He described the series as “A
– An Hourly Journey from Darkness to Light”, an adventure that clearly symbolizes the excitement of coming out of the pandemic. However, it also There are more layers: offering hope to a generation battling anxiety, and a commitment to sustainable, vegan, organic and scaling up harmless processes since he was a bachelor’s student at the University of Westminster exploratory research. Carzana’s is already in him A generation’s pioneering outlier graduation show featured giant, monstrous patriarchal creatures sitting on the shoulders of models, their gruff, manipulative, gloved hands dangling over them.
Five years have passed, and the controlling fears have been exorcised and purified and handed over to the caretaker angels of Khazana. It speaks ominously of trauma (which Khazana never directly addresses) while embodying a generation’s greater fear and angry helplessness. But over the years – through his master’s degree at CSM – the extraordinary chemistry of personal emotions and a larger social vision has fixed in him a messianic desire to make something that doesn’t hurt anyone or hurts anyone. things work.
This is what Carzana is now: herald progress by being it. “In the beginning, people always questioned me, as if using fabrics and dyes that didn’t damage the environment would be some kind of deterrent,” he recalls. “But I think it makes it a lot easier. Because once you create something, it feels completely yours.”
He noted that the hazel appearance “has been X-stained” by the amount of tea bags and orange spice. Midnight gray on coats and knits takes hours to dye with acorns or logs. ” The silk-like fabric is Tencel or Eucalyptus—renewably grown and cruelty-free. The soft, organic form of the bag is Pinatex, made from scraps from pineapple crops. Another luxurious black-coated material was donated by Sarah Burton, which is part of her Alexander McQueen initiative to redistribute slow-moving merchandise to young designers and students.
Paolo Carzana’s talent has attracted His own choir of guardian angels. He is a resident of the Sarabande Foundation, where he collaborates with fabric artist Semin Hong and jewellery designer Mairi Miller. Versatile London hatmaker Nasir Mazhar helps Carzana create his gravity-defying angel wings and miniature spirals The tulle hat comes to life. Behind him, there are also art teachers and other educators supporting this working-class boy who was bullied at school for his differences, but he proved to be the outstanding creativity of his generation.
In a way, this is an old and old story in the fashion world. Paolo Carzana felt the most profound connection with Alexander McQueen himself, he The legacy is the Sarabande Foundation. Carzana dedicates the show to him. He knows how lucky he is to find like-minded people to collaborate with and to be able to sing together something. “It really saved my life,” he concluded. “If I don’t create, I don’t think I can live. ”