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House of Flora

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British fashion label and design house
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House of Flora
IndustryFashion
GenreFashion
Art
Design
Founded1996
FounderFlora McLean
(head designer)
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsCouture
Millinery
Jewellery
Fashion accessory
Websitehouseofflora.net

House of Flora (founded 1996) is an establishedBritishfashion label and design house founded by designer Flora McLean.

House of Flora designs have been exhibited in theVictoria & Albert Museum in London as part of the 2009Anthology of Hats exhibition curated by millinerStephen Jones.

History

[edit]
Flora Mclean, founder of
House of Flora, wearing one of
her own creations, the wig hat.

McLean is the daughter of sculptorBruce McLean.[1] Some of her first self-made designs were the hats and turbans made for her father's 1996 film,Urban Turban.[2][3]

House of Flora, McLean's own design house, was founded in 1996 when she started taking on private commissions and making millinery props for magazines, advertising and fashion shows. Heravant-garde design aesthetic is informed by her stated influences ofsurrealism,constructivism and theBauhaus movement.[4]

Collections

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Hats

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McLean specialises in avant-garde headwear for haute couture designers, catwalks, fashion campaigns and personal collectors. The designs are made often from a variety of different materials not normally associated with millinery, such as PVC, Perspex, felt, leather, wood veneer, fibreglass and nylon, and are influenced by strong geometry and historical figures[5] as well as concepts in modern art. The geometric nature of the designs and the bespoke fabrication detail of the work often leads to it being described as part fashion/part art.

House of Flora has created Millinery Couture forMatthew Williamson,Blumarine,Bruce Oldfield and forRiccardo Tisci atGivenchy Haute Couture.

Clothing

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The design house also provides bespoke clothing designs, such as the pink fibreglass corset and black trench coat outfits designed and fabricated forVictoria's Secret in 2006 and 2008.

McLean debuted her first dress design created under the House of Flora name - entitledDress No.1 - at the SHOWstudio's 'Future Tense' project in 2008 (a military style cotton printed shirt dress).Dress No.2 (a wool, blue gabardine coat dress) andDress No.3 (a red printed mackintosh mac dress) followed. It is McLean's stated intention to produce a single House of Flora dress design per season.[6]

Collaborations

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Neil Moodie

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McLean and House of Flora's design project collaborations include those with hairstylistNeil Moodie, and with whom McLean has created 'Iconic Heads'[7] - hats inspired by hairstyles and created from in felt and other fabrics, one hat in the form of Elvis's quiff.[5][8] 'Iconic Heads' has toured toColette in Paris,Bumble and bumble in New York, andLiberty in London.

Danny Flynn

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House of Flora worked with award-winning printerDanny Flynn on a collection of accessories inspired by letterpress printing, and which debuted at the 2009London Fashion Week; this saw the designer's work being rendered as laser-cut typography on rubber for garments and accessories - the piece, entitled Dress No.2, was reviewed at the 2009London Fashion Week. The designs were also featured inVogue. Film of the work,Letterhead, can be seen on theVogue website.[9] An interview with Flynn for Print Week blog described the design collaboration.[10]

Justin Anderson

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The showcase fashion films for the new House of Flora dress collectionsDress No.1, Dress No.2 andDress No.3. were all created by the directorJustin Anderson for Ponyboy Films and displayed by Vogue.[9]

Notable ad campaigns and celebrated models

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House of Flora designs have been modelled byBeyoncé, on the cover ofThe Face magazine,[11] byKate Moss forFrench Vogue, wearing haute coutureGivenchy headwear designed by McLean,[12] andHelena Bonham Carter,Agyness Deyn andRóisín Murphy. McLean's work has also been photographed byMario Testino,Paolo Roversi,Nick Knight, andArthur Elgort, among others.

High-profile fashion ad campaigns and shows featuring House of Flora's designs includeMAC make-up 2008,Victoria’s Secret shocking pink corset showpiece 2006, Victoria’s Secret trench coat 2008[13] modelled byLara Stone inVogue, Katherine Hamnett ad campaign 2005,Rocco Barocco ad campaign,Blumarine campaign 1999, Luisa Beccaria, and the 'Millinery in Motion' show withStephen Jones.[14]

In 2010, Mclean was invited to create an installation of her designs for Kalbiri,Covent Garden.[15]

Awards

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McLean is a winner of the Jerwood Contemporary Makers prize,[16] an award initiative set up by the Jerwood Charitable Foundation and the UK's only award for the applied arts. The chosen recipients share a prize fund of £30,000[17] and an exhibition at the Jerwood Space gallery. The Flora McLean/House of Flora design piece, entitledMarcel, which was chosen for the Jerwood Foundation's third and final year of awards and exhibitions, was part of theIconic Heads wool felt hat project with stylist Neil Moodie in 2009.[18]

An exhibition of the work of all the award winners opened 17-June - 25 July at the Jerwood Space, London, 2010.[19][20]

Feature magazines and books

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House of Flora designs have featured[21] in magazines such asBiba magazine,British Vogue,Vogue Paris (nos.862 and 863),Vogue Italia (nos.661 and 675),[9]Elle UK (6 Nov),[22] Vogue Russian, Vogue Deutsch, Vogue Beauty, Vogue Nippon (no.84), Vogue Casa (no.10),[23]Elle UK (6 Oct, 7 Oct),Elegance (no.2), EPS Moda,Grazia andGrazia Hot List,Independent Magazine,Surface Magazine, Vandidad,British Vogue,The Guardian,Numéro (no.77),Wonderland (nos.01,2,4 and 5),[24] Aygo Magazine,Perspex,Interview (no.101),Toni and Guy Spring 07,Flair,Numéro (nos.75, 76),Numéro (no.75), Ballet Costume,Frank Magazine,Max & Co Japan,Givenchy Haute-Couture,[25]I-D (no.249),The Face (nos.79 and 80).[26]

In 2011, as part of their continuing 'Design' book series, TheDesign Museum produced 'Fifty Hats That Changed The World', which featured the collaboration of McLean and hairstylist,Neil Moodie[27]

References

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  1. ^Scotland."Bruce Mclean | the artist". The-artists.org. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  2. ^"Bruce McLean". Archived fromthe original on 15 December 2008. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  3. ^"Image is Everything". Studycollection.co.uk. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  4. ^"The House of Flora - FASHION CLOSE UP". Fascineshion.com. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  5. ^ab"Designer: House of Flora by Kirby Marzec". Fashion Indie. 22 November 2008. Archived fromthe original on 24 February 2012. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  6. ^"HOUSE OF FLORA". Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2010. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  7. ^"Neil Moodie Hair Stylist for Bumble and bumble". Archived fromthe original on 13 April 2010. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  8. ^"Latest Fashion News, Style Advice, Fashion Pictures, Fashion Shows".The Telegraph. Retrieved18 February 2014.[dead link]
  9. ^abc[1][dead link]
  10. ^"On canvas: letterpress print proves popular at London Fashion Week - Middlesex University Research Repository". Eprints.mdx.ac.uk. 20 March 2009. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  11. ^"The Face". Archived fromthe original on 7 May 2008. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  12. ^"Flora McLean - SHOWstudio - The Home of Fashion Film". SHOWstudio. 6 August 2008. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  13. ^"VS Models Stripped Down In Vogue Russia May 2009". LingerieWeapon.com. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  14. ^"Millinery in Motion: Stephen Jones". Archived fromthe original on 15 May 2010. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  15. ^The Kolberg Partnership, London (21 February 2009)."Installation with House of Flora at Kabiri's new flagship store in Covent Garden - What's on in London". Allinlondon.co.uk. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  16. ^"Jerwood Contemporary Makers exhibition". Archived fromthe original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  17. ^[2][dead link]
  18. ^"Jerwood Visual Arts : Newsletter". Email.rubios.co.uk\accessdate=2014-02-18.
  19. ^"Jerwood Space". Jerwood Space. Archived fromthe original on 7 January 2014. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  20. ^"Jerwood Visual Arts". Jerwood Visual Arts. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  21. ^"Info". Archived fromthe original on 24 April 2010. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  22. ^"Elle UK". Archived fromthe original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  23. ^"House of Flora - Vogue Casa # 10". Polyvore. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  24. ^"Wonderland". Archived fromthe original on 10 March 2010. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  25. ^"Givenchy". Archived fromthe original on 24 February 2008. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  26. ^"Givenchy". Archived fromthe original on 25 April 2010. Retrieved11 June 2010.
  27. ^"House of Flora with Neil Moodie, Hairts/Iconic Heads 2003",Fifty Hats That Changed the World, London:Design Museum, 2011,ISBN 978-1840915693

External links

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