘Ridge Forrester’ , “Massimo, Don’t Go” and “Chai Tea”, would go on to represent their dynamic compositions. Staying away from conventional rock music, Yndian Mynah is not bound by language or genre, allowing for impressive high-energy live shows that focus on a visual and instrumental journey, left wide open for personal interpretation. Expect large guitar-driven songs led by spontaneous structural changes, with a tendency for heavy breakdowns and momentary euphoria.

Their highly anticipated record “The Boys Scribbled Like Mad” drops on 25 November – Pre orders for the limited-edition record go live 1st November at www.thegoodtimes.cc

Listen to ‘Gestalt’ HERE 

Yndian Mynah social Media Links: Facebook | Instagram 

Released by The Good Times Co

For more info contact [email protected] 

 

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

“Sophistication and Edge, An Image-Making Visionary”

What happens when your work is discovered by Oprah Winfrey, at just 16 years old? Well, if you’re Sivan Miller – you may find yourself, through a series of events stretched across many years, living in New York as one of fashion’s rising photographers. From the salty-air of Cape Town city, to the whirlwind of NYC – Sivan has shot covers and worked with people that many of us will only ever know or see through screens or in prints. Yet, as I come to find out in our conversation, Sivan’s journey to New York is a childhood dream come true (and that chance experience with Oprah, was an earlier signal that he only understood many years later) but not without the difficulty and determination it takes to emerge in a place in which everyone is wanting to ‘make it’. Now, with a formidable portfolio & a shifting stylistic approach – namely, the style seen in images such as those VETEMENTS images, among others – Sivan is a devotee of exceptional lighting; knowing intimately how to refract its power to yield some of the moodiest, and most incisive portrayals of fashion as subversion – the potent revival of a new kind of avant garde; cyber, kinetic, grunge and ephemerality all wrapped up in one. Sivan is the kind of photographer dedicated to the visual expression of smaller brands – emerging, intellectually and culturally subversive spaces and creatives – as he is the glitz and glamour of the Academy Awards, and on the day we speak – he is off to shoot for Harper’s Bazaar. One’s creative career is really for the taking – Sivan shows us that originality must come first.

“This was all before Instagram – before social media – before you could say taking photos was a normal, everyday part of life for people across the board. I was going out everyday, shooting  landscapes and sunsets, people here and there – and I was putting it on a free website, Flickr, which was really the very first platform online for creatives – before Tumblr, even. I was a teenager, so really there was no ambition behind it; it was just for pure enjoyment. One day I got an email from the Oprah team, they had seen one of my photos, and they wanted to use it in their magazine, and meet her for an interview. I remember sitting in front of the computer, frozen – I thought it was fake. I called my parents to the computer, as I was so unsure. I kind of left it at that point, and then my parents followed up with it, my dad was like, ‘no, this is real.’ When Oprah came to Joburg, I met her there and they did a double page feature on me with my photo. That was the start of someone putting the spotlight on my work.” Sivan reminisces at this formative and surreal moment – surprisingly though, it did little to catapult Sivan at that time. He, in many ways, had growing up to do – and only some years later, when he fully stepped into the calling as a photographer, Sivan was able to remember that moment with Oprah as a big sign from the universe. On this, he says, “In my twenties, it was a motivation and inspiration to remember – but it wasn’t any sort of big ‘change’ in my life then. I mean, I was 16, you know? When times were really tough, I think back and I can appreciate, with gratitude, that Oprah believed in my work – which is a wild thing to even be able to say.”

For Sivan, the road to shooting and creating fulltime was a winding one – and it’s something I hear many creatives that we speak to, say; the idea of being a “creative” has not been as serious a path until the last decade. It simply did not offer our parents’ generation the futures of security that they so desperately wanted for us. Sivan reflects on this, “To be honest, pursuing it as a career wasn’t an option. To be a photographer back then was not a serious or viable career – my dad’s a lawyer, and the expectation was that photography could be a beautiful hobby, but nothing more than that. I studied 3D animation for three years, and only after going through all the routes from working at a post-production house – and being so close to photography but not quite there – did it dawn on me that I could do this full time.” Sivan’s experience in post-production meant that he was adjacent to roles like photography – and with the grind of an office job, the hope for a movement & action driven career, became clearer, “I wasn’t really into 8 until 5 in the office – really, sitting still, felt quite restrictive. The owners where I worked were amazing, they allowed me to go try – they had seen my photos, and said I could come back if it didn’t work out. I think that’s quite rare. I left that day, and I never went back. My parents were shocked, but I think all those factors really pushed me to make it work.” This moment for Sivan speaks to a greater risk that most, if not all, creatives face when they concede to the call and take up the mantle of their artistic expression. It is, in many ways, the only thing we are really required to do – to share this expression with the world. Now, more than ever, we see the creative industries and role players drive the world socially and culturally; defining the way forward in the 21st century. 

 

Sivan’s move to New York reflects a very real folktale murmured around the world – and even within the USA – that the city itself is a destiny that some simply have to follow through with. I ask Sivan what this means, as a South African, to reach an empire state of mind“It’s been amazing – it was my dream. It’s crazy that it’s happened. I went through all the states of ‘how can it happen, it’s so expensive?’ – New York is this mystical place, and I think it feels out of reach for many, many people. It’s been a constant amount of work, and constant shooting – that has been the most important thing, a strong portfolio is vital, and then to keep strengthening it as time goes on. I wasn’t great to start with, as a photographer, but there’s a talent inside all of us that has to get worked on and refined. I think everyone can, and should, follow their dreams in their own craft. The route to New York was marked initially by a VISA rejection – but I knew deep down that it had to happen. I tried to come as a tourist, and being a freelancer, I was rejected – they’re very strict. I started reaching out to agencies, and there’s no other way; with VISA issues, the best way is to ensure relocation to where you want to go, is to do it through an agency or company that can vouch for you. Finally an agency loved my work.” Since landing in New York, Sivan has gone on to achieve truly incredible things – the kind of work that photographers in fashion dream of. Sivan speaks to an array of highlights, “Last year I shot the cover of Elle, here in New York. I’ve worked with a lot of incredible models, brands creatives – and working at the Oscars was amazing. Meeting famous people has been interesting – almost all of them have been really, really lovely. Their lives are totally wild – like it really is a level of luxury and life that is almost alien to the rest of us – but so many celebrities I’ve met are really down-to-earth, and kind. Working with Jaden Smith, Gigi Hadid – it’s really amazing, and keeps me going.”

 

Now, Sivan is introducing an entirely new aesthetic palette in his work – marked by incredible shoots with various brands, all eager to work within this new stylistic narrative that he has set out – and one that aligns exceptionally well with the subversive thread running throughout fashion and design, “This is my new style, I’ve been heading this way for a while. It’s very futuristic – and pushes an edge, I think. I’m always thinking about creating something new or fresh. I love light – I could spend all day in the studio playing with light, which is a key aspect of the mood in this style; it’s a richness in the effects of light that maintains a level of sophistication, but also with an experimental essence. It’s how I see things now.” This style of shooting is one palpable and familiar to those of us enamoured with the more fringe – grunge – and cultish style of visual expression, and one that we at CEC (as you can tell by our feed!) remained adoring of – with a South African visionary like Sivan being a maker of such visions, we really couldn’t feel prouder. 

 

Written By Holly Bell Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Jordan X Shelflife : The First Exclusively African Jordans Collaboration Pays Homage to Community

Global giant Nike has chosen South African sneaker store Shelflife for its first collaboration on the African continent. The Jordan Brand, which created its first Air Jordan Sneaker in 1985 with basketball legend Michael Jordan, continues 37 years later to earn an astounding $3 million every five hours for Nike. Resales between collectors on the secondary market fetch up to 500% more than the original retail price. 

“Nike chose only three stores worldwide to do a special co-lab with the Jordan 2 shoe aptly named the “International Flight Club” pack.  The idea was to shine a spotlight on areas of the world that are passionate about Jordan sneakers but traditionally aren’t represented in mainstream media. Nike selected the Titan Store in the Philippines, Shop Two 18 in Detroit, USA and us in South Africa,” says Nick Herbert Founder and Creative Director, Shelflife. “When they first called me, I was driving to a meeting. I actually couldn’t believe my ears, and thought I was being pranked. Shelflife had been shortlisted to do a colab and we had to present to 30 members including top execs of Nike Jordan Global. It was a mad experience! I never thought that this would happen. Every sneaker store owner or sneakerhead dreams of the opportunity to work with Jordan to design a shoe.”

The Jordan x Shelflife took two years to develop. “We pretty much had free range on the colours and materials we wanted to work with. We came up with the concept of focusing on the Shelflife team that makes it happen; to capture the essence of the team who show up each day to make sure the product gets to market,” says Herbert. “Often it is only the CEO or owner of a business that is in the limelight. But each member of our team contributes equally. The Shelflife team are the most passionate, knowledgeable sneakerheads around – they understand it and live it and speak about it all day long. When the shoe was being designed, we worked together, asking for input on design, and each employee’s signature is featured on the shoe’s inner sole. The TEAM ONLY shoe acknowledges the role of each member of our team but also the broader community that makes us who we are – from sales staff to social media management, to the employee, to the designer to the client. We represent a collective who understand the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.”

Nike says,“Our collab with South Africa’s leading sneaker and streetwear store Shelflife, this fresh take on the AJ2 grounds you to the spirit of TEAM ONLY. And as Jordan Brand’s first collaboration with an Africa-based partner, it’s a celebration of bridging oceans and finding community.”

Kezia Linderoth, grew up in Retreat, Cape Town, and has been working at Shelflife since 2016. To Kezia, the collaboration between Jordan and Shelflife is mind blowing, and well-deserved.  “For the store to be recognised as such on the global scene will have a positive impact and will show the path for many other stores all over Africa. The time is right, and I am grateful to be part of the story,” says Linderoth. Herbert continues, “there are now 35 people working for Shelflife and I am incredibly proud that this business is now supporting 35 families. It has taken 16 years to build the business to this point. The team takes their jobs seriously and they work super hard – and I wanted to celebrate that.”

The Jordan x Shelflife range is available at Shelflife in store and online in Cape Town and Johannesburg.

In addition to the sneakers, retailing at R3,899, the Jordan x Shelflife range includes a TEAM ONLY range of clothing. The range will be distributed globally through Jordan’s top tier neighbourhood boutique partners and the Nike SNKRS app globally in October 2022. 

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

A Street-Cast Dream in Strand: Heysous Launches ‘More Spirit Than Flesh’ Capsule 02 shot by Koooooos

Heysous Apparel’s second instalment was heavily inspired by 90’s street, skate and club culture. We were going for a nostalgic feel, apparel that serves to give the user an embrace from their youth. Our goal with this drop as well as our company ethos is to always be inspirational, positive in message, and invoke a state of confidence, joy, love, peace and respect. Do with this message what you will. Have fun, and be free in your interpretation. And most of all know that we are incredibly grateful for your contribution. – Marco De Sousa & Deeva Merwe

The city of Cape Town sprawls further than the CBD, Woodstock & the Southern Suburbs than we might recognise; with 4.7 million folks stretching across the peninsula, we are a city of dreamers – ‘chilled’ – with a reputation for seeding some of the best brands that reflect these precise sentiments. We may not be as fast-paced as our kin in Joburg, but we certainly get it done. Heysous Apparel is a passion-project brand drenched entirely in this spirit; and at CEC, we have had them on our radar for a while. For our monthly fashion column, Interlude, they were one of the local streetwear brands I wrote about for our ‘Ascent of Local Streetwear’ edition, – saying, “Heysous hail from sunny Cape Town – a colourful, joyful ode to friendship and fun, alongside a wonderful size inclusivity. Their offerings are notable for the graphic print tees (our favourite is the Abra A Sua Mente tee depicting consciousness awakening) and bubble style typography, with mantras like “change cometh” and “guided by love”. Priding themselves on responsibly sourced fabrics and local production; we love to see the spirit of Cape Town’s textile heritage celebrated in a youthful way, for everyone.”

With summer ahead, and for their second drop ever, ‘More Spirit Than Flesh’ Capsule 02 Heysous’ co-founders Marco de Sousa and Deeva Merwe continue their joyful charge – and for their campaign, exclusively launched here on CEC, we are thrilled to showcase the work of a dear friend of the publication, Koos Groenewald. In a truly Capetonian style of collaboration – Koos, Deeva and Marco met synchronistically at Stellski’s in Woodstock – and thus, ‘Promdate’ was eventually born. With equipment, models – and Disco Creative’s Founder Candice Hatting in tow (as Koos says, far too qualified to be his assistant, but too fabulous in her ability to make people feel excited and welcome) – Koos captures the energy of Strand promenade – inviting people on their daily mission to join in on the fun. We can’t think of a more delightful way than to spread the intention of Heysous – and celebrate the city and its people. 

Koos explains, “Heysous is a passion project – and so the capsule campaigns felt like it should reflect that, too. We wanted to focus on showing the brand’s ethos of encouraging people to creatively express themselves. I told them about this idea that I had, to go to the Strand and do a street-casting shoot because there’s always such amazing people there. I know the area because my parents moved there 10 years ago, and whenever I visit – I’ve always said I wanted to document the people. There’s such a richness and realness in the people and characters cruising along the promenade.” The result is brightly lit images evocative of that feeling of being by the sea on a summer’s day – when the sand is reflecting its luminescence in lieuw of the sun, and the air is salt-stained and fresh. With beautiful, redheaded models – and appearances from the incredible people of Strand, the campaign is nostalgia & newness effortlessly synthesised – beckoning us to dive into the season ahead with utter gratitude for being alive, and for being South African. Koos says on the task of street-casting, “We bought three cast models with us, to make sure we had people to work with – so we didn’t leave it entirely up to chance-casting – in the end, we didn’t need models because everyone was so keen to be shot. What was an unexpected and beautiful turn of events, is that the models and people ended up being shot together – there was such a sense of unity in how it all worked out.” 

Marco reflects on the drop tself, “This is our second drop, and we’ve been around for a year. This round, we wanted to do something really punchy and small-scale, with the view to drop bi-annually or tri-annually. We wanted to reference 90s, skate and club culture – invoking a sense of nostalgia – so playing in that space, and having that conversation with Koos – his idea of going to Strand was perfect. We trusted him implicitly to do whatever he wanted with it. Heysous is about spreading light, love and happiness – and the campaign reflects that perfectly.” For Marco and Deeva, Heysous is a ‘side’ project (thought no less important, just parallel to their respective businesses and work) – so the brand itself is a critical space in which they can both have total free reign with, creatively. The capsule features an array of tees, plaid and corduroy pants – fit for function, and fun. A notable thread throughout the Heysous design code is the feature of epitaphs – both in English and Portuguese – the latter, a nod to Marco’s heritage. On this, he says, “I add a lot of Portuguese sayings that family used to say to us – they’re personal nods. One of the phrases in this drop, “Quem vê cara não vê coração” is Portuguese and translates to “He who sees a face does not see a heart.” Sometimes I try to disguise the emotion with the Portuguese. I know we can’t always be happy, but I think we can have meaning close to us, especially with what we wear. I find people shy away from the vulnerable embrace or openness in fashion, so this is our way of doing that.”

Some notes personal notes from Marco on the featured garments: 

All our fabric is sourced, dyed and produced locally.

Quem Vê Cara – T

“Quem vê cara não vê coração” is Portuguese and translates to “He who sees a face does not see a heart. 

– Pearl of wisdom taught to me by my Portuguese grandparents. 

Show Me Love – T

Based on the 90’s club track from Robin S, “Show me Love”. 

– The lyrics are all about self-respect and self-worth, ideals that we want this brand to stand for. 

More Spirit Than Flesh – T

No two atoms ever touch, we are more spirit than flesh.

– I like the idea of looking at science and an ethereal lens 

 

Shop the ‘More Spirit Than Flesh’ Capsule 02 here

 

CREDITS

Client: Heysous @heysous

Photography & Creative Direction: Koos Groenewald @koooooos

Production & Casting: Disco @discocreatives / @discocasting

Talent: My friend Ned @myfriendned

Models:

Robin @ruobing_j

Dean @_dean_hunter_

Thomas @thomasfartstern 

With special thanks to the people of Strand. 

Written By Holly Bell Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

PHFAT – The Unrelenting Sonic Pursuit

PHFAT is a moniker that has stood the test of time – the iconic name lives on in South Africa’s musical lexicon – stronger since, in many ways, than when the term was formerly known as P.H.F.a.t. Since 2015, with a slight alteration, founding member and lead emcee Mike Zietsmann is driving the verbal and sonic vehicle of PHFAT wholly as his own; not without, though, an exceptional commitment to collaboration – and as we come to find out in this interview, a firm support for the younger generation. Mike is an OG – and he has the scars to show. As someone whose very existence & career leads as an example of what is possible for independent musicians, the relentless spirit of creative expression & dedication lives on through PHFAT. Connect Everything Collective’s founder & editor in chief, Candice, caught up with Mike in his studio – a full circle journey, with her own memories of the 2010s laced with memories of PHFAT’s presence. 

Mike’s studio is nestled underground in a building in Cape Town’s CBD, walking into the room was one thing but heading through the doors into Mike’s fully equipped, geared-for-optimum-sound studio was quite another.  Walking into the studio where we’re about to interview PHFAT immediately takes me back to Candice 12 years ago, where I used to quiver with excitement when knowing I was about to watch PHFAT perform live in Newtown, JHB. The dedication to his craft of music is evident in his studio space and before we delve into the interview, we spend some time chatting and reminiscing over the tracks PHFAT have released, spanning over a decade. 

I ask Mike to take us back – a story arising out of the sleepy hood of Hout Bay, steeped in the kind of youthful grit that makes shit really happen –  to which he says, “Me and Narch just lived in the same town and we surfed together a lot. I decided I wanted to try and make music – and I was trying my very best to figure it out at that point – when a song played, I still had no idea how it was put together. At some point, we made a track that could’ve been performed. It sort of clicked, and then I think it was Fletcher who picked it up and played it in his set Earthdance. We were 18 or 19, standing in the crowd with our minds blown. The beauty of that age is not being aware of how bad you are – you’re quite willing to suck. The one thing about being willing to suck in public, is when you find out in public that people don’t like stuff – and if you can handle the criticism, that process of refinement can begin.” PHFAT at the time, felt like a new era, even genre in South African music. Fast forward to a few years later circa 2015 I see myself watching them (Mike) perform “Light’s Out” with JungFreud, genuinely one of the most incredible performances I’ve ever seen. Now, as the years have passed, Mike reflects on those days, “When we started, we were playing alternate stages at trance parties. There was always an element of the hip-hop thing, so we’d be with the drum & bass DJs, and then with the indie bands. I think people struggled to place us, initially. I don’t know where we are, but we’re still playing. Post-lock down is the first generational shift that we’ve seen – you can see a marked difference in the landscape. I’m reminded of when we were young millennials, going to the late Gen-X parties – now I’m an older millennial, with Gen-Z crowds.” Music was then, as it is now, an non-negotiable calling for Mike – and a path he has made work, no matter what, in a way that symbolises across the country that a career in music is possible – and it is absolutely necessary, “I remember when it first clicked, I was delivering pizza to pay for my R1 000.00 microphones – which was crazy money back then – and we had our first show, and made like R2 000.00. I realised I could make more money having fun than delivering pizzas – so it was non-negotiable to continue.”  

It was around that time that I clutched onto the CD handed out to me at one of the shows; PHFAT’s “Dinosaur Blood” – a disc that I played on repeat, from start to finish. An era of a time where the iPod was not yet a feature in my car (mainly because I didn’t have aux cable) and I relied on hard copy discs to get my music fix. On the release, Mike reminisces “Physical releases were still a thing at the time – this is before streaming. It was actually pretty wild, I had a relationship with Puma when I was younger and skateboarding, and I called them – and we somehow convinced Andy from Mahala to print something like 10 000 CDs, and they put them in the sleeve of every Mahala magazine and we just mailed it to everyone for free. Then, we just put it all on Soundcloud so everyone could listen to it.” With so much changing in the way we consume and create music – I remain an ardent fan of the music video format. Maybe it was being raised on music channels, or the total poetry of those moments seeing artists come alive on screen. There was a form of access to their world – does it remain relevant though? Mike comments, “The music video was a visual statement that could sell a personality or identity. We haven’t lost that necessarily – it’s just been fragmented into smaller and smaller pieces, across social media. People’s attention span seems shorter now, too – so today, long-form videos are not necessarily the most strategic way to convey a story.”

With the disbanding of PHFAT as a crew, Mike has taken up the mantle firmly on his own – as the solo performer, keeping the lifeblood running of PHFAT to fans and collaborators alike. What has this proven in both challenge and triumph? “My production chops have certainly improved through collaboration with other artists. It brings on challenges, for sure, but it has also provided more opportunities. When you’re out there on your own, it can expand your versatility or spread you too thin. Anytime you’re spread too thin in the process of up-skilling, you can eventually get back up when you’re stronger to handle it. I think it’s made me a more capable musician. There’s people who would argue the music has gone backwards, but that’s okay – you’re allowed to hate.”  

Mike’s optimism in SA music is both refreshing and encouraging, laced with unwavering passion and a non-stop attitude to release good music and collaborate with artists and musicians from the local scene in South Africa. Maintaining this optimism is critical to his success – and the maintenance of PHFAT’s importance in the local music consciousness. Mike makes a case for why the grass need not always be greener, “We get fed the success stories from other territories – you know, the grass is greener mentality. When you actually go to those other places, you realise the hustle is still happening; sometimes in an even more competitive landscape. There might be more catch-nets or resources available, but it’s also relative. I think to lose optimism is to start looking for a new career. You can’t be jaded about the scene, because it will always be over-saturated or under-developed. In every scene in the world, there are viciously talented musicians who are underappreciated.The goal is to crack it everywhere, but everyone has a starting point and every starting point has challenges. I think one of the things that has helped me stay optimistic has been working with young musicians. That youthful, hard-headedness to fucking just go for it, is so energising.” So who is Mike watching out for now, in 2022? “Talent-wise, Moonga K is amazing. I’ve worked with him on a ton of songs. I saw him this weekend at Daisies – they put him on at 3pm, so it wasn’t a big crowd, and it’s difficult to light up to a sparse crowd; but he was fully immersed in it, he pulled in an audience  from nothing. His voice is world-class, and he dances well; he’s got that feeling. Internet Girl, aboynamedblu, and Burning Forest Boy too, though I haven’t worked with him.” After the interview, Mike played me some of his unreleased and upcoming music – listening to these tracks was an absolute treat (especially in the previously mentioned geared-for-optimum sound studio) – the music is superb and reflects the utmost commitment Mike has (and has never lost) for releasing the sounds that could only be known as…PHFAT. 

With Mike’s grasp firmly on creating spaces in which local musicians share in the spirit of the future – and the event producer space that he is a part of, Rare Cassette is an example of this. With Rare Cassette’s team – Katya Volkova, Josh Berry, Dillon Birns, Zach Lees and Nikita Lanndau – I experienced big things to come in this new era of events & shows, post-pandemic and future-focused. Katya explains, “we are a team of musicians and creatives just decided to make a dream happen. Just because we can. Rare Cassette is for musicians and music lovers. Sound, stage design, lighting, ear plugs for all guests, posters and visual style we love, backstage for artists, long soundcheck night before the show to make sure that everything sounds and looks the way we want it. We did it without sponsors and any brand support, just because we wanted to. God bless the venue, the Factory,with their support, understanding and trust. We did Rare Cassette  with attention to every little tiny detail, we also learned a lot of lessons haha of course, but the most important on the event day we all were the most happiest people in the world, because everything was happening, a lot of beautiful people came to Paarden Eiland and each live show looks sick, authentic and boom!” 

 

What does this mean for the performing season ahead? Katya remarks, “It was brave and crazy to put this event in 4 weeks. But with good energy and passion I believe that everything is possible. I, personally, love projects and ideas when it sounds crazy, feels scary, but exciting, inspiring and gonna be a lot of fun. I hope with Rare Cassette we have turned on the switch for live music in Cape Town and in the future we’ll attend more and more awesome live shows.”

Article Images by: Hana Sho 
Written By: Holly Bell Beaton and Candice Erasmus

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Chapter 10 | A round-up of Spring Summer 2023 in London, Milan & Paris

The fashion calendar can be elusive at best – with four official seasons (Spring / Summer, Autumn / Winter, Resort & Pre Fall) and two major event blocks in the year; the ‘big four’ of New York, London, Milan and Paris recently saw the whirlwind month of SS23 begin and end. Interlude is firmly focused on South Africa’s burgeoning fashion landscape – however, we thought it’d be fun to travel to Europe for this edition, with CEC’s picks for London, Milan and Paris as a springboard for what lies ahead in fashion. With the hybridisation of fashion weeks – easily accessed through social media & from the comfort of our screens – it has never been easier for the rest of us to participate in big moments. Fashion production beckons us, all. Running through the holy grail of Vogue Runway – the leading resource on schedules, runway images, updates & direct commentary from esteemed fashion critics – it can be a lot to digest, but oh so great a tool to bookmark for the seasons ahead. 

So why is Spring / Summer presented now, when the northern hemisphere heads towards winter? Well, a number of reasons; production, firstly, is mapped out to ensure the garments shown on the runway, if not immediately bought by private purveyors, head to the innumerable floors of department, flagship & e-commerce stores. With this, comes the trans-seasonal approach of the lives of luxury fashion consumers; if you can afford Louis & Bottega, you’re probably not strictly, seasonally bound to any region of the world – least not the precarity of weather. Then, comes the fact that by now – mid-autumn – whatever was shown earlier this year, best be in the archives and wardrobes of its customers already. Lastly, and most interestingly, some of the pieces shown might not even end up in store; fashion shows, more than anything, are a marketing tool & testing ground these days; an incredible platform to communicate the label / house or designers’ point of view as it stands right now, keeping their offering firmly within the consciousness of their intended audience. Make of it what you will, that fashion weeks are ceaseless in their scale – I am going to keep my cynicism at bay in this piece, and maintain a wholly hopeful attitude to the expression of sartorial creativity. With an average of 45 to 60 looks per brand showing, the excess is viscerally rife; but sometimes we have to dull into ignorance to honour ingenuity, it seems. 

For the purpose of easy reading, we have selected four label’s shaping fashion’s current tale; running across an expanse of design codes, fabrication and stylistic interpretation that leaves even the most existentially-bound fashion cynic (me…) giggling with delight at the sheer drama and joy that clothing evokes. I encourage you to research more, if you wish – as I mentioned, head to Vogue Runway, and my other favourite resource – Nick Knight’s insightful team and associates at fashion film mecca, SHOWstudio, who are producing some of the most thoughtful panel content & commentary that I’ve heard in a long time.  

London Fashion Week /// Spring Summer 2023 /// 16 September to 20 September 

Dilara Fındıkoğlu is fast becoming a cult-classic – the designer, after which the label is named, is a Turkish-British alumni of Central Saint Martins. With an incisive grasp on goth / DIY chic that is running rampant online; Dilara’s design world is informed by sex, sexiness, and the feminine form – and provides a commentary on what this really means from the feminine perspective – forget the glamour of sex; she has been quoted as saying that she wants to “destroy modesty” and in doing so, presented a subversive delight of this. Set in a soon-to-be demolished 19th century hotel, there was no soundtrack; simply, the sound of the model’s stilettos as the tension hung in the air from the audience. With up-cycled Victorian nighties, sheer tulle and smear lipstick all reach back into Dilaria’s own expression of Istanbul’s tense relationship between liberation and traditional expectations. 

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Chopova Lowena are the punk code darlings of the moment – with the label’s obsessed-over pleated, kilt classic appearing as always – and Emma Chopova’s Bulgarian heritage remain front and centre as the contemporary folk-wear juxtaposed with sportswear, continues to manifest through her, and co-designer Lauren Lowena, as they flex their design muscles. With an emphasis on gender fluidity, and ‘thrifting’ aesthetics – the distinguishing inspirations were best explained by Sarah Mower, “the collection paid homage to the Rose Festival, a pageant which takes place in Kazanlak, the village in central Bulgaria where Chopova’s ancestry is rooted. There were riffs on rose-forms in prints and cuts; a backpack became a whorl of petals.” As always, the label’s fabrication is centred on the sourcing and use of deadstock textiles, and recycled materials – and the hands behind production are skilled female artisans in Bulgaria. What arises from this, are incredibly intricate silhouettes in swathes of unusual and contrasting prints; styled perfectly with heart-shaped lips, and grunge/cyber models of your dreams. 

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

JW Anderson stood somewhere between humour and clarity for SS23 – as ever, tongue-in-cheek pieces were showcased alongside ‘serious’ tailoring and negligees. With a commentary on earth-activism and our obsession with digitising our world; stock-image screensaver prints of sunsets and beaches were featured, a crazy high-neck top made out of qwerty keyboard panelling, inverted knitwear and that deranged & perfect plastic fish dress; a cocktail dress that looks precisely like a goldfish inhabits it, as if one is wearing it on the way home from the pet shop. JW is an older and more established brand from the late 2000s, and thus his guardianship for smaller, emerging designers came through in his bid to continue LFW upon the Queen’s death; ensuring those who couldn’t afford to reschedule, could still show. 

Photo: Isidore Montag / Gorunway.com

Simone Rocha is fast a master of her own design codes; with the Rocha-spun romanticism in full swing for SS23. The collection featured tons of ruching, immense volume – sheer fabrication in layers – buckles, and all in a slightly more subversive, darker expression of her love for ballet. With pops of tangerine and silver – the show received a standing ovation, after taking the audience on a journey through themes of vulnerability, Catholic Ireland (Simone is Irish) and traditional garment construction definitively portrayed through a contemporary lens. 

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Milan Fashion Week /// Spring Summer 2023 /// 20 September to 26 September

Ferragamo showcased its launch collection under a new creative director – namely, fashion prodigy Maximilian Davis, who at 27 years old, is leading one of the oldest, heritage brands in Italy into a new era. With an emphasis on the house’s legacy – Davis danced an exceptional balance between elegance and youthfulness, energising the collections with the crimson red, camel tones punctuating the cleanliness of form & construction. Ferragamo has long been primarily focused on accessories – still a main feature, with beautifully crafted bags and footwear adorning the runway show. We are very excited to see Maximilian continue his indelible rise. 

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Bottega Veneta saw its second collection showcased by newly appointed Matthieu Blazy – and he did not disappoint. An exceptional feat of tailoring and the precise engineering of leather were front and centre – interspersed among truly ‘ready-to-wear’ casual but chic pieces presented across 74 looks for both womenswear and menswear, designed actually for everyday life. As Nicole Phelps wrote, “Blazy also revisited the “dynamic” silhouette he established last season, exaggerating the sense of clothes-in-motion by adding what could be described as fins to the back of pant legs. Similarly, the storm flaps on trench coats seemed to have caught a breeze and stayed there. The curving funnel necklines on jackets and shirts gave them a streamlined profile. These are subtle details, but if they’re missable by the uninitiated, they matter a lot to fashion obsessives who watch for such changes. Blazy has those people’s attention.”

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Prada has done it again, and as always. Just when I think I’m beyond the facade of an iconic monogram – Miuccia and Raf put the Prada inverted triangle monogram on an array of utterly mesmerising sheer nighties. Like the Prada loafers and hairclips of every fashion girl’s heart, this strategically placed monogram has the ability to turn any piece into a cult-classic; that, I think, is mastery in heritage branding. With the oversized eyelashes on the models and the different levels of sheer fabrics; the air of romanticism running through the show was firmly held by Raf’s decisive, clean take on structure – as seen on tailored pieces and mini dresses. 

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Blumarine makes it hard to imagine that the house itself dates back to the ‘70s – and in that, is a heritage brand. That is precisely its genius, though; consistently offering a well-versed, highly stylised version of y2k / 90s sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll in a Milanese fashion world of tailoring and elegance. With denim, studs – dyed hair – and the ultimate ethereal draping – creative director Nicola Brognano is the king of trash-as-righteous, goth-as-chic; a fine order for 2022 in which the most fashionable gals online are usually the most twisted in their style. Titziana Cardini writes, The mermaid is the new incarnation of the Blumarine girl, according to creative director Nicola Brognano, who, in his childhood, was obsessed with The Little Mermaid cartoon. “I watched it on repeat so many times that the VHS (that ancient archaeological find) got destroyed,” he said. But what is it about the Little Mermaid that so enthralled Brognano? “She was a redhead like my mother, and I loved the way she was dressed, all those eye-popping colours. I remember a minidress that was exactly a cartoon version of a Versace metal mesh number.” The glamorous mermaid look evidently stuck, but for spring, Brognano turned it into a darker, gothic representation, “intriguing and sexier, less pop, much dirtier.” The image of the Blumarine girl seems to be submitted to a constant process of mutation into ever-evolving versions of herself. “Less girly, more femme” was the mot d’ordre for spring.’

Photo: Daniele Oberrauch / Gorunway.com

Paris Fashion Week /// Spring Summer 2023 /// 26 September to 4 October 

Sacai continues its revival – with Japanese designer and founder Chitose Abe continually showcasing her principle design style, from 1999, in a wholly new and contemporary vision for 2022 and beyond. With a utilitarian rotation of silhouettes, asymmetry angles, and colourways of khaki, monochrome,  deep lavender and pops of floral – the vision this season is structure, structure, structure. There is a sexiness and formidability in Abe’s design – and a profound example of the inherent love affair between Japanese designers and Paris.

Photo: Daniele Oberrauch / Gorunway.com

Issey Miyake showed for the first time since Miyake’s passing; to an emotional room, filled with ardent supporters of Miyake’s brilliance and legacy.  The posthumous tribute contained vital elements of pleats – a Miyake signature – with mathematically precise patterns, and an emphasis on structure, knitwear silhouettes. Celebrating Miyake’s love for life and design, the collection featured lots of colour, and multiple references to the 80s Japanese design lexicon from Miyake emerged nearly forty years ago, to take the world by storm. Luke Leitch affectionately writes, ‘Satoshi Kondo and the design team, who had worked closely with Miyake until the end, provided a quote of their own: “We see design as a process driven by curiosity, built upon a comprehensive exploration—bringing joy, wonder, and hope to life, and of course with a touch of playfulness.” This collection, named A Form That Breathes, was evidence that Miyake’s unparalleled application of technological innovation in the pursuit of joyfulness through design was in safe hands.’

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Botter showcased their signature Caribbean blue among a whirlwind array of highly tailored pieces – bringing together their singular, yet plural in expression, fascination with the ocean. Fabric research led Lisi Herrebrugh and Rushemy Botter to kelp-derived material – further manifest in an aquatic theme, with scuba style dresses. The “prophylactic aquariums” (brilliant) were the dye-water filled condoms wrapped around the models hands – a commentary on plastic waste, perhaps – but also, a truly fun anecdote in bringing literal water onto the runway. Botter continues to execute from strength to strength – with co-designers Herrebrugh and Botter firmly envisioning new material adventures ahead, perhaps mostly earth-led. 

Photo: Salvatore Dragone / Gorunway.com

Louis Vuitton had our very own Candice Erasmus (CEC Editor in Chief) screaming with delight – a highly energised show, led by formidable womenswear creative director Nicolas Ghesquière’s exceptional design codes. An homage to the houses’ original luxury leather goods status, the house is firmly a fashion brand too; with technical details in abdunance from structured leather, quilted padding and THOSE exaggerated zips. When the show’s film was released, the music and location astounded those who were not in attendance – Nicole Phelps reports, “Nicolas Ghesquière invited his longtime friend French artist Philippe Parreno to create an installation, and together with the Hollywood production designer James Chinlund (of The Batman fame) they created a set that felt a little as if a spaceship—a distant cousin of the Nope UFO, perhaps—had landed in the heart of Paris and the aliens had set up a fun fair for locals to see the special attraction.” The petal-style structure was certainly unreal to view – alongside an insane soundtrack, LV was a clear study in the production-value and power of the runway format. 

Photo: Isidore Montag / Gorunway.com
Written by: Holly Bell Beaton

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