Harper's Bazaar (Singapore)

CRYSTAL CLEAR

On the eve of The Fashion Awards 2017 in London, Windy Aulia sat down with Nadja Swarovski and talked about fashion designers, sustainabi­lity and bumping into Hugh Jackman in her bathrobe

- Showman, Showman The Greatest The Greatest

Last December in London, Nadja Swarovski was in a celebrator­y mood.The Fashion Awards 2017, presented by Swarovski, was well into its rehearsal stage and she had just thrown a sumptuous private dinner for a handful of her friends. Bianca Jagger, who was about to hand the Swarovski Award for Positive Change to Maria Grazia Chiuri, sat to her left, while Mary Katrantzou, one of Swarovski’s recent collaborat­ors, was busy snapping away on her iPhone across from her. The hot-button topic Ms Swarovski shared with the table was the Saint Laurent crystal bedazzled gown that Miss Piggy, her special guest, would be wearing on the red carpet.

Swarovski’s involvemen­t with fashion dates back to the creation of the Aurelia Borealis crystal.This special stone, made by Manfred Swarovski, cast shimmering rainbow hues through a new coating technique applied to the surface of the crystal. Christian Dior was so besotted by it that he used them in his collection in 1956 as well as on costume jewellery. And the rest, as they say, is history.

How do you decide which fashion designers to support?

We’ve certainly been looking at graduation collection­s. Mary Katrantzou and Christophe­r Kane are some past examples.What’s very important for us is to see if the designer appreciate­s crystals as a creative material. Designers who appreciate crystals will do something a little bit more interestin­g with them and really push the boundaries. Mary asked us to print a certain kind of crystal pattern on top of the crystal—an intricate process, which [presented] the crystal in a more multi-dimensiona­l way. Another one is Faustine Steinmetz, who’s taken the concept of blue jeans to a different level by mixing them with crystals to create an amazing juxtaposit­ion.We really do like to experiment and explore with the designers.What we are doing with the schools is positionin­g the sustainabi­lity angle of the crystals, which I think is super important, and the schools are embracing this topic more and more.That is, I think, going to be a very key element in the future.

Do you think sustainabi­lity is changing the face of fashion?

Yes, I think so. Maybe not the face of fashion, but the soul of fashion. I think it’s very interestin­g what Livia Firth has done with her “Will I Wear This 30 Times?” campaign. Basically, she’s encouragin­g people to wear their dresses 30 times. I think what’s going to happen is that people will invest more in quality garments.

Besides sustainabi­lity, what other causes are close to your heart?

I want Swarovski to become a more cause-related company. For example, we have a collection in relation to the film

which touches on the issues of diversity and inclusion. That’s a topic that’s really important to us as we have signed on to support the U.N.’s women empowermen­t programmes.We have subsequent­ly started a Diversity and Inclusion department as well, which is rolling out worldwide.That’s why we really wanted to work with [20th Century] Fox on this. Now, I have to tell you this embarrassi­ng story. I had a massage in the hotel yesterday, and I was walking from the spa to my room, in my bathrobe… and guess who I ran into? Hugh Jackman. I finally had the chance to compliment him on his work in

and how it became an inspiratio­n for us.

How does it feel to be able to change the world through your work?

You know, my biggest driving force is to make every woman proud, and feel what it feels like to wear a diamond. So if we can instil that empowermen­t or pride or joy, then that’s success. And the product lends itself so well to that. It’s crystal, it’s pure and it’s about light—it catches the light as it reflects light. And it’s about positivity. That’s certainly the mission, to push that positivity forward. ■

 ??  ?? Nadja Swarovski
Nadja Swarovski

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