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Photo by Camilla Stephan
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Photo by Serena Pezzato
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FEBRUARY In Favor of Nordic Rigor Vice: How did you two get started in the fashion business? February: We both went to fashion school, and after a couple of years in the Milanese pret-à-porter we realized we needed to make something that was our own. thanks to some Japanese investors, we started February in 2003. What inspired your new collection? Lots of different things. The films of Antonioni, the art installations of Raynaud as well as the interesting patterns in our bathroom tiles. We were aiming at a simple, clean collection, based on simple geometric shapes such as squares and circles. You could say it’s a basic collection. If you don’t appreciate that concept, you can’t appreciate our work. The thing that I like about your clothes is that even if they’re very rigorous and austere, there is always a sense of fun too. The fact that we use basic shapes allows us to have much more freedom with everything else. We want to produce clothes that make people feel at ease, clothes in which they feel comfortable. To us they are a way to make your life less complicated. A sense of play and irony is absolutely fundamental. Who are your favorite designers? We’re big fans of what Raf Simons is doing for Jil Sander. We love his simple lines and his Nordic rigor. The numero uno remains Pierre Cardin. He was the first designer to disassociate himself from the classical interpretation of clothes. We also love the fact that he can put his brand name on absolutely anything: clothes, penholders, planes, forks... It’s a bit whorish but, commercially, it’s awe-inspiring. We both sleep on Pierre Cardin mattresses. If you could dress a fictional character, who would it be? We’d like to be costume designers for the characters in Miguel Angel Martin’s Brian the Brain. As a designer, what do you consider to be a true sign of success? Having contraband versions of your clothes for sale in street markets. Do you wear your own designs? Sure. We love to wear the ones that never put into production. They are our illegitimate children. INTERVIEW BY SERENA PEZZATO |
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| Photo by Tomas Falmer |
Bringing the Class Back to Metal Babes
Vice: How did you go from the Black Metal hotbed of Bergen, to having your own label in London and friends in high places in Milan?
Kristian: Bergen was never where I found my inspiration, but I was wisely advised to get a tailoring degree from there before I left. Even before I was a teenager I knew how to sew. When I was 22, I got into London’s Royal College of Art, and directly after graduating I was offered a job as the head designer for Harrods International, then I went on to Charles Jourdan Paris for Japan. While that was happening I launched my own label.
How did you hook up with Donatella Versace?
Donatella was introduced to me through an “insider” and immediately chose me to be her new protégé. It was part of a project where established names select one up-and-coming designer to create a collection for them. I am very honored she chose me, I really get a lot of vital advice and support from her and it will give my brand a bright future.
What do you do when you get in the office in the morning?
I create my pieces from sketches. We make all the patterns and samples on the model’s body. I rarely use a mannequin. With my tailoring background, I am very involved in the making of the garments. I like to mix contrasting fabrics, like soft vs. hard, masculine vs. feminine, shiny vs. matt. A typical dress of mine would consist of a sculptured leather bustier against floaty silk chiffon drapes.
Gross question, but do you have a “muse”?
Yes, but it’s a fantasy one. She is a modern-day romantic femme fatale heavy-metal vixen. Each collection is an essential part of the saga of my muse; and every season she adds a new element to her wardrobe and conquers new territory. Still, every new piece blends perfectly with her old.
Are you a big Frank Frazetta aficionado?
Sometimes I need to escape my chaotic and stressful world and let my mind drift off into fantasy. With my fashion, two worlds collide. It’s an explosion of heaven and hell, with a splash of blood; $4 million rock babes meet high-society extravagance.
INTERVIEW BY KATARINA POBLOTZKI






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