Waikato Times

Bespoke labels lead the way

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Bron Eichbaum had one last goal to conquer in her 40 years in the fashion industry – to set up a label reflecting her love of androgynou­s, well-made clothing.

When she launched Herriot last year, the 56-year-old Wellington­ian began creating limited runs of timeless, anti-fast fashion garments that were locally made.

There’s a sense that Herriot could be a runaway success, but Eichbaum wouldn’t want to compromise her values. When Jacinda Ardern wore a pair of Herriot pants in a Vogue fashion shoot, the designer had 750 hits on her website in mid-February, but not a single garment to sell.

Looking back, it was a crazy, whirlwind few days for the mother-of-three who laughs: ‘‘The clothing was off production at the time. The whole experience was just, wow, insane. But the shoot was amazing. Jacinda looked beautiful.’’

Just a few weeks before Eichbaum found out that the Prime Minister might wear her pants, she tramped the Heaphy Track and contemplat­ed walking away from the brand she launched early last year.

"I came out of the tramp thinking I do want to do this, but I am going to do it to the beat of my own drum. If I can’t make it work that way, I won’t do it. I wasn’t going to affect my health and family time.’’

Since she left Burnside High School in Christchur­ch, Eichbaum has worked across the spectrum in the fashion industry – shop assistant, window dresser, model, modelling agency manager and founder of Wellington’s first upmarket recycled store, Soup.

Now the full-time product designer at Silverdale knitwear, she says launching her own fashion brand was the last frontier of her fashion industry career, something she always wanted to do. ‘‘I didn’t want to go to my grave without trying this. It was something that had been niggling me.’’

Eichbaum is part of a growing trend for small, bespoke fashion brands being launched in New Zealand. Sold online and in a rising number of selective boutiques that prize quality over quantity, collection­s are released in small drops and limited runs like prized art works. In Auckland, the women’s brand Mina launched last month, while its founder, Natalie Proctor, continues in her day job.

In Wellington, Georgie Veitch crafts exquisite, limited-edition jackets under her Georgie label, selling them in the Wellington boutique Ena. Brands like these resist fashion trends, and they also reject the fast fashion, offshore manufactur­ing model that dominates the industry.

Prizing local craftmansh­ip, Eichbaum hops on her e-bike and rides to a small factory in Newtown, where a number of machinists stitch and sew her designs. Back on her bike, she delivers the finished garments to the Wellington store The Service Depot. ‘‘Sustainabi­lity is really important. I’d never get so big that I’d need to go offshore.’’

Herriot styles are made in tiny batches. For her first collection, Eichbaum made just eight of her coats, and six of her pants. Eichbaum’s designs are slouchy, comfortabl­e garments with a playful androgyny. Designs that she likes to wear, Eichbaum loves nothing more than seeing a stranger in a Herriot top or one of her boiler suits. ‘‘That gives me the biggest thrill.’’

Her latest Herriot capsule collection is ‘‘all about freedom. The textiles can be worn coordinate­d or rebound off each other for an eccentric flair’’. Inspired by the Roma people, the self-confessed tomboy says, ‘‘I love the way they cross genders with oversized garments, because it’s not actually the right size for them to begin with, and recycle and repair them when they can.’’

It’s a similar story in Dunedin, where Darlene Gore makes limited-edition classic garments under her self-titled label. The 49-year-old has also worked elsewhere in the industry, as a tutor at Otago Polytechni­c, and as co-owner of a former label. The

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