TALK US THROUGH HOW YOU APPROACHED OUR COLLABORATION FOR WILD GARDEN.
On the first prep day I had to drive from Kent to London and straight to New Covent Garden flower market to buy stock for the shoot. It was hectic, but it was worth it. For me, it was the sensory aspect of the Wild Garden, and that it was menswear, that made me really excited. I was inspired by changing silhouettes. I wanted to give the models armour, a sort of antigravity effect to counteract the clothes. One model was 6'5" and when he had the headdress on, he was over 9 feet tall. I love that sense of scale. The orange shoulder piece structure is something I’ve been working on for a long time and it finally worked here. I chose the flowers based on the colours in the print. I started bouncing ideas around in March. I want people to think 'I haven't seen this before. Who are these creatures?' I wanted to create something that looked like it had grown on the models. Like if they had sat down in a garden for too long, the flowers and plants would have taken them over.
HOW DO YOU GO ABOUT YOUR PROJECTS?
It depends what kind of job. The first thing I do is I'll write something, a few sentences about what I think the concept is. Then I’ll go back to my back catalogue, and think, what should I do? The main thing I do is draw. I sketch out shapes. Often, I have an idea in my head that I've wanted to do for a while, and then I'll try and attach that to something. Then obvious it’s the sourcing of different flowers, and then the making itself.