There's room for the Gap, but the joy of dressing is an art.
You're only as good as your last collection, which is an enormous pressure.
I'm passionate and I travel the world not just as a tourist but to understand cultures... I've lived with Masai tribe... I travel the world and bring it back in the form of a research book that would become the starting point for the collection.
I've treated the waistcoat as if it were a corset, so that it becomes the first layer in the process of putting clothes on the body. There is constant motion between layering and revealing.
Fashion is a very stressful place to work because of the demands of doing the shows - no one expects a writer to produce two books a year on the dot - but it's also a very toxic place to work.
I'm an accomplice to helping women get what they want.
I believe in discipline, so I'm not the right person to cry about weakness and things like this, but maybe I'm not human.
If I didn't already sense that I was different, I certainly was reminded, whether by my parents or by the other school kids. Not just reminded. Told... I was made to believe it wasn't right. If I went a little bit too off - slap! It was Dad's upbringing and it was Victorian, and that's the way he was.
I have all my life fought against prejudice, having been subjected to it myself.
My dresses are very reasonably priced, for dresses that are cut on the body.