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Abou
One fine day, I found myself with “nothing to wear,” so I climbed into my boyfriend’s closet and started trying on his clothes.
The first pieces I designed were exactly like that — made to be worn by people of different genders and sizes. On each person, the clothes look a little different, because first and foremost, we’re all individuals with our own unique features — and that’s wonderful.
A difference of three sizes and thirty centimeters in height worked some real magic — and I discovered a couple of unexpected wardrobe gems.
How It Started
That got me thinking:
why divide clothes by gender or even by size and height at all?
clothes by gender or even by size and height?
That got me thinking: why divide
why divide clothes by gender or even by size and height at all?
I don’t try to fit myself into strict stylistic frames. I’m more interested in exploring different directions. Right now, it’s: a touch of avant‑garde, raw edges, faded colors, asymmetry, and an Asian flair — as I imagine it.
It’s the second approach that speaks to me. I want my body to feel comfortable, my skin to feel good, and my sense of beauty to purr with delight. And that’s the kind of clothing I create.
Recently, I came across the idea that clothing can be divided into two types. The first is clothing that the body must adjust to — squeezing itself into familiar shapes and frames. The second is clothing that wraps around the body, flows with it, gives freedom, and sometimes breaks the usual visual lines.
Style