Lost & Found
Inspired by Fumio Sasaki, a Japanese writer who lives with a few pieces of clothing and not much else, this graduation collection examines minimalism through an exploration of routine, connectivity and efficiency.
In reducing clutter and excess, we produce a demand for efficiency (that is, how much can we achieve with as little as possible?) and — as an emergent property of having such little variety — routine. Cycling through the same pieces in our wardrobe day after day, week after week, these clothes become enmeshed with ourselves, inextricably linked to one another just as our daily activities and routines seamlessly flow from one to the next.
Inspired by Fumio Sasaki, a Japanese writer who lives with a few pieces of clothing and not much else, this graduation collection examines minimalism through an exploration of routine, connectivity and efficiency.
In reducing clutter and excess, we produce a demand for efficiency (that is, how much can we achieve with as little as possible?) and — as an emergent property of having such little variety — routine. Cycling through the same pieces in our wardrobe day after day, week after week, these clothes become enmeshed with ourselves, inextricably linked to one another just as our daily activities and routines seamlessly flow from one to the next.
My collection has been featured on SHOWstudio, also had an interview with Adam Andrascik, Nick Knight and Pierre A. M’Pelé to present it.
Here is link for ARTSTHREAD portfolio and the flip book version of my final year work, included the Burberry Childrenwear Competition, BFC x Charles Jeffery x British Library Competition and a project for Julius 7 (A Tokyo founded brand presents an otherworldly, gothic-inspired aesthetic).