


I’ve seen Morrissey a bunch of times in concert. I go back and forth with not listening to albums but just specific tracks. I love Morrissey and I thought it was like a funny joke but people were definitely hot about it. I know that one of the first designs you did was the Morrissey's dead shirt. We're Like a globalized thing now, right? We can't do the bootleg anymore and we haven't for a very long time. We're working directly with bands, image, licensing, artists, all types of proper shit. No, because now we just work directly with people now. And then somebody was like, no go.ĭoes that happen a lot? How do you deal with that?

Richard Prince made this as a phrase painting in the nineties and then Kate Moss wore the t-shirt with the phrase on it to the opening.Īnd then we made it meta, the shirt never existed. It's actually one of the first brands I bought for myself. I just made a Long Island focused playlist.Įverything from Billy Joel to MF Doom, De La Soul, punk rock and hardcore. Office sat down with Alex to talk about Chopped and Screwed music, working with Puma and fighting climate change. Even though the runway itself is intentionally dwarfed by the colossal fountains created by Lynda Benglis, the show's grandiosity was not lost upon viewers, as many (both there and at home viewing on screens) were naturally captivated by Anderson's awe-inspiring vision. The entires spectacle orchestrated by Loewe plays with perspective, enticing the audience into a world larger than life, both literally and figuratively. The very concept of a garment is reimagined, with structured tops made to emulate volumnious swaths of fabric, meticulously held together by oversized pins. Waistlines ascend, legs extend, and busts broaden, emulating the bold, heroic proportions of action figures. The collection takes traditional silhouettes and augments the construction to new heights. The perceived casualness commonly associated with everyday fabrics is abruptly shattered by the infusion of glamour and radiance. Covered in an array of sparkling crystals, classic cuts of blazers and polos, along with familiar fabrics like knit and denim, undergo a transformative journey.
