GQ (South Africa)

Paul Smith’s 50 years in fashion

Britain’s best-loved designer Sir Paul Smith rings in 50 extraordin­ary years of business this month. To celebrate, he reveals his proudest moments from the past five decades. Stripy hankies at the ready!

- Words by Teo van den Broeke

there are only a Handful of living fashion designers whose names Have become synonymous with a singular aesthetic.

The way a coat looks when it’s wrapped around the body, say, or the visual contrast created by two patterned fabrics being draped together. There’s Ralph Lauren, of course, whose acute understand­ing of the American pastoral look is second to none. And then there’s the master of oversized tailoring, Giorgio Armani. Miuccia Prada is up there too, as is spider king Hedi Slimane. And then, naturally, there’s Sir Paul Smith. Beloved for both his exuberant approach to life – the 74-year-old, who’s been with his wife, Pauline, since 1967, still goes swimming at 5am every day – and his playful design perspectiv­e, Smith has spent the best part of his life peddling his unique vision across the globe. And it’s a vision that’s become as closely associated with brightly coloured tailoring as the “classic with a twist” casual pieces (think muted macs lined with colourful stripes and bomber jackets cut from sherbet silks) that line the rails of his 166 worldwide stores. So, in this, Smith’s semicenten­nial year, we thought it’d be a good idea to sit down with the nicest man in fashion and ask him to recall the key moments that have come to define his extraordin­ary career, decade by decade. Covering everything from his first Parisian show to breaking ground on the world’s most Instagramm­able store (not to mention, of course, all the times he dressed the late, great David Bowie), here, in his own words, Smith recalls a fashion life very well lived.

The 1970s Paul smith mounts his first-ever menswear show in Paris in 1976. The City of lights is agog.

We started making clothes to sell to other people in the winter of 1976. Back then, I showed my collection­s in tiny little hotel rooms in Paris because there were no fashion weeks in London, Milan or New York. It was just Paris. I had a couple of mates from the RCA [Royal College Of Art] who were working in design companies in the city, and they had a beautiful apartment on Rue de Vaugirard. We were having dinner one night, and they said, ‘Why don’t you put on a fashion show in our apartment?’ and I said, ‘That’d be fantastic.’ It was on the first floor, with lovely big windows and parquet floors. I think it was probably the only fashion show ever that all the guests had to knock on the door to get into – there was just a little Paul Smith business card above the doorbell. When we were pulling the show together, it was all hands on deck. We played the music on my cassette player at home, and we played a continuous tape. We paid for a few models, but they were very reasonably priced. Pauline and I literally sewed every trouser and did all the fittings. It was just lovely. It was one of those shows that, if you did it today, it’d feel so unique and special. There were only about 35 people in the audience, and it was just honest and friendly. I’d been working as a freelancer at a few companies, and I’d done a bit of styling. I was mates with the guys at Arena and The Face, and I worked for Browns on South Molton Street as a freelance designer a few days a week. Through all those connection­s I got to know the people at Barneys and Bergdorf Goodman in New York and Seibu in Japan. Miraculous­ly, most of them came to the show. Now, the fashion week schedule is so enormous that you probably wouldn’t get them as a young brand, but back then there were only about 30 shows, and I was the new kid on the block. In terms of coverage, at that particular show, I think we only had someone from Daily News Record – though

I’m not sure if that exists any more – and Women’s Wear Daily [WWD] maybe. I did two shows at that apartment, but the neighbours complained so we couldn’t continue. About a year later, I did my third or fourth show in Paris, in a minimal, raw concrete gallery which was owned by the interior designer Andrée Putman. For that show, we used all black models, the soundtrack was dub music, and the clothes were colourful. It was a radical change. I remember talking to Gene Pressman. Anyway, it went on to be a better-selling collection than previous ones. It was just a moment where I was ahead of the game. It wasn’t too radical, and it resonated with the buyers, but it was a bit of a shock at the time. They were mainly used to British designers showing clothes made from British >>

fabrics and tweeds, and suddenly I was doing silk slubs and cotton in raspberry or Yves Klein blue. I think that show was the birth of the dreaded “classic with a twist” an expression that people so often apply to us now. Our clothes were very wearable, but they had that little bit of difference.

The ’80s smith introduces Curios and non-clothing items To be sold in his stores for The first Time, from filofaxes To dyson vacuum Cleaners.

The face of shopping for fashion Changes forever.

On 9 October 1970, I opened my first shop, and it was a tiny square with no windows, which only opened on Fridays and Saturdays. You would literally walk in and see nothing but an Afghan hound and me, so it was already crowded before anyone entered. I suppose that was where my “selling more than just clothes” idea really started because having additional things available to buy – such as a poster I stole from a café in Paris (with permission, of course) or some penknives Pauline and I found in Greece – acted as a bit of an icebreaker. It helped give people coming into the confined space a sense of relaxation. When I came to London in 1979, I opened my shop on Floral Street, and it was the first minimalist shop in the whole of England. Deyan Sudjic from the Design Museum wrote later that there was no other shop like it, which was a wonderful compliment. If you think about Comme Des Garçons and the other Japanese designers – Issey Miyake, Yohji Yamamoto – they didn’t appear until the early 1980s, and they obviously had that minimalist design too. Mine was an empty concrete space. I had this cabinet that had a sliding glass top on it. From the stuff, in that cabinet, I used to make as much money as I did from the clothes. Everything in there was just so unique and different. Later, a friend of mine had this wonderful diary, which turned out to be something called a Filofax. It was loose-leaf, but it also had a diary, notepaper and little plastic wallets for things at the back. Pauline asked my friend where it came from, and it turned out that it was from a little stationery shop that’s now a Starbucks on Kingsway, just around the corner from my office. She bought me one, and I saw the company that made them was called Norman & Hill. When I eventually went to visit them in Bethnal Green, I realised the company literally consisted of an elderly man and an elderly lady. They supplied the army and people from the church with Filofaxes. I managed to persuade Norman & Hill to make the covers of their Filofaxes not just in black, but in browns, greens, navy blues, burgundies, and then I asked if I could put together a pack of what I thought was correct for the modern person. You know, things for your credit cards, etc. Many people think we invented the Filofax because in two or three years we sold 17 000 of them! It was unbelievab­le. James Dyson was also a mate of mine – is still a mate of mine, although I’ve not seen him for 20 years. He came out of the RCA and he invented this vacuum cleaner that was in pink and lilac – unusual colours for a vacuum cleaner – and it had this transparen­t drum for the rubbish. He was finding it difficult to distribute, so I offered to sell them in the shop. People who came into the shop thought I’d forgotten to put it in the cupboard after cleaning in the morning. I put a cardboard ticket on it with the price – it was quite costly – but, from my memory, we sold quite a lot.

The 2000s are one of The most formative decades in smith’s fashion life, he’s knighted in 2000 and opens his iconic bright Pink shop on la’s melrose avenue in 2005, which goes on To become The most instagramm­ed boutique in The world (Probably)

In the year 2000, I’d been living with

Pauline for 33 years, since 1967. We never got married, but in 2000 she asked if we could, so we arranged a date. Later on in the year,

I gave a load of my mail to the team in the office – gas bill, American Express etc – and one of them said, ‘You’d better look at this. It’s from the Queen. She wants to make you a knight.’ Which was great, and lovely and I said yes and all that. Later on, another member of the team said, ‘We’d better check the date because you’re going to Japan and a lot is going on.’ So she rang Buckingham Palace, put the phone down and said, ‘You’re never going to believe it! You get knighted at 11am, and then you get married at 4pm on the same day.’ So, it was a busy day. Pauline got made a lady in the afternoon, so she was Lady Smith. I received my CBE from the Queen, but my knighthood was from Prince Charles. He said, ‘I think we wore your shirts for our engagement photograph,’ which was true. When he got engaged to Diana they both wore blue Paul Smith shirts. Lord Snowdon photograph­ed them. After my knighthood, I was given the Légion d’honneur. That was really special because I’ve been loyal to France with my fashion shows since 1976. Later, when we were looking for a shop in Los Angeles,

I found a building on Melrose Avenue, which had a pointed roof and was wooden and wasn’t very nice – but I could actually afford it. I was sitting at the table in my office thinking, “The house numbers on Melrose Avenue go from zero to 20 000 or something. They’re kilometres long, those streets, so you’ve got to build the Eiffel Tower to get noticed...”

In the end, we rebuilt the horrid building with the landlord and turned it into this big pink shoebox and, by chance, it’s become the most Instagramm­ed building in the whole of California. Forbes did something on what to do in California as a visitor and our shop was above the Hollywood Sign in the list! It was just barmy, absolutely barmy. Around 300 to 400 people have their photograph taken against the wall every day – not now, with the virus. And then, for Pride, we had [one wall of] the building painted in the Pride colours. People were driving home from work in the evening, and it was a pink shop, and then they were driving to work in the morning, and it was a striped shop.

The 2010s The Paul smith brand’s relationsh­ip with Celebrity intensifie­s, Culminatin­g in a dinner hosted for John legend at hollywood’s Chateau marmont in 2019 (but london’s still home)

We’re blessed with people such as Gary Oldman, who lives in LA, and Kevin Hart and John Legend, who I hosted a dinner with last year at Chateau Marmont – a lot of the acting and music profession­als wear Paul Smith.

They just wear our clothes. They go into the store. We dress Harrison Ford too; he loves our bespoke suits. But then we’ve got a lot of the young bands too. We’ve never courted the celebrity thing at all. As you know, the front rows of many shows are considered, transactio­nal places in terms of celebrity. For us, it’s more organic – going back to Bowie, whom I dressed, and Led Zeppelin. Even when I was 18, I was making clothes for Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page. We’ve always had this lovely associatio­n with music and actors. Daniel Day-lewis wears us. It’s never been courted. I’m approachab­le. I’m a nice, easy personalit­y. There’s no fanfare. People can come in and be treated like human beings, you know?

The shop on Melrose almost certainly helps. During the Oscars, it’s a go-to place. If you’re a British actor over there, for Photograph­s instance, you can just go into the store for

a hug. I call it a hug – it’s not a literal hug. It’s just a dose of Britishnes­s. It’s, “Ah, Paul Smith”. I go to LA once a year. I’ve been going since the 1970s. I’ve been going to New York since the 1970s. I don’t not like it, it’s just somewhere I go. I’m more of a European by nature. [America’s] not somewhere I’ve ever been tempted to live. I’ve got my home in Tuscany, my home in London.

The 2020s smith Celebrates 50 years in business with a gala dinner and show in Paris This year (The british Press goes nuts over The Presence of susan sarandon) and unveils Plans for The Paul smith foundation

Thank God we did the 50th-anniversar­y show and dinner in January of this year rather than June because otherwise, it wouldn’t have happened. So many people have texted and emailed me telling me, ‘The last time I really enjoyed myself was your show and dinner,’ because more or less after that we were straight into the trauma of lockdown. In terms of the 50th-anniversar­y show, we have a nice topsyturvy archive in Nottingham, from which we remade some of the original Paul Smith prints and ideas. We included some of the photograph­ic prints and some of the floral prints from the ’70s and ’80s in the show. It was a nod to the past. There was a two- or threeminut­e reportage projection onto the back of the runway, which featured photos from the various shows and ad campaigns we’ve done over the years. The building where we had the show was a dance hall, with a theatre next to it where we had dinner.

The dinner was just mates really. It’s a shallow, fast-moving world now. Not just in fashion but in music and lots of things. At Paul Smith, we’ve never been number one, but we’ve always managed to keep fairly relevant. There’s a human being called Paul Smith who runs the company – he’s hands-on, he’s still the main shareholde­r, he still goes to work every day. I love my job, and I suppose on my tombstone I’d like it to say, “Great continuity, nice guy”. You know the thing I’m most proud of is continuity. The fact that there’s always been a relevance. Little shops in Italy and France that are still buying Paul Smith after 25 or 30 years. That’s just fabulous. I own my business. I’ve never really borrowed and even since lockdown I’m still in business, but lots of other brands are going to the wall. We’ve been old-fashioned in the way we run the business. We work within our means. We’ve never gone down the logo route, which is a big thing from the past ten years but is a fast buck if you don’t watch it. You can do really well for three years, but then the next generation will say, ‘That’s what my sister or brother or

‘During the Oscars, British actors go to the LA store for a “hug” – a dose of Britishnes­s’

dad wore – I don’t want that.’ If you’re a bit more anonymous and you have nice clothes that you’ve priced correctly, you’ll succeed. About ten years ago, I gave a tiny amount of shares in my business to start the Paul Smith Foundation. The idea is that it’ll provide advice for creative people – if you’re a young graphic designer starting out or if you’re a chef, even. You don’t need to be someone going into fashion. I always get people asking me how I’d do it if I started today, so initially, it’s just going to be an advice source. But who knows? It may turn into a physical thing where you can visit to get inspiratio­n. We could have the archive open and lots of lovely books. It’s probably partly about legacy and partly about giving something back. Over the years, we’ve had so many people come to this building thinking that they want to be a fashion designer.

I say to them as we walk around, ‘It’s lovely to be a fashion designer, but it’s an oversubscr­ibed job.’ When they walk through the building and see display people working – window dressers, marketers, buyers, social media people – they see that there are lots of lovely jobs that exist in the industry. My approach has always been to demystify the job and make it more understand­able and, in a way, more accessible. That’s what the foundation does.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise, Top: backstage for from AW20 in Paris, 19 January; The Melrose Avenue “pink shoebox” shop in Los Angeles; The first Paul Smith catwalk show, an Autumn/winter collection for 1979’s Paris Fashion Week. Smith had been showing in the city’s hotel rooms since 1976
Clockwise, Top: backstage for from AW20 in Paris, 19 January; The Melrose Avenue “pink shoebox” shop in Los Angeles; The first Paul Smith catwalk show, an Autumn/winter collection for 1979’s Paris Fashion Week. Smith had been showing in the city’s hotel rooms since 1976
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