The Daily Telegraph

Prints charming: how Cath Kidston kicked out the kitsch

Former Liberty designer Holly Marler has set the struggling chintz label on a new path, finds Caroline Leaper

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‘People either love it … or want to stab us,” Cath Kidston herself once said of the divisive vintage floral aesthetic she pioneered and popularise­d in the 1990s. It was a phrase replayed in the press in April 2020, as the 28-year-old British high street brand fell into administra­tion. Conclusion? The stabbers had won in the end.

The death of Cath Kidston was perhaps declared too prematurel­y, though. All 60 of its UK stores were permanentl­y shuttered and 902 staff made redundant, as it became one of the first high-street casualties in the pandemic. But Hong Kong private equity owner Baring bought back the online, franchise and wholesale arms of the business.

From the rubble, a rebuild; there are now 122 UK employees. Melinda Paraie, CEO since 2018, installed a fresh leadership team, poaching a new chief commercial officer, Suzanne Egleton, from Allsaints, and former Liberty design director Holly Marler as creative director. Marler’s first collection launches this week; online, in the retained 146 internatio­nal stores, and in the brand’s new London Piccadilly flagship.

“I love this kind of challenge, because I knew I had to turn it around,” says Marler, who started her role in October last year. “The brand had a massive cult following and a great history.

Print design is integral to everything that I do, I knew I was the woman for this job.”

Formerly of Alexander Mcqueen, Temperley London and Liberty London, Maler specialise­s in original, exquisite print designs. In her week off between finishing at Liberty and starting at Cath Kidston, she painted, filling a sketch book with motifs that she felt might contribute to her new “print language” for the brand. The resulting debut, her Rose Revival collection, contains new takes on classic florals, hidden messages and symbols within ditsy prints and the most appealing colour combinatio­ns to come out of the retailer in at least five years.

“It was about taking our heritage but making it relevant,” she says. “You can reimagine a vintage print in contempora­ry colours, or by changing the scale. Tongue in cheek humour is really important to me and Cath Kidston can do it so well; prints needed to speak to people and have a personalit­y, as they haven’t for some time.” In recent years the brand had struggled to find the right balance between what Marler calls “camp winks” within designs and novelty graphics. In attempting to make quaintness and Britishnes­s appeal to internatio­nal markets (40 of those 146 global shops are in Japan) the regular use of double decker bus and sausage dog cartoons had inadverten­tly turned off audiences at home.

“It has been hard, and it’s a work in progress,” admits Marler of her task to find a handwritin­g that appeals to all. “[Applicatio­n of ] colour has been really key to changing that kitschness. This year with roses for example, instead of doing navy as a base for a pink rose, we’ve done khaki green with bright orange roses. Drawing style is important too; making things a little rougher around the edges and not quite as perfect.”

Kidston herself stepped down as creative director in 2016, but was involved in the hiring process for Marler. She founded the brand from her kitchen table in 1993 (after noticing that her dreary ironing board could do with a more exciting patterned cover) and grew it to a point where turnover exceeded £100 million in 2013. Now 63, Kidston still holds a minority stake.

“She spoke to me about her early inspiratio­ns, the Notting Hill vintage markets and how the red stripes in her prints came from sweet wrappers she remembered from her childhood,” Marler says. “I had to do a project [as part of the job interview process] and she likes a lot of the same inspiratio­ns as me.”

For Marler, bringing her luxury market experience to the high street was essential. “The print placement on a bar of soap has to be as special as on the silk scarves,” she asserts. “I’ve never been about print slapping; designing a print and putting it onto this and that. Everything is hand painted for its purpose.”

Marler can list endless takeaways from her time at Mcqueen – one of the most visible acknowledg­ements perhaps is the silk square scarves she has introduced at Cath Kidston, with perfectly illustrate­d borders.

“Mcqueen was so into his storytelli­ng,” she recalls. “He didn’t care what other people were doing around him. I’m still working like that for a high-street brand, with a theme and making sure each print has a meaning. That [originalit­y] is what gives people a reason to buy something.”

The run-up to Christmas will be Marler’s most important test to date. In its heyday, one in five people bought a Cath Kidston item as a gift for a loved one during the festive season. She’s hoping her designs will all be snapped up – right down to the limited edition tins for Cadbury’s Roses chocolates, which should end up in most households.

“I want this collection to be well received and sell this Christmas, but I really want people to have that same sentiment for it that they used to for the brand,” she says. “I think we can earn that. I want to see everyone in a Cath Kidston dress and smiling.”

‘The print placement on a bar of soap has to be as special as on the silk scarves’

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 ?? ?? Vintage revival: Forever print tea dress, £95, below left; Forever print pyjamas set, £60, left; Dreamer print pyjamas set, £60, above (all at cathkidsto­n.com)
Vintage revival: Forever print tea dress, £95, below left; Forever print pyjamas set, £60, left; Dreamer print pyjamas set, £60, above (all at cathkidsto­n.com)
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 ?? ?? Brave Soul print dress, £80
Brave Soul print dress, £80
 ?? ?? Sunshine side plate, £8
Sunshine side plate, £8
 ?? ?? Silk scarf, £60
Silk scarf, £60

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