All About Helen Bullock

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If you’ve been reading my blog for a while, you might noticed that I had an interview column (by the way, I am planning to  revive it in 2016!) and I wrote about the super talented, London-based artist Helen Bullock. Her vivid  fashion illustrations and bold prints felt so full of life and attitude. And now, this unique personality launched her own bags line, printed with her signature vibrant prints. The limited edition collection is a selection of custom canvas tote bags, with hand stitched leather straps, and contrast print pockets. Hand printed with bright and bold gestural marks and her favourite colour pallete including, Lizard, Grape, and Traffic Cone Orange, these totes are roomy, and “even roomier for the weekend” as she told me! Alongside these, there is a collection of Limited Edition Giclee Prints – all in editions of 20.  The original fashion illustrations were seen in magazines including AnOther, and CNN Style. You can buy all of these goods in her new on-line store, www.helenbullock.com 

I feel Helen’s must-haves are good tips for arty Christmas presents! And, you can read our interview here.

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I love this Vivienne Westwood illustration so much. 

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Flower Market. Marni SS15

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Marni celbrates its 20th Anniversary! From this occasion, they opened a Marni Flower Market, which brings the most Marni-ish thing on Earth- florals. For this special season, Marni showed a clean, but bold collection featuring delicate, white tunics, yellow leather suits, flower-power printed gowns, white kimonos with obi belts… it was a chaotic harmony, this time at Marni. Many pieces were statement, and the looks can be easily mixed with last season pieces… while Marni played contrasts, the Milan fashion week comes up to an end…

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Mr. Altuzarra

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Cheers people, Joseph Altuzarra is the designer of the year, according to CFDA! Known for the ultra-feminine collections, I guess that’s a right choice. This talented New Yorker simply had to win. He collaborated with the NYC Ballet and now in September he will launch a collab with Target… and all the time Mr. Joseph keeps it in his own, characteristic style. So, lets all preview his best collections!

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SS14 – Blouses also came in banker’s blue cotton or a patchworked indigo print. Cropped jackets were hand-embroidered in the style of Japanese boro fabrics. And trompe l’oeil dresses looked like thin-gauge sweaters worn over narrow silk skirts. Other designers make a fetish of fantasy. Altuzarra genuinely gets off on making clothes for real life. For him, it’s about the everyday, only elevated.

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SS12 – Built-in parachute straps (a bit gimmicky, admittedly) accented the shoulders of sleeveless dresses, while track pants came with racing stripes down the sides. Tops that were one part baseball jersey, another part scuba suit suggested that this designer has absorbed the lessons of a certain influential Balenciaga show from the early aughts.

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AW14 – Take the double-face navy cashmere wrap coat with generous cobalt blue shawl collar that opened the show. It was a model of timeless refinement, as it was in the bolder combination of pine green and fuchsia that came later. Altuzarra cut skirtsuits in the same lofty, unembellished double-face cashmere and finished them with such a fine attention to detail that they could’ve easily been worn inside out. That was an idea that particularly resonated with him. An understated gray sheath was constructed with horizontal slits at the waist that exposed bright orange and coral linings, “almost,” Altuzarra explained, “as if the back of the dress was being exposed.”

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AW11 – “It started with the idea of not having to think so much about clothes,” the designer said backstage, and it’s true—this was a 180 from the daring cone-busted sheaths and hyper-precise tailoring of his last collection. “I wanted something longer and looser, something sensual and feminine, but utilitarian at the same time,” he said. The pictures that inspired him: old photos of Kate Moss wearing parkas over her evening dresses, in the days when her accessory of choice was Johnny Depp.

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SS10 – Sensing it was time for a break with the 1980’s, which have been so popular lately among young designers, he went in a more 1970’s direction. Patchwork and “taking clothes apart” were his fixations for Spring, he said backstage. But we’re not talking about any old hippie-dippy patchworks. Altuzarra mixed expensive white eyelet and Swiss dot with brown suede and swatches of basket weave into fitted apron dresses that didn’t leave a lot to the imagination. He worked the same materials into jackets, vests, and pants that were more covered up but no less sexy.

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AW12 – Altuzarra chose Corto Maltese, the protagonist of an adult French comic from the sixties and seventies, as his starting point. “He was a sailor, his mom was a gypsy, and his dad was Venetian.” That gave the designer a reason to really dig into military-influenced tailoring. Describing the fabulous fur peacoats, velvet blazers, and shearling toggle coats (gold-plated horn toggles, to be precise) would take up too much space here, but suffice it to say there were some real swashbucklers, and that for every jacket, there was an equally great-looking pair of corduroy flares or slim cargo pants peeking out from above thigh-high boots.

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AW13 – “It forced me to be much more demanding about tailoring, cut, and fit,” Altuzarra said of his new ethos. Demanding is a good word for coat-dresses with tiny waists and padded-out hips, and super-constructed double-breasted power suits with shiny gunmetal buttons topped by cropped vinyl boleros. Vinyl was the surprise. He used it for shrunken motorcycle jackets worn solo or over the top of khaki trenches. Unlike leather, it’s rainproof, and so, says Joseph, it ages better. He also engineered it into hourglass dresses and tops with fur shoulders and sleeves. Leather, which has more stretch, proved the better material for other body-con dresses sliced below the hips with zippers from which were suspended sheer chiffon skirts.

Interview with Helen Bullock

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Helen Bullock (Central Saint Martins BA, MA) is a textiles-driven label, using strong silhouettes as a platform for bold prints of a visceral nature. Throughout the seasons, work has been featured in publications including Dazed & Confused, i-D, and Vogue. And… now she’s up on Design & Culture by Ed !

EDWARD: Hi Helen. You are a young fashion designer from London, who graduated Central Saint Martins BA and MA, having your own label Helen Bullock and doing amazing illustrations during the fashion weeks. It’s all really impressive. Well, I hope you are doing fine?

HELEN: I AM!!!!

ED: What inspired you for this season’s collection? It’s so FULL of prints! And as I know, all textiles are designed by you.

H: Yes! All about the prints! As always a look across many different paths of imagery in an attempt to create my own visual story. At first I was driven by the bold honesty of graphic 60s prints, alongside a carefree image of Peggy Moffitt, combined with the intensity and composition of Keith Herrings work. Bit of a whirlwind really.

 

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ED: Many designers usually find out they are going to be in fashion industry after sometime of studying different stuff. But when you were choosing your college, did you feel from the beginning you will be a fashion designer?

H: As the cliche often goes it really was something I dreamed of as a kid – but no more so perhaps than other options that preoccupied me. I eventually started studying fashion a little later than normal, and was a little resistant as thought the fashion pathway was a little predictable, and was thinking of myself as a fine artist. That all stopped though when I came across the idea of print … something that I’d never considered before, but seemed to bridge the gap so well between art and faaaashion!

ED: If you could choose, who would you love to wear your pieces? This can be an alive or dead person…

H: Well … I absolutely love it when Julie (Vehoeven) wears them …. but on a wish list Peggy Moffit would be super … and Iris Von Apfel would surely rock it!

ED: Who is your biggest fashion idol?

H: Anyone really who is prepared to take a risk and walk down the street holding their head high. I’m sat next to a lady Linda right now wearing a wonderful explosion of a Diana Freis dress…and dolly curls in her hair – we work together every Monday, and she never fails to impress.

 

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ED: While you are a fashion designer, at the same time you’re contributing your fashion illustrations for A Magazine Curated By…. How would describe your drawing style?

H: Intuitive, sparing and in equal measures intense, at times awkward.

ED: Looking at your print erupting clothes, it seems you have a very energetic personality. Does your everyday style reflect the collections?

H: I hope so. I feel at a low if I’m not wearing brightness.

ED: If it’s not a secret- what are your next future steps for your label?

H: I’m trying to work my label as a limited edition made to order product. So rather than stockists, I’m almost searching for a place to exhibit the garment. At present though I’m setting up an on line shop, and have various collaborations in the pipeline.
I’m also hoping to add a range of scarfs to my next collection.

 

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