Interviews

Introducing: Bond Hardware

Dana Hurwitz and Vincent Barile are the Brooklyn based designers behind the label Bond Hardware. Specializing in pieces created from found objects and re-purposing things from the local hardware store. Starting with rethinking what neckwear can be they’re also expanding to rings and other designs. Dana’s currently at the Pratt Institute while Vince studies at the Art Institute but they still find time to work on their collaboration. Learn more about it, what makes them tick and how cool their Dads are below. Continue reading

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Daryl K + Spencer Sweeney = a downtown girl’s perfect pairing

2 looks from the Daryl K spring 2012 collection

I won’t say that the fact that I just got a reminder to register for February fashion week didn’t put a little stress into my morning! It seems like you’ve hardly processed one season when the next is upon us -and I can’t imagine what a designer feels like. So I’m psyched to be posting this little interview in this space between fashion weeks.

I have been a fan of Daryl K’s work for years: deceptively simple pieces that are always being called edgy because they’re not overtly girly, to me they just seem confident…if clothes can be considered such! Her collection that will be coming out this spring is surprisingly colorful and I discovered that the gorgeous prints are a collaboration with artist Spencer Sweeney. In addition to being a painter Spencer is one of the owners of one of my favorite clubs, Santos Party House and is very much a part of nightlife in New York. He also has a show of his work up now at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise and it’s definitely worth checking out.

Spencer Sweeney at Gavin Brown

You both are very much part of “downtown” NYC. Did you know each other before collaborating? How did you meet?
We were definitely aware of each other through the years, but we did not connect until this collaboration. Our mutual connection was Gavin Brown, a friend of Daryl’s and who represents Spencer. Daryl had the idea to collaborate and reached out to Spencer through Gavin. The first meeting was mutually affirming – we love each other’s work and personally, we got along excellently.

How does the collaborative process work?
It begins with an exchange of sensibilities – Daryl explains the collection and ideas on shapes, fabrics and color. We then go through Spencer’s catalog of work and we discuss his forms, themes…details. We actually begun by appropriating close-up areas of various paintings and mocked up fabrics and initial tailoring. There was a type of ‘collage theme’ with the collection already, and this enabled a fluid collaboration. We ended up with a few existing paintings (the Scottsman top and pants), while we focused on a main, unique fabric – a custom painting by Spencer that was featured on the new JumpDress.

What has been most exciting about doing a collaboration?
Seeing a great outcome in terms of the clothes, and getting to know another artist through their work.

Was there anything unexpected in terms of the results or experience?
When putting together a collection – you learn to expect the unexpected. Yet overall, we were pleasantly surprised with how amazing the clothes looked. The showing was at Gavin Brown’s and was a fantastic experience – we had live drumming by Lizzie Bougatsos and Billy Ficca .

And individually: what’s your current favorite song/artist to listen to when you want to be creative/make shit.

Daryl: Today I have D.R. Hooker…..but I think I will have some Al Green tonight.

Spencer:
It changes every moment… I can say this morning I had J.K. & Co. for breakfast.

a sneak peek at Daryl K spring 2012

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mandy Coon

 When I decided to start “Fashion Fridays” to highlight someone working in fashion in NYC I asked Erin Dixon, the editor of Dossier Journal who she thought would be good to feature. Mandy Coon was one of the designers at the top of her list. I knew Mandy had shown this past NYFW at Milk Studios but didn’t know her background first as a model then a DJ and finally becoming a designer via FIT and apprenticing for Camilla Staerk. What I did know was that when I checked out her designs I found the mix of sleek satin and leather with more architectural knits creates the perfect cocktail of sexy/smart/sophisticated for the downtown set.

Here are Mandy’s answers to my FF questions:

If you could live in another era, when would it be and why?
The ’50s were a pretty amazing era decade for design….

What’s your favorite movie?
Visually, I love The Night Porter. It’s pretty intense, but Charlotte Rampling is so amazing in it.

A purse from her Fall 2010 Collection

What is a current obsession?
Rabbits (real ones). And my dog.

Do you read fashion magazines?
Occasionally. I used to read them a lot, but this days, I’m super busy, and I think I might be unconsciously trying to avoid them, to some extent. I don’t want to be unconsciously influenced by anything….


Describe your style as a friend would
Dark, but fun.

What style/trend (current or past) do you hope is never recycled?
Uggs

What style/trend would you like to see come back?
High-waisted trousers- not the ridiculously high ones, just the ones that sit at the natural waist, instead of falling off and showing your bum.

Has the internet changed the fashion industry? How?
Definitely. I was not exposed to much, growing up in texas. Now kids are exposed to everything.

Can we find you on twitter?
Yes- but I don’t tweet much.
I do have a facebook problem, though…

finish this sentence: I love New York because…
literally anything can happen here.

Autumn/Winter 2010 lookbook, photo by Samantha Rapp
Autumn/Winter 2010 lookbook, photo by Samantha Rapp    

 Where to find Mandy Coon
NEW YORK:
ASSEMBLY (www.assemblynewyork.com/)
EVA (www.evanewyork.net)
OPENING CEREMONY (www.openingceremony.us)
BIRD WILLIAMSBURG (www.shopbird.com)

LOS ANGELES:
OPENING CEREMONY (www.openingceremony.us)

PARIS:
COLETTE (www.colette.fr)

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Samantha Pleet

SamanthaPleet
The story began in 2006 when Brooklyn Designer Samantha Pleet debuted her namesake collection, intertwining elements of the mysterious and fantastical with a sense of modernity.
Each season new and ancient ideas from music, art, history, and literature are conjured along with various feelings and are transformed into Pleet’s silhouettes, then shown in collaborative projects from films, photographs to unique installations.

The clothes, made in New York City using organic materials whenever possible, have become favorites among creative girls around the world including musicians like Beach House, The Dirty Projectors, and Au Revoir Simone.

She has collaborated with Urban Outfitters on Rapscallion by Samantha Pleet which led to curating the inaugural pop up shop at Space 15 Twenty in Los Angeles. The  Pratt graduate gardens, paints, travels, and hunts for treasure in her spare time.

If you could live in another era, when would it be and why?
 I would want live in Venice in the middle ages for many reasons, it was beautiful, there was influence from different cultures brought in by all the merchants, there were fun parties, good wine, and the women wore really tall platform shoes. 

What’s your favorite movie?
Valerie and Her Week of Wonders

What is a current obsession?
Plants

Do you read fashion magazines? If so what are your current favorite?
Dossier Journal

Describe your style as a friend would
She wears an alchemy of influence from French New Wave, grunge, and wizardry.

What style/trend do you hope is never recycled
Polyester shirts

What style/trend would you like to see come back?
Hats everyday

Has the Internet changed the fashion industry? How?
Yes dramatically, now resources, designer collections and other information is easily accessible, trends spread faster, and more people can be a part of the industry.

Can we find you on twitter?
@samanthapleet

finish this sentence:
I love New York because…there is magic in the air

photos by ANDREW DEFRANCESCO

 You can find Samantha Pleet’s designs
in NYC
Bird
203 Grand Street (between Bedford and Driggs Avenues ) Williamsburg, Brooklyn

US Online
Bona Drag

UK Online
The Moon and Mars

for her complete stocklist visit www.samanthapleet.com

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Chrissie Miller from Sophomore

chrissie
Chrissie is wearing Sophomore’s brilliant “Flowers in the Attic” t-shirt -from the book that i stole from my babysitter to read the “dirty parts” when i was a kid and jeans by Court Jeans
Chrissie, along with Madeline von Froomer is the designer for the label Sophomore. Unapologetically at ease with herself in the world, she has none of the pretensions that you sometimes find in the fashion world. Which makes sense since she’s a native new york city girl who began by making t-shirts for herself and her friends. So she wasn’t trying to be a fashionista: she just did her own thing and the girls who loved her cool/casual style started following Sophomore. Not unlike how the really cool girl in highschool will inevitably divert a little attention from the Queen Bees without even trying…

You can find Sophomore at Opening Ceremony in Manhattan and Bird in Brooklyn and a bunch of other places as well as online. All the deets are on their site.

If you could live in another era, when would it be and why?
The 1960′s in Los Angeles, Laurel Canyon.
I could have hung with Jim Morrison, Graham Parsons and Waylon Jennings!

What’s your favorite movie?
Beaver Trilogy

What is a current obsession?My boyfriend

Do you read fashion magazines?
I really dont. I mostly just check out style.com

Describe your style as a friend wouldI’m a jeans, t-shirt kinda person.

What style/trend (current or past) do you hope is never recycled
Ugg Boots

What style/trend would you like to see come back?High waisted jeans, I’m not into a low waist.

Has the internet changed the fashion industry? How?I think its great that anyone can look at images both old and new. I think it helps people who are interested in fashion learn their history.

Can we find you on twitter?
Yup! @chrissiemiller and @sophomorenyc

Finish this sentence:
I love New York because…I was born here.
or
Momma always told me…the future!
looksFromSophomore

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , , , | 10 Comments

Althea Harper + FF = Fashion Fridays

altheaUpload

Althea Harper in her own sweater.

Hello lovelies, I want to give more play to NYC based designers and others in the fashion industry. So every friday I’m going to do a short profile with someone new. I’m starting it off with Althea Harper who you might know from her stint on Project Runway. After PR she moved to NYC and gained more experience by working for Tory Burch while still working on her own label. She was listed as one of 6 designers to watch this past fashion week by Refinery29 which piqued my interest and then when I attended her showing during this past fashion week I fell in love with the cool simplicity of her designs.  I met up with her this past week again to take her photo and she couldn’t be nicer. Talented and nice? A great combination!

If you could live in another era, when would it be and why?
I consider myself a modernist and I love the future so I can not think of another time period that I would prefer to live. I don’t think I could handle living in an era that didn’t have woman’s rights!!

What is your favorite movie?
I love the movies Great Expectations, And God Created Woman, Repulsion, Azucar Amarga

What is a current obsession?
Military boots- where comfort and fashion meet!!

Do you read fashion magazines? If so what are your current favorites?
I love Elle, ID, Love, Purple

Describe your style as a friend would describe it. 
A juxtaposition between drape and tailoring, comfort and fit and chic and sexy.

What style/trend (current or past) do you hope is never recycled?
moon boots

What style/trend would you like to see come back?
Flare leg pants- they are great for curvy girls! I love my skinny jeans, but I would like to wear my boot cuts without feeling like a dork….

Has the internet changed the fashion industry? How? 
 It has made fashion more accessible to more people, it doesn’t matter where you live. It also put people more in contact with the designer which is great!

Can we find you on twitter? @altheaharper

Finish this sentence:
1. I love New York because…
or
2. Momma always told me… if you can believe it you can achieve it!!!

Below a photo from Althea’s Spring 2011 Collection- see more on her website

HARMONICS
I was inspired by sound waves- the shapes they make and how they symbolize our communication to one another.  I took the curves of the waves and then contoured them on the body to enhance the female form through both cut and print.  I wanted to create a statement for a woman, through the shapes of sound, to communicate to the world without even saying a word. –Althea Harper

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , | 6 Comments

(Chic + Rage) * (Perverted + Cool) = Cody Ross

A Q & A with the madman behind Priestess NYC
blackWhite
Forget the props he got from Rihanna recently. It’s Cody Ross’s unique point of view, constantly morphing and mutating his Priestess NYC line with a tantalizing cross-section of coolness, cosmopolitanism, wearability and straight-up fun. Even Walter Van Beirendonck would be intrigued by Cody’s fashion propositions.

After a few cocktails chez lui, Cody agreed to a spur of the moment Q & A.

What’s hot right now in fashion?
Atalanta Weller, Anne Pachan’s swimwear line “Cala Ossidiana”,
Jean-Pierre Braganza, Millie Cockton, Hannah Marshall and Gemma Slack! Oh, and I just previewed Pleasure Principle’s new range and it’s impossibly cool!

What’s in your ipod?
 Die Antwoord, Dommin, Depeche Mode, Boyz II Men, Lucas Banker,
Isaac Mutant.

What visual art have you been eyeing?
Leon Botha,  Marianne Aulie, and Banksy & Co.

Where do you shop?
Seven NY and cool showrooms around the city.

Do aliens exist?
Yeah, but a hundred billion galaxies away (making contact could be seriously risky!).

What are you reading these days?
Chris Trela’s super-cool new book “The Autobiography & Sex Life of Andy Warhol.”

Wow! You should meet Lindsay of Outlaws of the Border. She’s reading alot about Warhol lately too. Maybe it’s in the air!
Who’s your favorite ‘it’ girl?
SIGRED AGREN or anyone who looks like her! And lately I’m crazy for that Israeli girl, Luda Dolgun!

If you could clone a girl and then make out with the both of them tonight who would it be? Melissa B.

Who has cool style?
Brittany Kubat and Yo-Landi Vi$$er from Die Antwoord. And of course, Katya from Style Defined!

Ha! Okay, cool. Thanks!

LydiainCodysPriestessNYCCropJacket
Lydia Hearst in Priestess NYC

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , , , | 9 Comments

Lindsay Jones in Silhouette

My Q&A with the designer of Outlaws of the Border
3Lindsay
Lindsay Jones radiates an ethereal and delicate quality as well as a quiet inner strength. It’s this juxtaposition that makes her interesting as a person and an artist/fashion designer.  I first met her at the Zac Posen party for Target. We’ve since found out that we both live in loft buildings in a decidedly unhip area of Brooklyn and we’re beginning our own collaboration -more on that another time. In the meantime please click below to read my interview with Lindsay and learn the details of her upcoming show.


Hey Lindsay, what’s up?
I’m working on the next Outlaws of the Border Collection, of course, but I am also showing work at the Chelsea Museum in the project room on June 21st with a musical composer and a film artist. My pieces will be larger than life art/fashion pieces that I will execute with a very conceptual approach. They are part of the installation that fills the space of the room and links the various elements together through movement and fabric. I am very excited and hope you all can make it out!!

That sounds great. I personally love the Chelsea Museum. And this leads perfectly into my first question! You were originally studying as a sculptor and then got into fashion design. How did you go from one to the other? 

I feel most mediums translate into each other, It is a blurry line where one medium shifts into another, be it sculpture or film or writing…the more you learn of one it bleeds into the others. The focus is what makes it grow into  something strong. And Fashion in a sense is wearable art/ sculpture, that is collapsible and functional on a daily basis. I love that it can say so much so quickly and be gone. Like a series of thoughts.

So you see fashion design as creating something in 3D space. Because obviously clothing on a body is interacting with space in all dimensions and isn’t flat… 

One of the key things I like to pay attention to is the silhouette. I like the idea of a silhouette being interesting or modern or having a unique approach but not in a overly constructed way that restricts movement of the body. For me it’s kind of like a tension between the super constructed silhouette and the natural organic approach to shapes that are more along the lines of a woman’s body and the freedom that exists there… that point of intersection is what I find interesting. Silhouette has for many years reflected culture. Through fashion, sculpture and architecture. It is rather revealing about a cultures ideas of what is happening on a larger spectrum and the future motion of the whole, although harder to see when in the midst of it. That is why I think it is good to find things that are interesting without being tricky or overly trendy. So that the end result is classic although modern in its approach.  

You worked for some other designers before you began your own line. How did that experience inform you?
Well first you start as an intern and you have to do a lot of tasks and it can get quite complex. But I think that was kind of the best transition, because what it did for me was better than school. It forced me to be organized. It also let me see firsthand where an idea comes from, how it’s communicated, translated, executed: the whole thing through a team. It’s really exciting to see how it all culminates.

spring10lookbookpage8
Speaking of teams, do you work with others on Outlaws of the Border? 
I’ve had up to 4 interns! Seriously I have two other people who work with me now. Maria Sharpe and Sheyna Imm. They do more of the business marketing/ P.R. side which that allows me to focus on design. They are also close friends of mine so we have a very open/collaborative relationship. 

Ideally how do you see your line developing?
I would like to move Outlaws forward in a way that includes more people into my vision while I remain true to myself.
spring10lookbookpage3
Are there any women you’d want to dress? 
Honestly, Kim Gordon, maybe even Grace Coddington. People with individual style: to see how they translate the clothes into their own style.  

What are your current obsessions?

Andy Warhol! I even have a little hair piece that I’ll wear sometimes. Seriously I love Warhol and his work and his effect on popular culture. 
  
What do you like best about New York? 
I like the hidden places. And how everything is interconnected, I like the mix of cultures and mix of rich and poor and how everyone is so close together and I like the industrial aspects and places further out. Little Russia, Brighton Beach, the bridges, all the parks…
What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever given or received? 
Don’t think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide whether it’s good or bad. Whether they love it, or hate it. While they’re deciding, make even more art.
-Andy Warhol

All photos from Outlaws of Border Spring/Summer 2010 Lookbook by Yana Toyber

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Kenzo says you might as well dance

A Q&A with designer Kenzo MinamiKENZOMINAMI.PORTRAIT.ACE2010(C2_Small2)
I met Kenzo Minami awhile back at a party at B.East. He was dj-ing at the party and I liked his energy and overall vibe. Later I learned that dj-ing was just a small part of what he’s about. Kenzo is a majorly accomplished artist/designer and the more I learned about him the more intrigued I became: he has been commissioned to do work by a variety of companies from Mercedes-Benz to Converse to the Tribeca Grand Hotel. He’s also had both solo and group shows and in 2007 was chosen as one of 35 people for “Johnnie Walker Blue Label Celebrates 35 Under 35” which was designed to celebrate the brightest young minds across a broad cross-section of disciplines including artists, writers, music executives, comedians and designers. Oh! And he also designs t-shirts that are sold at one of my favorite NYC boutiques Seven! So I’m psyched that he took the time to answer a few questions for me and that in turn I can introduce him to those of you unfamiliar with his work.
(click below!)

 If people ask you the question “What do you do?” how do you answer?
Graphic Designer?

minami
WSOGMM1 – Kenzo’s piece for Exit Art
What are you currently working on?
I have work in the upcoming show/benefit for Exit Art Gallery on June 7th. It’s with an amazing collection of artists including Nan Goldin, Yoko Ono, Bill Viola, Swoon, among others and Special Guest Host Michael Douglas.
In addition I’m working on multiple pieces for other shows. And I really have to update my website and finally planning to start on that as the next top priority.

You’ve also done work recently for the ACE Hotel, which is one of my favorites in New York. How did you get involved in creating work for them?

It goes back to long before the one in Portland was opened, and one of the very first solo project I did years ago when I was still mainly doing broadcast stuff.  When I did the a few projects with Nike in 2003, I met Alex Calderwood (who eventually opened Ace Hotel) who was involved in the projects through the agency Neverstop back then. When he opened Ace Hotel in Portland, they contacted me if I would do a mural for it – and I did.  And when they opened one in New York, we talked about doing another one for it also – and 2 years had ended up passed till I did one this past March.  


TURBINEofLIFE(AceHotelNYC).MuralOnly©KENZOMINAMI2010
Turbine of Life mural
Can you tell me a little bit about the mural / your thoughts behind it?

Yes, it’s called Turbine of Life. I went through a very stoic or almost bland period creatively, dealing solely on academic or meta level themes (about creation and process of the pieces themselves, what it is to graphically construct, or regarding where we are in our visual culture). Then I snapped out of it and went for something more emotional, positive, and in the direction of “Forward” as oppose to everything being in retrospect or in comparison or referenced.  So this was the piece I was picturing: this turbine, springing out all these lives and living organisms.  This in my head was about the nature as organic based machinery but also about human scientific attempt to reboot the nature. 

You seem to have successfully created your own career path/avoided a corporate route. How did you manage that?

I don’t think I necessarily “avoided” the corporate route - I think (and would like to think) that I had a healthy and balanced relationships with corporate projects and essentially corporate clients.  As much as I was very specific and careful of the tone I was setting and balancing between art and commerce, I was also fortunate to work with people who really wanted to do something cool in the world of advertising or corporate media and gave me a freedom.  And as much as I had freedom and fortunate environment to work within, I think I consider myself as a designer rather than artist and I do definitely come from design back ground (I studied industrial design and started my career as a set designer) – so I never had any emotional or artistic conflict with potential restricted condition I could had been working with (even though I cannot say that I experience too much of it, as I mentioned), and I think this created the condition of mutual respect and understanding of creative territories.  
And regarding creating my own career path – again, I was very careful of every move I was making and really pondered  every step I was taking and tried to make sense of the whole. It was a balancing act of so many different elements, but at the same time, there was no way of me doing what I was trying to do if it wasn’t for all these people who gave me chances and opportunities.  So I am not sure how much of my career path I “created” on my end even though I did try my best to be on top of it and it has progressed in the way that I intended it to and hoped it to – There are so many people I owe my career to and should give credits to. 

Okay, and now some easy questions! What are you looking forward to in 2010?
The summer!

What are your top 3 favorite places to go out in NYC?
I really don’t go out to particular places anymore except a few coffee shops when I take a break. Blue Bird Coffee Shop on East First Street, Gimme Coffee on Mott street, And La Colombe on Lafayette street. I really wish that they would open an hour or two longer (if not whole night) – they all close around 6 p.m. or something, and I often miss them by the time I step out of my studio.

What music are you currently listening to?
Alton Ellis. Aphrodite’s Child. Nick Drake. John Cale. Susumu Hirasawa  Young Marble Giants. Van Morrison. Bob Dylan. The Blue Hearts. Soutaiseiriron. Nino Rota. Boz Scaggs

MK115.1999.Black(front+back).2©KENZOMINAMI2010

Are you still dj-ing?
Not at the moment.

Best advice you’ve ever given or received?
Not the advice I received personally, but after all the pondering and agonizing, I reached the point in my life that I generally try to live by these 2 quotes and sayings. One is “You can live to be a hundred if you give up all the things that make you want to live to be a hundred.” by Woody Allen. And the other, which sort of came as a surprise to me is this very common and old Japanese saying “We’re fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance.” I never payed attention to it until I saw the English translated version – which puts it in complete new light and perspective, since this was such a regular and common saying to the point that it is banal and almost lost any significance when we say it in Japanese. It was one of those thing your uncle said to justify drinking and partying. But then, when I really thought about it, this really sums up how I feel about life, as the other side of same coin of saying by Woody Allen. In the way that there is no point in thinking why we are here. We are already here, so we have to start the whole topic from the basis and the idea of “might as well”. In original Japanese version, it actually says more of “We are either dancing fool or fool who watches it, so it’s pity if you won’t be the one who dance.” In a way, having one saying from true New Yorker, and the other from Japanese as mottos for my life makes sense considering that I lived half of my life in Japan and second half so far in New York.


“Rose” + “Money”

roseMoney

I meant these pieces as a pair loosely.  I usually jam-pack an artwork with multiple themes and sub-themes like a puzzle, but with these, I just wanted to simply suggest one simple theme for each.  And 2 things we all are paying attention or have them in our collective consciousness at the moment seem to be ecology and finance – nature and money.  

the end


Posted in Interviews | Tagged , | 3 Comments

A Dandy in New York

MattFoxNY_dandy
While nowadays there are many looks for men from the black skinny jean hipster to skate punk to preppy, many of them seem to be personified by a distinct desire not to grow up. Or a frightening excess of facial hair – which is perhaps overcompensation for feelings of insecurity in terms of their masculinity. The Dandy is a distinct look that is refined and is worn by those secure enough to know that elegance and masculinity are not necessarily polar opposites. Matt Fox is one such person and has a sense of style I’ve always admired. In addition he is one of the owners of the Fine and Dandy Shop, an online emporium which offers “accessories for dapper guys”. He was also nice enough to answer  style questions for Style Defined.


How long has the Fine and Dandy Shop site been in existence?

We launched on October 31, 2008. It’s been just over a year and we couldn’t be more pleased with the response.

And how did it start?
For as long as I can remember I’ve wanted to open a shop. But the cost of real estate in NYC has made it more of a dream than a reality. It was just over two years ago that I had the idea to give it a try online. The online world is so ideal for a niche market concept. It’s really incredible the number of people we’ve met online who identify as dandies.

What defines a Dandy?
The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines a dandy as “a man who gives exaggerated attention to personal appearance.” In the modern world I think a dandy pays particular attention to the details of his dress and makes the extra effort to look his best each day.

If someone wanted to become a bit “dandified” how would you advise them to begin?
Is there one or two particular articles of clothing or accessories you’d recommend? I would recommend a couple of well-tailored suits and a few well-chosen accessories. A couple of great ties (or bow ties if he’s adventurous enough), a tie bar, a couple of pocket squares, and some great socks. It’s all about the details. The biggest thing is caring enough to take the time each day to look his best.

Are there any role models in film or literature for aspiring dandies?
Of course there are the obvious in literature like The Scarlet Pimpernel and The Great Gatsby. Recent films with dandy inspiration are Sherlock Holmes and Brideshead Revisited.

Do you think the interest in Dandies stems at all from a (negative) reaction to the modern world or technology?
I think it’s more of a rejection of the trend over the last several decades of casual dress. Casual Friday has been extended to each day of the week in many workplaces. But I think the tide is turning. Even the New York Times wrote recently about younger guys increasingly dressing up. TV shows like Mad Men probably have something to do with it but I also think recession is a factor. We all have to dress to impress (and keep our jobs).

And is there anywhere in particular to go to find dandies?

Take it to the streets! The best style inspiration is seeing the guys walking the streets of New York City. From the older, blue blood of the upper east side to the hipster dandies of the lower east side, the fashion dandies of 5th Avenue to the dapper Wall Street gents. Dandies are everywhere you look!

Posted in Interviews | Tagged | 2 Comments