Erin Wasson | Page 213 | the Fashion Spot

Erin Wasson

Model-cum-clothing and -jewelry designer Erin Wasson braved a typically cold and foggy San Francisco July on Thursday to show off her Low Luv jewelry line. Azalea, the Hayes Valley boutique that seems to be making San Francisco a fashion destination, feted Wasson's chunky bracelets, amulet necklaces, and shark-tooth earrings with Pisco sours and beats by DJ Ma Yeah. We sat down with Wasson to ask her about Low Luv, feminism in fashion, and why her RVCA collaboration ended
What were your design inspirations for Low Luv? "I'm obsessed with symbolism so there's a lot of Swedish symbolism, a lot of Egyptian symbolism. A symbol that has been profound and around for hundreds, sometimes thousands of years is exciting to me. The jewelry is not meant to look new. The ideas is for it to look like you went to a flea market or junk shop—like a treasure chest of oddities."
Where did the name come from? "Anybody who's going to scream "I love you!" at the top of their lungs, I'm leery about. I want to be whispered I love you to. It's love on the down-low. Jewelry exchanged as heirlooms in families is an exchange of love. And it's less disposable than clothing."
Many models are happy to walk down the runway, collect a paycheck, and call it a day. What made you want to get into designing? "When you have a creative fire inside of you you can't explain it. Ever since I was a kid I had a really over-spastic imagination. I was always interested in writing and art and music— anything that allowed me to channel that creative force. I was in the fashion business, living in this huge tribe of fashion people with all these idiosyncrasies and all the creative juju that came with it. And it was always hard for me to just be an image. So when I had the opportunity to work with Alex [Wang] it was like being given a new set of eyes, and I just got insanely excited about that mad hatter element of the creative process."
What's your go-to outfit? "Jeans and a t-shirt. Seriously, I always tell people to buy a $5 pack of Hanes V-neck t-shirts, throw on their favorite jeans, and pile on jewelry that can tell your story. Jewelry can bring a heightened sense of style to an outfit more than some tragically hip top or a super-trendy pair of pants."
And shoes?"I like ****kickers!"
Who's your style icon?
"I don't have one. I'm inspired by every woman walking down the street."
What's your response to people who say that loving fashion is anti-feminist? "Here's the thing about the fashion business: Most of it is run by gay men who will never be able to completely understand a woman...I think there is a lack of a true connection with what a woman really is. Of course, there will always be designers like Donna Karan and Diane von Furstenburg. But people have asked me if I've ever felt objectified in photo shoots and campaigns and I always say: I'm going to do what I feel comfortable with. If is was ever a point where I don't feel comfortable, then I'm not going to do it.

"Sex sells. We're all sexual beings, we all like to have sex, we all like to talk about sex. We all like watching sexual energy and chemistry ignite in front of us. It's exciting, it's human nature. So to use an element of sex in fashion to get people excited and to pay attention is human nature. Americans are so prude. It really bothers me.

"But at the end of the day, nobody really cares about a male model, I mean, lets be real. Nobody gets excited about the next "It" guy. Here's a business where if you look at a male model and a female model, guess what? We make more money. And that's ****ing empowering."
What happened with RVCA?"It was always supposed to end at this time. It was an awesome opportunity. I had two amazing, empowering years. I learned so much and they allowed me such a massive amount of creative input and energy. Now it's time to take all that knowledge and really stand on my own two feet and go out and do something for myself."
Will you design clothing after the jewelry? "That's the plan."
http://www.refinery29.com/our-qa-with-erin-wasson-at-her-low-luv-collection-debut-1.php
 
More interviews
Erin Wasson on Low Luv Jewelry, Leaving RVCA, and Her Beauty Must-Haves
While much has been made of Erin Wasson parting ways with apparel brand RVCA, the model turned designer's official word on the matter is that now her "focus is on continuing with my Low Luv brand," as she told WWD.

She recently landed in San Francisco for a trunk show of the jewelry line at Azalea boutique.

StyleList was there to talk with Wasson about Low Luv, RVCA, and embracing her role as a style icon.

StyleList: You're here showcasing your Fall 2010 line for Low Luv. What was your inspiration this season?
Erin Wasson: It's heavily inspired by symbolism, although the pieces are a lot more architectural because I played with a lot of negative space. I want it to look like I did all of the hard work for the girl buying it.

I find a lot of pieces in flea markets around the world when I'm traveling, and I have tons of books on jewelry from different cultures. So it's blending everything together.

I like that the collection looks old because my finishes are in antique silver and gold. They look like they've already been loved a little bit, which is really important to me.

SL: After taking on new roles as a stylist (for Alexander Wang) and designer (for Low Luv and RVCA) over the last few years, you've also become a street style icon of sorts. Is that something you embrace?
EW: [Looks at us weird].

SL: You know what we're talking about.
EW: I do! But I'm like every other girl that's into fashion, and I would have never thought in a million years I would have been given the opportunity to style and to make a clothing and jewelry line. When I meet girls enamored by what I'm doing, it makes me want to do more. They're the fire under my ***. All of this was very haphazard and spontaneous, and I just kind of fell into everything. But [the fans] make me feel like I'm doing the right thing right now.

SL: There have been rumors you're no longer collaborating with RVCA because you are difficult. What's your take?
EW: It all came out in WWD. RVCA made their statement, I made mine. At the end of the day, this was all what it was meant to be. It was a contract and every contract comes to an end. Everything out in the world is speculation, and we loved working together. We both walked away from it with a lot of respect and gratitude.

SL: Do you think you'll do another clothing line? Perhaps a namesake collection?
EW: Anything's possible. I like to keep a bit of mystery. I'm not ready to read my entire book to everyone right now. There are still a lot of chapters being written. And I want to make sure that [a clothing line is] right.

SL: You're in H&M's bikini ads. Did you prepare with a special diet and exercise routine?
EW: I didn't do s--t. I want to say I work out, and I don't want to be that a--hole who doesn't do anything. But, no. I got lucky because I came to St. Barts with a tan because I was in Hawaii for my birthday two weeks before the job.

SL: You split your time between New York and L.A. Are you a surfer girl?
EW: It's funny, [people see] me sort of encompassing this Southern California beach culture. I'm from Texas, so if I'm going to encompass anything it's a margarita, some Tex-Mex, and a concha belt.

SL: Beauty-wise do you have any must-haves?
EW: When I wake up, I'm using Neutrogena Skin iD, which I bought off an infomercial, which was rad. I'm into trying new things, but because I travel so much, I try to keep [my routine] small and edited so everything fits into that little Ziploc bag. But I'm obsessed with Liz Earle's oils. I travel so much that my skin gets really dry.

And I love me some Falsies mascara from Maybelline [Wasson is one of the brand's spokesmodels]. For my hair, Leonor Greyl has these amazing jasmine hair masks that feel amazing. The products are all in French, so you don't really know what it is, but you just know that it works.

SL: Since you are always on the road, you must have your iPod on you at all times. What's your guilty-pleasure song?
EW: The Wu-Tang Clan. If I'm going to have a moment and go there and get a little ghetto, it's all about Wu-Tang.

SL: The summer's just about wrapping up. Do you have any vacation plans?
EW: I'm a working girl. I'm working all through August. I'm lucky enough to have a great job [modeling] in Harbour Island in the Bahamas, so I'm probably going to tag on a couple days there after the job. In August you either f--k off or stay around and take jobs. And if the money's there to be had, I'll work.
www.stylelist.com
 
Look who our US Sugar Sisters caught up with — the piercingly beautiful and free-spirited Erin Wasson! She flew in to San Francisco to promote her latest Low Luv collection at Azalea Boutique. The model-slash-designer totally meshed with the city's relaxed vibe but simultaneously stood out thanks to her stunning presence. We had a Fab chat about everything from her super laid-back Summer style to her modeling work with J.Crew, from editing down your closet to her future projects. Hear part one of what she dished below.

FabSugar: So this is your latest collection. What's been going on with the line? What are some favourite pieces?
Erin Wasson: There’s a piece actually from this collection that they don't have in the case, it's like a square double knuckle ring that I'm a huge fan of, it's heavy with the onyx and everything. I'm really into symbolism, I'm quite obsessed with it actually. I dig it all, that's why I made all of it!
FS: What's your process, what's your inspiration, where do you start from?
EW: I kind of obsess over a certain culture and I find the symbols within that culture.
FS: Do you travel there?
EW: I didn't go to Egypt and study hieroglyphics or any of that kind of sh*t, but books are a great source, the library, movies. I think that the whole idea is that it could even start with finding something really interesting at a junk shop and liking the craftsmanship, or something about a piece and figuring out a way to sort of inject all of those symbols into that piece and going from there, starting out with moulds and stuff like that. A lot of times you'll see something and you're like, "OK, how can I make that into a bangle?" And you're like, “Well let's just put it on steroids and make it really big and make a dainty pendant and do a really big pendant in the same version."
FS: Do you have any plans for expanding it into other categories?
EW: I'm doing a Holiday collection and then I'm doing a separate, smaller solid sterling silver collection as well. My RVCA contract came to an end and I'm in the works of talking with other people and taking my time to really figure out what that next step is going to be. I'm definitely going to be coming up with another clothing line, standing on my own two feet and making it my own but it's probably six months away from now. Taking a little intermission right now.
FS: Do you have any ideas of what the clothing line would be like?
EW: If I do that one day, for sure, denim is a staple, it's always going to be a part of everything that I do. I love leather, that's always going to be a thing that I do moving forward, I think that people that know me and follow my style understand that it's a very loose take on fashion. The older I get, I'm much more inclined to be into the idea of utilitarianism and as much as I think that trends make the world go 'round, it's also a scary place to live when we're following trends too closely. I think that we forget what our own personal aesthetic is because we're kind of being told by the media and outside forces what our style should be, and as you get older, you realize what you love.
FS: Well you did that big garage sale I heard about.
EW: It was really cathartic. It was like I have piles and piles of sh*t and I was like I don't need all of this crap. There's a point in life where your things start to own you and you don't own them anymore, and you've got too much of it. I'm an animal lover and I love Best Friends Animal Society, it's where all of Michael Vick's pit bulls ended up, and it's an actual rehabilitation facility less than just a shelter. They really work on the social situations of these animals that come in and foster some of them and get them socialized so that they can be placed instead of just putting them in a cage and hoping that people adopt them and then all of their issues become their issues, so yeah, I raised $8,000, it was awesome!
www.fabsugar.com.au
 
I loved reading her interview, she seems so cool and I love that she has a potty mouth.
 
MORE INTERVIEWS!
FabSugar: What are some of your Summer essentials?
Erin Wasson: I'm that beach bum that's always on the beach, I don't need a towel, I'm happy to get sand in all of my crap. I'm not the girl that puts on a frilly little dress to go down to the pool. When I go on vacation, and I go to Hawaii quite often, literally everything I need can fit in a bag this size [pointing to her Alexander Wang tote]. A white t-shirt, a pair of denim cut-off shorts, a pair of flip-flops, a couple bathing suits.

FS: What kind of bathing suits?
EW: I always have a really hard time with bathing suits. I like really basic things. There is a brand, they just did a pop-up store in New York, it's an Australian company — Zimmermann — and I think that as far as swimwear goes, they are so progressive in their cuts and their textiles and fabrics. Their prints are totally awesome and they fit me really well. I have no boobs so I have a hard time finding something that's going to fit. But at the end of the day, my go-to is a black American Apparel bathing suit.

FS: I know you model for J.Crew. How did that come about?
EW: When you just look at their stuff on a rack, you're like "Oh, it's preppy, it's kind of like whatever," but they have this really dope way of styling the sh*t out of it that makes you just want it. I love that they'll take four t-shirts and layer them on top of each other and create dimension. I don't work with them often because I try to keep a balance of high-fashion and commercial stuff, but at the end of the day what people don't realize is that we're all f*cking trying to pay our bills. So if J.Crew is on the horn and they're like, "Hey, we want you to shoot," you're like, "F*ck yeah I'll do it." It's a great brand.

FS: It shows versatility, too. You can do grungy, you can do polished, you can do it all, you're a model.
EW: That's the objective, a model is supposed to be is a f*cking chameleon. It's so interesting, the whole movement, like "oh my god we're seeing Victoria Secret models on the runways now, like woah." There's niches within the fashion world and some girls that are going to be doing high-fashion and doing your obscure shoots for i-D magazine or something like that aren't necessarily commercially friendly enough to do a J.Crew. For me it's always a balance of doing the commercial friendly stuff but then balancing it off by doing a great editorial.
www.fabsugar.com
 
Last week, when I walked into Hayes Valley's trendy boutique Azalea to meet with model/designer/stylist Erin Wasson, she greeted me with a sun-kissed smile and asks, "Do you always wear a suit?"
I was indeed in a suit and I (kind of) joked with an awkward laugh, "I wear suits to feel better about myself."

What a way to break the ice, huh?

But Wasson was totally chill despite my awkward laugh. She's a Texan girl (she and I bonded over that) who is now in L.A. and was unbelievably mellow. She stopped by the boutique to present her latest collection of jewelry for Low Luv.
"This is the second collection -- it's a costume collection," says Wasson, who also designed for RVCA and did some styling work for San Francisco native Alexander Wang. "I made the transition from high-end jewelry about two seasons ago. My whole take on this jewelry brand is that I want girls to wear it as if they didn't buy it at a shop."

Finished with a gloss of antiqued bronzes, silvers and golds, the pieces in the collection do live up to her vintage store standards. From snack cuffs to cut-out necklaces to steer skull pendants, the pieces merge mystical funk and reclaimed charm.
"It looks a little worn and it looks like it has a little life to it," she says. "It's as if the girls who wear it went out and hunted for this obscure piece of jewelry."

Fully armored in jewelry on her neck, wrists and fingers, Wasson chatted a little more about Low Luv and her take on style in San Francisco.

Q: Do you have a certain connection to costume jewelry? Or jewelry in general?

A: My take on jewelry is not to do something that hasn't been done before. That's not what I am looking to do. I am very much into symbolism in all capacities and all cultures. I like to start with one symbol like the ankh or the cross from last season -- a lot of people think it's a religious correlation, but for me, if you take something like the evil eye, you can look at it as an Egyptian symbol or look at it as something like an illuminati symbol.
Q: So you're really into symbols?

A: Symbolism is a very powerful thing. Cultures tell their stories through symbols. Through that, I am taking the story that has been already told and incorporating it into the jewelry line and making it a hodgepodge of different place or thing.

Q: Besides your own jewelry, what are some of your other favorite jewelry brands?

A: I am so not the person who will drop thousands of dollars at a jewelry store.

Q: So you're all about vintage jewelry shopping?

A: I love the hunt. I love the oddity. I love the power of getting something for five dollars and making it look expensive.
Q: I once saw a hamster jawbone pendant in gold that was being sold in the Haight -- what are your thoughts on that kind of jewelry?

A: I love taxidermy -- it has history. It's an animal that may have been found dead in the desert -- but it's like you're giving it new life. You're putting it on your body and giving it legs to walk in.

Q: Do you come to San Francisco a lot?

A: I think this is my third time here.

Q: What has been your impression of San Francisco style?

A: I really enjoy how there's no glitz and glamour here. Everyone is going to the beat of their own drum. It's really eccentric. You see a lot of those hippie elements -- some people are a little disheveled. Granted, I am not giving a good skew of San Francisco having not spent a lot of time here -- but in L.A. I find that people are so obsessed with trends and they're so about an impeccable look. It's a very trend-driven city. From what I can tell here, everyone is putting it together the way they want it.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/chronstyle/detail?entry_id=69433
 
What kind of elements within yourself do you put into your jewelry?


I think that slightly tough edge. My take on jewelry is the bigger, the better. I don’t believe in walking out the door and taking something off. I’ll pile it on ’til the end of days. Mr. T is my huge inspiration [laughs]. I mean I’m not even joking. I’ve literally been obsessed with Mr. T since I was a child and the five thousand pounds of gold chains.

Beside Mr. T, what was your inspiration behind your current collection?

I am heavily inspired by symbolism in life, whether it be Native American symbolism or Egyptian symbolism or even the last collection had a bit of Swedish symbolism in it as well. So I think that is always where I start out with my research, is symbols that really move me and that really intrigue me and then diving into the meaning behind symbolism is kind of where I always get my start with the jewelry.

How does the jewelry represent you?

I think it gives a pretty good idea of my aesthetic. The antique silver and the antique gold, it’s not shiny…it’s a little tarnished. I think that’s a pretty good metaphor for myself.

Is there a particular person that you can see wearing them?


I think it’s keen for anybody. You know, there’s definitely a lot more edgier pieces. I’m a really big fan of large pieces, large rings, large necklaces and things like that, but then you know every season I try to do daintier things. I hope that everyone finds something that suits them.

What is the significance of the name Low Luv?

Ever since I was 16 I came up with this almost personal mantra of low love, where it was spreading love on the DL. It was sort of subtle acts of love and so the idea of low love related to the idea of starting an accessories brand because it’s those little bips and bops that you put on that means so much to you. They’re like these subtleties that have a story for yourself and they might not have a story for someone else, but they’re for you.

How has being a model influenced you as a designer?


You really [understand] the subtleties of certain fits of things and how such a small tweak can change the fit, the cut and the hang of something. On the same level, I think just being around a world of aesthetics and being around creative people and you know, total characters. I remember just being back stage and seeing some people almost on the verge of costume and I just thought that it was so beautiful that you’re exterior can be such an extension of your interior and I think that’s why I am so inspired by different elements of design.

What do you think of San Francisco style?


I like it. Everyone here is like totally disheveled, and I appreciate that. From what I’ve seen, everyone is very eccentric. I’m looking forward to spending some time in some thrift shops in the Mission tomorrow and seeing what that’s all about. Everyone seems to just go to the beat of their own drum.

What else would you like people to know about your line?

It’s affordable. I think that anybody who is like, “Ah man, I really want a really cool piece of jewelry,” they can walk into a store like this and not feel like they’re breaking the bank and hopefully they know they’re getting a little piece of me, something that I think is pretty groovy.
sfindiefashion.com


www.sportswearnet.com
 
I googled her line and I actually love all of her jewelry! It's sooo amazing.
 
i have a love/hate relationship with her sometimes, but that interview brought me back to the love side. I really like her explanation of the low luv brand name..
 
Love that Joie campaign... her natural beauty really shines. :heart:


I love that she has a potty mouth! so funny! she's a badass ;)
 
^Thats probably the worst thing about her not showing RVCA anymore!!! Hopefully she will attend some shows in September...
 
does anyone have all the pictures for the true religion ads? everytime I think I've seen them all I find more I've never seen.
 

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