| LONDON
HAIRDRESSER TURNED MILLINER JUSTIN SMITH TALKS
ABOUT HEADWEAR
The windows of the Maria Luisa shoe store on
Rue du Mont-Thabor in Paris are usually filled
with footwear, but since fashion week, they’re
home to the fancy hats of London hairdresser-turned-milliner
Justin Smith.
His elaborately decorated hats—with Victorian
jet beads and three-foot-tall ostrich plumes—had
editors buzzing during the collections.
Custom headgear is available at his Soho atelier,
or from his web site, www.jsmithesquire.com.
This is what Smith had to say about Hats and
Hatmaking:
How would you describe your aesthetic?
Traditional with a twist. By traditional, I think
of early 1900's to 1940's England, when everyone
was really wearing hats. My last collection was
based on a burlesque Victorian circus.
So do you think that people should wear
hats every day?
They're certainly coming back because the style
makes one look more dressy and dapper. It's a
big British trend right now, everything dandy.
But I love even flat caps and trilby hats as well.
Each of my hats has an individual character to
them. They create a quite stylized individual
look.
How should a woman work a hat like yours
into her wardrobe?
It can be for a special occasion or for every
day. For example, a client bought a beautiful
Dries Van Noten jacket with an empire waist. She
commissioned two hats, one that would make the
jacket dressier and one that would make it more
casual for daywear.
Why don't we see celebrities wearing
hats on the red carpet?
I think it's ridiculous and something we need
to change. People are a bit scared to wear hats.
But really, it's just another way of adorning
yourself.
Your hats can be really intricate—you've
got one made of silver knitted wire and another
one made of tattooed pigskin. Which of your creations
took the longest time to make?
The burlesque corset hat with detachable ostrich
feather fans took two and a half months to make
because we made the fans from scratch, and the
patchwork beading was all done by hand. I think
it's the most beautiful piece in my collection
because it's not just a hat, it's also a performance
object.
Do you think people realize that your
hats are made by hand?
When working with felt, it's quite time consuming—steaming,
shaping, and pulling with your bare hands and
with pins. But the result is a hat with no obvious
seams or telltale marks of factory manufacturing.
I always include a vintage brooch or jet beaded
Victorian appliqué to make it more special
and unique.
What's your next project?
An eight-page shoot with i-D magazine. And I'm
starting a line of lower-priced ready-to-wear
hand-trimmed hats that I will be presenting next
season.
POSTED BY STYLE FILE |