Five things that have inspired me this week:
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
Showing posts with label Covent Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Covent Garden. Show all posts
Sunday, 21 April 2013
Saturday, 20 April 2013
All Saints - The Biker Project
All Saints. OK – so it’s
not an independent, but this one is certainly an individual store …..
Funnily enough, two stores
down from Bolongaro Trevor I found myself on the doorstep of an All Saints concept store. Although I have always liked the design and
interiors of their stores, this one particularly caught my eye as it looked
more like an exhibition than a shop – and is!
- The 50 piece exhibition shows leather jackets hanging from the
ceiling and nothing else except a few pairs of shoes lined up on the floor and
two seating areas. I had to ask what the
store was about!
- This store holds ‘The Biker Project’, a new concept and the first
store to do it- it displays all one off designs specially made to auction. The auction winner will have one tailor made
personally for them. Bidding starts at
£1000 for plain leather and £2000 for special leather, it is rumored that Johnny
Depp has his eye on three!
- The biker jacket was chosen for this first project as All Saints
feels it is an iconic statement piece for their brand.
- Before the auction staff will be travelling to Miami, LA and Berlin
to put together a client list of all those interested, although dates are not
confirmed. If you leave your name and
number you will be phoned with the dates nearer the time.
- Downstairs you can see items from current and new collections two
weeks before they go into all other All Saints stores.
- This is the only store where you can see this project and exhibition
– what a good find!!
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
Friday, 19 April 2013
Bolongaro Trevor
Bolongaro Trevor, clothing shop
For something a little different... try Bolongaro Trevor:
For something a little different... try Bolongaro Trevor:
- The designers and founders of this shop were the founders of All
Saints, but left when it started to get very big and more commercial.
- The Trevor’s are a husband and wife team who design the men’s and
women’s wear.
- They produce 52 – 100 of each piece, with a lot made in England and
all of very good quality.
- The printed designs are hand painted then screen printed onto
fabrics.
- Their inspirations come from vintage style references and military
themes. Some garments have original
buttons and other details they have managed to salvage/find.
- The interiors are also inspired by vintage designs with old adverts
collaged on the walls, scissor hooks for rails and taxidermy. The portraits running down the stairs and
throughout the stores are found at antique markets such as Spitalfields.

- The brand has four London stores and two more up North - one in
Birmingham and one in Leeds. All
together there are roughly 100 people who work for the company – so not
massive!
- The assistant I spoke to picked their statement ‘flag jackets’ made
from actual flags as their favourite garment! These are unique designs which would certainly stand out in the
street. To me they were reminiscent of Vivienne Westwood’s style.
- They have a very broad range of customers from 25 up to 60, but rather
than targeting an age they aim for those that just want something a little bit
different to wear.
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
Thursday, 18 April 2013
Magma
Magma is on the same street and is one of four stores in London which sells artistic books, magazines, its own tee shirt designs and a few fun gift sets.
- Started in 2000, this was their first shop- they now have four in London and a couple dotted further up north.
- One of their stores, which focuses on products rather than books, is literally five stores down.
- Magma started off as a book shop only.
- They now commission illustrators and designers to produce items such as their graphic tees. These are suspended from the ceiling- almost like a product installation. They give their concepts to artists who then develop the designs, adding their own signature to the initial briefing.
- Book sales are down thanks to competition from companies such as Amazon.
- They have a really good line of fun, small gifts, which sell well and can’t be searched for on the web.
- They adjust their products seasonally and to follow current trends – featuring cycling and food at the moment!
- An architect has now designed all their stores. They wanted nothing pretentious in the
design, preferring something that would encourage customer interaction. So their bookshelf is a metal ladder
structure with wooden shelves attached and suspended- giving the feel that you
can just throw the books on rather than preciously placing them! The interior
of their shop five doors down is made entirely from cardboard! All their shop interiors are modular and can
be dismantled in a few hours - practical and visually interesting!
- They have had regular customers since they first opened, many from
creative industries who ‘enjoy time to get away from the drawing boards and
computer suites and to actually interact and browse with the books’.
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
Wednesday, 17 April 2013
Super Superficial
Super Superficial sells printed tees, jumpers and sunglasses. It was their interior which caught my
interest – although it’s a small shop, they have used wood in their interior to
create a clean and fresh backdrop to their artistic clothing. It turns out the founder of the brand and
shop is an architect and Super Superficial is inspired by Swedish architecture
and the beautiful Scandinavian-style café Nordic Bakery in Golden Square,
W1. I was made welcome by a very
pleasant shop assistant/illustrator who is one of the three people who run the
business. She filled me in with some
background information –
80% of their printed artwork is from uk artists, who can all be found on their website http://supersuperficial.com. Super Superficial use their website as a creative platform for these artists.
Their artwork is interesting and different - they try not to create anything too ‘branded’ so you won’t find their name simply splashed across the tee-shirt, instead each piece is like wearing an individual piece of art, particularly as they don’t mass produce any designs.
Their customer base ranges in age between 18-45 and is mainly male, although I’m sure I’m not the only female to buy into it - but then again I love oversized graphic tees!
The tone of the shop is set with cool non-offensive hip hop playing in the background.
They have started doing a small amount of sales to other countries, in particular Italy and Asia.
They are not too heavy on pr but do update a facebook and twitter page- something for us fans to follow!
Their sunglasses are great! These iconic designs are made by Grafik Plastic and this is the only store in Europe to stock them. They are made by hand and the company recently won a ‘red dot design award’ – so possibly one to watch out for!
//Photography by Lillie Cooper
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)