Standing Ground‘s Michael Stewart was named the inaugural winner in a savoir faire category of the LVMH Prize. His label’s first solo runway outing during London Fashion Week proved how much he deserves that award. The way Stewart approaches dress-making is truly one-of-a-kind. It’s so powerful and haute in craftsmanship that you can easily imagine the designer taking helm of a brand like Alaïa. Spring-summer 2025’s closing khaki dress was the supreme example of Stewart’s celebrated technique (a term so rare used – and practiced – by emerging designers). Two layers of jersey had been draped and cut over the wearer’s body, before Stewart drew the contours his instinct told him to apply. These drawings were then digitized to make the design symmetrical and applied as stitching to the layers of jersey, before hundreds of micro-beads were inserted in the pockets of space that remained. Yes, that’s magic, and it echoed down to every single detail of the line-up, from the sublime, sculpted leather jacket to a hooded, velvet maxi-number.
Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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