Interview October 2011 : Florence Welch by Craig McDean | Page 4 | the Fashion Spot

Interview October 2011 : Florence Welch by Craig McDean

^One of the best editorial I've seen in a long time!
 
The Row
by Steven Pan
Styled by Elin Svahn



Joseph Altuzarra, Prabal Gurung, and Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen for The Row: Those were the 2011 nominees for the Swarovski Award for Womenswear, the CFDA’s honor for emerging talent in ready-to-wear design. Altuzarra honed his skills at Givenchy, Gurung at Bill Blass, and the Olsens at . . . Wal-Mart. But while the “Save Money, Live Better” monolith of mass consumerism might not be the most obvious training ground for the higher ranks of American luxury, the Olsens are not to be underestimated. By the time they were 18, the former child stars had successfully parlayed their shared role as Michelle Tanner on the late ’80s TV comedy Full House and twin performances in a series of direct-to-video films for tweens into a $1 billion-a-year business called Dualstar that merchandised dolls, makeup, accessories, and, of course, clothing. In fact, the Olsens—who had been wearing samples from the likes of Marc Jacobs and Chanel, cut down to children’s size, from the age of 6—have always had an uncanny ability for translating runway fashion for their avid young following.

However, Mary-Kate and Ashley entered a new fashion sphere in 2004 when they retired from their screen sister act, and relocated from California to Manhattan to attend New York University. Snapped daily in their freshly minted uniform of leggings, grandpa sweaters, and face-obscuring Dior bug-eye sunglasses, they became the emblem of “hobo-chic,” the ubiquitous look of East Coast coeds. (In their freshman year, the twins also assumed ownership of Dualstar; their wealth has been estimated at $137 million each.)

It was from beneath this layered-to-the-max carapace that the Olsens embarked on a project that would be their gateway into full-fledged fashion design: creating the “perfect” T-shirt. That was the germ of their elevated basics line The Row. From these (relatively) humble origins, growth was slow but steady. The label made its runway debut at New York Fashion Week just three seasons ago with a tightly edited 19-look collection of black silk crepe de chine straight-cut tops and straight-leg trousers that turned out to be one of the most critically well-received shows for Fall 2010, a season that heralded a return to classic American sportswear. Since then, the materials have grown more opulent. For Fall 2011, a fur-tuft T-shirt made of cashmere and fox rubs up against the glossy crocodile backpacks and box-frame ostrich cross-bodies that comprise The Row’s first in-house accessories collection.

Anne Slowey caught up with Mary-Kate and Ashley, now 25, in their Chelsea studio.

ANNE SLOWEY: You’re talking to someone who just barely bought a TV, so, you know, I only know you as fashion people. Does the level of credibility you’ve established within the industry surprise you?

ASHLEY OLSEN: I think my sister and I just focus on working hard. We started off working with Wal-Mart on our first clothing line as an extension of our personal brand when we were 12, and we got to learn about being aware of what was in the market and what wasn’t. When we were 18, we decided to take a step back and go to school. But after a year at NYU, I think we were kind of bored because we were used to constantly juggling both worlds!

SLOWEY: The Row began with the search for the perfect T-shirt, right?

MARY-KATE OLSEN: It was a project for a great T-shirt that we thought maybe we would do for The ONE Campaign [the global organization fighting extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africa].

ASHLEY: We didn’t end up doing that, but we loved the fabric and got the best fit that we could create.

MARY-KATE: It all started with us talking with our friends about the T-shirt—just putting it on bodies, on anyone from 12 to 60, and different sizes.

ASHLEY: We wanted it to be different sizes; we wanted it to be timeless. So it was learning about production and manufacturing, one piece at a time.

SLOWEY: What came next after the T-shirt? When did you realize that you were creating a collection?

ASHLEY: It was a T-shirt, and then a tank top, and then a dress—

MARY-KATE: And then a blazer, and then the stretch-leather leggings—which I think people thought was a crazy idea at first.

SLOWEY: But then everybody wanted them! I know Lauren Hutton’s a fan.

ASHLEY: I think our first-ever magazine cover was of her on Forbes on a motorcycle in the leggings. SLOWEY: You couldn’t ask for a better fit model than Lauren Hutton. She’s the epitome of a smart, understated, take-no-prisoners woman.

ASHLEY: I think The Row skews toward an older market—an educated consumer who’s been shopping for years. The main thing we thought was lacking in the luxury market were basic pieces that could break up an outfit so you didn’t feel like you were totally dressed in one designer. You could add some ease and comfort, tone it down.

SLOWEY: When you start working on a collection, are you thinking about specific pieces that are missing from most wardrobes?

ASHLEY: Our core business are those pieces that you really want to have accessible to you but you don’t really want to worry about, like a great white button-down.

MARY-KATE: But now we have daywear, nightwear, the item that goes anytime, too.

SLOWEY: At what point did you realize that you were successful and being taken seriously as designers?

ASHLEY: I don’t think we ever did.

MARY-KATE: We still don’t. We just go from season to season, hoping that people enjoy what we make.

SLOWEY: You’re not being looked at as celebrities designing but as designers who are designing things women want.

ASHLEY: Well now it’s funny because most designers have become celebrity-type figures. I hate that word, celebrity, but it’s not necessarily the brand that’s being branded, it’s they themselves.

SLOWEY: You guys have worked the reverse magic.

MARY-KATE: It’s a non-branded brand.

SLOWEY: I’m noticing a very tasteful logo here. I think it would be good to talk just a little bit about how you came up with your hardware and made those kinds of decisions.

MARY-KATE: We didn’t like tags. We didn’t like labels. We wanted something very chic, very minimal. So we always go back to metals as our hardware for branding.

ASHLEY: We didn’t want a lot of hardware at all. We just let metal be our label. Our first season we just did gold, and then we introduced silver for resort.

SLOWEY: It’s very discreet. Who’s your favorite designer? Other than yourselves . . .

ASHLEY: We like Yohji Yamamoto and Karl Lagerfeld, and Dries Van Noten, the way he uses color. Then old Coco Chanel as well.

MARY-KATE: I remember the first time we walked into Prada—was it in Rome?

ASHLEY: No. I think before.

MARY-KATE: Well, I remember going in, and then traveling. We had to drive from Milan to—from Florence to Milan? Or from Florence to Rome?

ASHLEY: It was the outlet—the Prada/Miu Miu/Jil Sander outlet—outside of Florence. I was going nuts there because everything’s like $40 and the dollar was so strong at that point.

SLOWEY: Right, that’s when Italy was still a Third World country and everything was lire. So 3,000 lire was $40.

ASHLEY: Our dollar was so strong. And all the nylon bags . . .

SLOWEY: I think we were all on shopping heydays in the mid-’90s. So what do you think it is that women are looking for now when they go out in search of personal style? Because you’ve obviously always been looked up to as style icons.

interviewmagazine
 
If you had told me that Kirsten & Craig's ed was from a 90's magazine i would totally believe. Truly amazing. :heart:
 
^ Yeah, it screams 90s :lol: I totally love it, too.
Top Gun is great too. The dresses are so beautiful. Thanks for the pics!
 
Super Furry Animal
Photographer: Gregory Harris
Stylist: Vanessa Chow
Model: Erin Fee
Make-Up: Karan Franjola
Hair: Seiji
Casting: Michelle Lee/KCD

interviewmagazine.com
 
Dolce & Gabbana
Models: Egle Tvirbutaite, Daria Strokous, Katlin Aas, Patricia van der Vliet, Tatiana Cotliar, Julia Nobis, Caroline Brasch Nielsen, Bryant McCuddin & Alice Cornish
Photogtapher: Robbie Fimmano
Styling: Karl Templer
Make-up: Mark Carrasquillo
Hair: Recine
models.com
HQs without text

interviewmagazine.com
 

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