Glamorgan Gazette

I don’t live for fashion parties ... I prefer to be at home in my kitchen

Eco-conscious handbag queen Anya Hindmarch talks to HANNAH STEPHENSON about fashion, family and how lockdown afforded her precious time at home

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HER famous clients include the Duchess of Cambridge, Gigi Hadid, Reese Witherspoo­n and Kendall Jenner – yet handbag designer Anya Hindmarch tries to stay out of the red carpet spotlight her customers attract.

As the creator of bold bags – some have eyes, others resemble glitzy crisp packets – she’d rather be running her business than smack bang in the public eye.

In fact, when she was younger the environmen­tally conscious entreprene­ur had neuro-linguistic programmin­g (NLP) to help her nerves when speaking to industry groups and students.

“It was a very particular thing which came out of the trauma of failing in a singing competitio­n at school when I was about 13,” she recalls; nerves got the better of her on stage and she just dried up.

The problem got worse as her company grew and she would struggle to breathe from fear of public speaking, and end up hyperventi­lating.

“I felt silly and embarrasse­d about it. I read up on it, and the best advice I could find was to breathe into a paper bag, but that really wasn’t practical.”

The NLP worked, but even now she isn’t a fan of being in the limelight, preferring to be at home with the family.

“I don’t live for going to fashion parties.

I prefer to be at home in my kitchen,” she reveals.

Anya, 52, has spent years juggling running her designer handbag empire with bringing up five children (she’s a stepmother to three, and mother to two).

She was 25 when she met her husband, James Seymour, who was a 37-year-old widower with three children under the age of four. Anya says she knew she was going to marry him the instant they met, and also fell in love with his children.

“It was very instinctiv­e and you have to follow your gut. I fell for him and I fell for the kids and it felt really right. And I was a bold 25-year-old, having started my business young.”

“At one point we had five children at five different schools,” she recalls.

“It was complex. Very hard. We had to invest a lot in help at that point [they had an au pair].

“The logistics were incredibly complex, with five sports days and five parent-teachers evenings. It was pretty full-on.

“I’m certainly guilty of not having a great work-life balance,” she continues.

The lockdowns gave Anya some precious family time. “A lot of people, if they were honest, would say that just taking a moment to step off the conveyor belt and take stock will bring them benefits. For me, spending time with the kids was really special, and not travelling and being endlessly busy was quite important, both creatively and personally.

“It was nice to go for walks every morning with the kids at 7am – that was really special, and I probably won’t have that again.

“I’d be sitting at the table doing my business and the children would be sitting at the table doing their work. I was learning what they do and they were hearing more about what I do.

“They understand they’ve always had a working mother. That’s what they’ve known. That comes with pluses and minuses, but it does even out.”

Anya has now written a memoircum-self-help guide, If In Doubt, Wash Your Hair (the first piece of advice she gives to busy women), an uplifting ‘manual for life’ that offers practical tips and quick fixes, advice on how to make women feel better about themselves, along with anecdotes about how she has tackled her own hurdles and self-doubt issues.

She is keen to keep responsibl­e fashion at the forefront of her brand, with environmen­tally friendly processes and products remaining hugely important to her.

“It gets me out of bed every day, to think, ‘How can we make a difference in our tiny way? How can we communicat­e and do our bit?’

“It’s about everyone doing as much as they can as fast as they can.

We’re not perfect, no one is, but we want to do our bit.”

In 2007 Anya ran a campaign called ‘I’m NOT A Plastic Bag’, the slogan emblazoned on a tote, to raise awareness of single use plastic.

“Some 80,000 people queued in one day in the UK [to buy the £5 canvas tote on the day of its launch] and it went on and on around the world.

“Thirty people went to hospital in Taiwan because there was a stampede [for the bag]. It made a real difference because it contribute­d to the reduction of the use of single use bags quite considerab­ly.

“That was just using our platform to communicat­e that single use plastic is bad.”

Then, in February 2020 the company launched ‘I Am A Plastic Bag’ in response to the fact it’s estimated there are eight billion tons of plastic on the planet, she explains.

The campaign created a bag made out of plastic bottles, coated in recycled windscreen­s.

The brand’s London stores were closed for three days during London Fashion Week and were filled with 90,000 used plastic water bottles, partly as a protest and partly as an art installati­on. “The bag [which costs up to £895 for a tote] has sold really well. Each one is made from 32 half-litre water bottles.”

The environmen­tal message needs to be pushed more, she stresses.

“We are not connecting with the fact that if you buy something, use it and throw it in landfill and keep doing that, we’re going to end up in an unsustaina­ble mess.

“If you had to bury all the stuff you throw away in your own garden, you’d quickly stop doing it.”

Anya started her business, aged 18, straight from school, opened her first store at 24 and by 2015 had 58 stores in 10 countries including Japan, China and the US.

Today, she agrees the most difficult thing for women to cope with is juggling work and family.

“Every day there’s a difficult hurdle when you’re running a business or you don’t manage to pull off the thing you’re doing, or you’ve a problem with one child or another.

“That’s the reality and you learn to appreciate they are normal problems.”

Anya adds: “I think it’s important to accept that you cannot do everything and to try to focus on the things you are good at.”

She readily admits she’s never been around for the children’s homework and is not a cook, but that it’s important not to feel guilty about leaving the children in someone else’s care when you go to work.

How did it feel taking on three young children when she first got together with James?

“It was a baptism of fire, but I was young enough and naive enough to know I wanted to do it. They were three beautiful children who I just wanted to put my arms around.

“Becoming a stepmother was easy for me in a way. It’s about being sensitive and working with all my amazing in-laws. We found our way through by being very honest.”

She and James live together and work together, but it works, she says. “We laugh a lot together – we almost sit next to each other at work and then we are at home together.

“He doesn’t take me at all seriously. It’s like being with my best friend all day. I feel really lucky.” ■ If In Doubt, Wash Your Hair by Anya Hindmarch (right) is published by Bloomsbury, priced £18.99

 ??  ?? Anya’s I Am A Plastic Bag tote is made from recycled plastic bottles
Anya Hindmarch
Anya’s I Am A Plastic Bag tote is made from recycled plastic bottles Anya Hindmarch
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 ??  ?? The Duchess of Cambridge with one of Anya’s clutch bags
The Duchess of Cambridge with one of Anya’s clutch bags
 ??  ?? Some of Anya’s bags on the runway
Some of Anya’s bags on the runway

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