I moved here in 1984 and it was crazy. I had been working for Interview Magazine in New York and I came to shoot the scene happening in London. There was this cultural explosion happening with Leigh Bowery, Trojan and Michael Clark and Culture Club. We were in Taboo, and I fell in with people like Princess Julia, Jeffrey Hinton, John Maybury, the director, and Stevie and David from BodyMap. I was sleeping on their couches, I had no idea they were at the epicentre of creative London. I thought I’d seen it all in New York, but London was next level wildness. I learnt an important lesson in those years: a sense of originality. If you copied someone else’s work you were looked down upon. It was not cool. Everyone had their own creative voice — today, so much is made from mood boards off Instagram and Pinterest. It’s bizarre that’s accepted.
SelectFashion, the popular women's fashion retailer known for its affordable, trendy clothing, is set to close 35 stores within days, following a series of clo
One ranged from a gilded embassy or under the Louvre to an elegant br
Ms Rule is a special educational needs coordinator at Douay Martyrs Catholic Secondary School in Hillingdon but works on her business in the evenings and at wee
British fashion is under threat from artificial intelligence that can identify popular products and flood the market with cheap copies, designers have warned.Fu