988_480n

Meet Ada Fung

Ada Fung is a fashion PR, working as an account manager at Karla Otto Asia. Fung is a graduate of Central Saint Martins and the London College of Fashion. Having studied womenwear design, Fung previously worked at Julie Verhoeven and was editorial assistant at SHOWstudio in 2004. The following year she made a transition from editorial to fashion management by assisting Camilla Lowther at Camilla Lowther Management. In 2008 Fung moved back to China to work as a bookings editor at Vogue China.
Whilst in China, Fung worked on GQ China pre-publication and was a styling assistant at Max Mara’s ‘Coat!’ catwalk in Beijing. In 2009 she became fashion features editor at Modern Weekly China (for Beijing and Shanghai) before returning to London to assist Penny Martin at The Gentlewoman.
During her time there, she helped produce a shoot for Fantastic Man in Beijing. Fung then started work as a contributing edtor for Hong Kong-based magazine Obscura. Since 2011 she has been at Karla Otto Asia as an account manager for Hong Kong and Bei Jing.

Via SHOWStudio

1035_480n

Meet Julius

Julius takes inspiration from Zen and other aspects of Buddhism, an influence that stems from Horikawa’s forbidden and clandestine journey into Tibet from China and subsequent stay at a monastery in the region. Julius has showed at Paris Mens Fashion Week since 2008.

Via showstudio.com

Screen Shot 2013-02-25 at 10.04.37 PM

Xander Zhou: Instagram

The Rising Chinese Designer Shares His Visual Diary of London Collections: Men

Taking in fittings and model castings, backstage show-day chaos, and the wonders of Soho and Shoreditch nightlife, celebrated young Chinese designer Xander Zhou documents his intimate experience of debuting at the inaugural London Collections: Men.

Exhibiting his minimalist take on menswear in the capital for the first time, the Beijing-based aesthete moved into the illustrious St. Martins Lane Hotel a month before fashion week and set up a temporary studio in the West End to finish the preparations. The designer has shown 11 collections in China, launched his eponymous label in 2007 and has dressed leading celebrities like actresses Zhou Xun, Fan Bingbing, actor Chen Kun and Edison Chen. Zhou closed the Friday evening of London Collections: Men with Fleurdelism—his spring/summer collection of deconstructed silk suits and paneled satin T-shirts, inspired by boy scouts and lilies.

“Design is an international language; it doesn’t matter where you’re from, it matters what you do,” he explains. “My generation’s background is very complicated—I was born in China, I studied in the Netherlands, I came back to China again. I travel a lot so I’ve seen many things, and I think this generation of Chinese young people is more confident to share its ideas with the world.”

Via www.nowness.com

802_480n

Meet Chris Liu

Chris Liu is a fashion designer living and working in London. Following his MA in Fashion Design at the London College of Fashion, Liu worked as a design consultant for Burberry Prorsum before founding his eponymous label. Liu has been recognised as one of the top in a new generation of Chinese designers by Vogue China. Liu’s clothes are sold at Joseph in London, Maria Luisa, Paris and Harvey Nichols, Hong Kong

Selected Publications

  • Davies, Hywel; ‘100 New Fashion Designers’ Laurence King Publishers September 2008.

http://chrisliulondon.com
Via showstudio.com

Screen Shot 2013-02-25 at 10.13.14 PM

Xiao Wen x Dana Lixenberg

China’s Quirky Star Model and Marc Jacobs Muse Disrobes After Fashion Week

Bare-faced and beguiling, current fashion world darling Xiao Wen Ju lets her guard down for renowned Dutch photographer Dana Lixenberg, unwinding after a gruelling Fashion Week schedule of fittings and shows in this series of intimate and raw portraits.

“It’s always a bit challenging to do a natural portrait of a model,” says Lixenberg, who shot Ju in Manhattan’s Lafayette House hotel. “Somehow youth and beauty dominate, so it almost helped that she was exhausted and had come from a rehearsal.”

Twenty-year-old Xiao Wen, who hails from the ancient city of Xi’an in China, signed with IMG in 2010 and quickly climbed the ranks both in her home country and internationally, featuring on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar China that May as well as walking for designers including Hermès, Louis Vuitton and Prada the following year, ultimately scoring Marc Jacobs’ Spring campaign in 2012.

“There’s a playful element to her,” says Lixenberg, who has shot for publications including The New YorkerNewsweek and The New York Times Magazine and exhibited in solo shows at Amsterdam’s FOAM and the Nederlands Fotomuseum. “She looks like a little dancer: petite, almost Audrey Hepburnish and very slim and flexible like a kitten. She had a quiet charisma, and it wouldn’t surprise me if it popped up in film.”

Via www.nowness.com

Screen Shot 2013-02-25 at 10.27.53 PM

Lane Crawford A/W 2012

Hong Kong and China-based retailer Lane Crawford selected Nick Knight to direct and capture their first ever moving image campaign. The resulting fashion film and imagery – starring Asian models Ming Xi, Xiao Wen Ju and Wang Xiao – features sumptuous looks from A/W 2012, including pieces by Yohji Yamamoto, Celine and Balenciaga, carefully curated by acclaimed stylist Edward Enninful.

Via showstudio.com

Screen Shot 2013-02-26 at 1.04.10 AM

Eastern Promises

View video here

It’s no secret that fashion’s most dynamic new markets can be found in Asia and the Middle East. This begs the question, if that is where couture is being purchased and craved, why should it not also be where it is made and shown?

To affirm SHOWstudio’s commitment to exploring new fashion frontiers, Marie Schuller headed to Singapore for French Couture Week 2012. Following in the footsteps of our ‘Asian Couture Week 2012′ project, this coverage unpicks the work of designers from areas like Bangkok, China, Hong Kong, Japan and France in fashion film, candid post-show interviews and essays by Sue Wen Quek and Bobby Luo.

Via showstudio.com

Screen Shot 2013-02-25 at 9.54.55 PM

China’s Most Striking Men

Thomas Giddings Gets An Intimate Look at the Far East’s Top Male Models

Emerging faces Rui Wang, Liu Chang, Hao Yun Xiang and the firmly established Zhao Lei are profiled in Thomas Giddings’ elegant short filmed during the spring/summer 2013 menswear shows in Paris. Inspired by an enigmatic scene in Paul Schrader’s 1980 film American Gigolo, Giddings filmed discreetly in order to capture both the models’ true personalities and the minutiae of the everyday.

“I wanted to capture the downtime and follow each of the boys in a subtle way,” says the photographer, “telling the story through their characters, rather than through the clothes.”

Giddings began his career shooting behind the scenes at fashion shows forPOP and i-D, and has since gone on to photograph for British VogueTwin and Russian Interview, as well as hold numerous exhibitions of his work. Demonstrating the growing influence of China on the fashion industry, the four boys have risen over the past few seasons to work with some of today’s most influential designers, including Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel, Kris Van Assche for Dior and Dolce & Gabbana. Giddings’ Paris short features intimate access at high profile runway shows for Louis Vuitton, Dior, Dries Van Noten and Mugler, offering unique insight into the usual high-octane sheen.

“I work differently to a lot of other photographers backstage,” explains Giddings. “It’s about communicating existing moments rather than stepping in to direct.”

Via www.nowness.com

Layout Silent Voice 20121119 [p]3

Hairy-Egg Photo Studio

There is a lot of local Chinese Photographers, that appear in to pop out with their aesthetics. The reality of ones, that emerge with a new vision and approach to Fashion and Documentary, seems to moving the borders of a “perfect fashion photo-shooting” to the area of real art. The one that I met was Viko Wu, young Chinese-Canadian photographer that amazed me with a touch of raw reality in the street style photography. Please feel free to check the website: www.hairy-egg.com and her tumblr: www.hairy-egg.tumblr.com. With her co-operation with fashion designer Yutaka Onozawa (Silent Voice) they bring the new level to emerging Shanghai fashion scene. Here is the “Press Release Silent Voice Men SS2013″.

This ride was built up for Shane with some deluxe components The frame was hand torched only at the lugs. It makes for an incredible detail, and with the hard-ano rims this bike is easily one of [Factory Five's] nicest builds to date!

Fixed-Gear Bikes Gaining Popularity Amongst Chinese and Expat Riders Alike

A recent article in Jing Daily about fixed wheel bicycle culture in Beijing, including fixie bike polo, has whet my appetite for and nudged me ever closer to ditching my 21 gear mountain bike in favor of a single speed, fixed-gear road bike. I’ll admit it: there’s something beautifully elegant and minimalistic about fixed-gear bikes. They are usually devoid of mechanical complication, with the most fanatical fixie purists eschewing even brakes (something that I cannot fathom in the sudden stop and go nature of Shanghai city riding). With no cables, gear levers, derailleurs, or shock absorbers to add weight, complexity, and clutter up the visual purity of the bike, you’re left with a beautifully clean geometric shape.

Continue Reading →

A model wears a design by Fake Natoo, a fashion label that uses materials destined for the dump. Provided to China Daily

From Garbage to Garments

Chinese fashion designers and entrepreneurs are upcycling and recycling old clothes into new garments to help both the planet and their local communities.

Read the full story by Tiffany Tan at China Daily.

Chinese Fashion Brands Look West

It’s nearly impossible to go a week without reading about international fashion brands expanding their operations in China. But what about Chinese brands targeting the West?

A number of Chinese fashion and apparel brands are now aiming to build upon their domestic success and establish themselves in Western markets. Among them are companies like Bosideng, with recorded revenues of $1.3 billion in 2012 and over 10,000 retail outlets in China, and Eve Enterprise, the group behind four menswear collections now targeting the UK.

Read the full story from The Business of Fashion.

ChinaFile: Chinese Designers in a Down Economy

Very few Chinese designers experiment with prints…

Most Chinese designers still struggle with their fabric sourcing. Local suppliers traditionally shun small orders and refuse to supply them. And buying fabric at retail makes the designers’ products too costly. So quite a few designers turn to the overseas market for fabric. Uma Wang, for example, uses exclusively Italian-made fabric.

But with export orders dropping, Chinese manufacturers are now turning to local designers to fill the capacity in their factories.

Read the full story at WWD

260547_406833046041369_1784340632_n

Vega Zaishi Wang Showroom

Beijing-based Vega Zaishi Wang (王在实), one of Jing Daily’s favorite emerging Chinese designers, recently moved her VEGA ZAISHI WANG STUDIO+SHOP into an airy new space. Nestled in historic #63 Yanyue Hutong, the studio and showroom strikes a harmonious balance between Wang’s unwavering, simplified aesthetic and the more elaborate, traditional northern Chinese architecture. Having just debuted her Autumn/Winter 2012 collection, “Jaran Zagaan Aduu” (“六十白骏”), Wang will likely have her hands full in the months ahead, settling into her new digs while promoting the collection as fall fashion season heats up.

Via Jing Daily

“Shang Xia is not a second line of Hermes; it shares the same engagement of craftsmanship quality, but with Chinese inspiration. The best strategy of realise this is staying loyal to our philosophy and to use excellent raw materials, great craftsmanship and contemporary design.”
Read the interview at Luxury Society