WWD Digital Daily

Meet Qiuhao, China’s Answer to Phoebe Philo

● The Shanghai- and Tokyo-based designer, who Philo mentored at one point, came to be known for his namesake brand that conveys "an oriental philosophy of formless beauty."

- BY DENNI HU

Qiu Hao, who founded his namesake brand Qiuhao 21 years ago, has only produced one collection so far, but with 38 iterations.

“I've been polishing and perfecting the same collection, the same pattern for the last 21 years. It's about consistenc­y,” Qiu said of his womenswear label based in Shanghai, which he organizes not by seasons but numericall­y.

Qiu, who uses the finest wool, silk and other natural materials from all over the world, caters to the kind of woman who can command a room, has discerning taste and is not afraid to unveil a softer side of herself. One wouldn't be surprised to see Phoebe Philo or The Row in their wardrobes.

“I always say that I don't ask me about my inspiratio­n, I even have it tattoed on my arm,” added the soft-spoken Qiu, as if always lost in thoughts.

“The design itself is self-explanator­y because it comes from my personal experience in life; it's an amalgamati­on of the five senses,” Qiu added.

In his most recent collection­s, a personal touch can be felt in products that reveal a slice of an examined life: an intricate yoyo-quilt asymmetric­al skirt (collection 38), a wrap dress that frames the body into a Noguchi lamp (collection 37), a leather tote bag with ikebana silhouette­s (collection 29), a silver necklace made to resemble a strand of baroque pearls (collection 38) or his recent perfume collection, one that he created with his boyfriend and business partner, Jun Huang, that came with names like “Wind Blows,” “No Man's Island” and “Lover's Hug.”

At 46 years old, Qiu looks youthful enough to blend into the eager crowd of young creatives in the downtown Shanghai scene. Still, his career trajectory, one that includes an atypical retail experience and an early rise to fame, was ultimately a story of navigating the market with care and determinat­ion.

After graduating from Suzhou University with a degree in spatial design, Qiu launched a commercial womenswear brand in 2003 with his business partner Chuqiao Wang. Right after the SARS outbreak, he took advantage of vacant storefront­s and set up a multibrand retail store that showcased the works of his fellow designer friends. He kept the lights on from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m., an odd practice that helped him attract the local fashion crowd.

When Qiu parted ways with his business partner a year later, he also said goodbye to his career as a designer for a mainstream fashion brand and went on to pursue a degree studying womenswear under the formidable Louise Wilson at Central Saint Martins.

He clashed with Wilson — a rite of passage — and received guidance from Phoebe Philo, who briefly returned to her alma mater as a tutor after leaving Chloé.

“She told me that I had found my design language already but that I should try and play with elements that I don't like. She said that if you kept on doing what you fancied, you would get pigeonhole­d,” said Qiu, who recalled Philo suggesting he play with a bundle of shiny leather. “It was her way of conveying the incongruen­t,” Qiu said.

Qiu got his big break early on when he became the first and — so far the only — Chinese winner of the Internatio­nal Woolmark Prize in 2008.

But Qiu was not interested in life in the limelight, so when he returned home, he got a new telephone number and went fully incognito. He became hyper-focused on building a new brand with a small team of six employees, a format he kept for almost 20 years.

A contempora­ry of Uma Wang, Ziggy Chen, and ZucZug‘s Wang Yiyang, Qiu was among the first wave of Chinese designers to navigate a nascent market.

“It was a time when people didn't believe in independen­t designer brands at all, but I didn't want to fight it. I looked inward, found a way to exist, and continued to do what I was good at to prove them wrong,” Qiu said.

For the past 10 years, Qiu's team has been based in a waterfront office in a historical establishm­ent by The Bund. There, he began building the current version of the brand, one built on intuition, rigorous workshoppi­ng with a small team and, ultimately, controlled chaos.

“It usually starts with the arrival of a piece of fabric — if I think the fabric will be perfect for the coat, I make the coat, then build a look around it,” Qiu said.

“My principle is if my colleagues don't want to wear it, then we decide against it. We keep it a little like how being a student at school.

“I think my unstructur­ed creative process happens to reflect an oriental philosophy of formless beauty,” Qiu said. “But always within control,” he added.

“I say now that the only fun I have with fashion nowadays is selecting fabrics that are getting so expensive. My studio manager hates me for it,” Qiu said jokingly.

Qiu, who has a personal relationsh­ip with most of his loyal clients, shies away from PR and marketing, particular­ly celebrity endorsemen­t.

“It's simply because I don't want to deal with inventory pressure and I don't like socializin­g,” Qiu said admittedly. “But on the flip side, this means we can save energy, save budget, save time and make sure we get the product right.”

“Without the noise that celebritie­s create, I also manage to keep close to my clients who have generously tolerated me for over 10 years,” added Qiu.

In the last decade, Qiu has steadily expanded his foray into fashion accessorie­s, leather goods, footwear and fragrance. For fall 2024, Qiu included a pair of heeled tabi in his design, which Qiu he said is more forgiving on the toe gap, due to its one-piece sole constructi­on.

As a fashionabl­e shoe design popularize­d by Martin Margiela, Qiu instead sees them as a form of rebellion against corporate dominance.

“People will think I am ripping off Margiela's design, but that's just what the marketing world tells us nowadays,” Qiu said.

Qiu's pieces, which range from 3,000 renminbi, or $414, to 160,000 renminbi, or $22,100, can be found at around 20 doors across mainland China, including the prestigiou­s retailer SKP.

“I think most buyer shops in China are not that profession­al, some of them are like personal shoppers, so not running a real business,” added Qiu of his rationale for keeping small distributi­on.

“I rejected an order from a buyer who only picked tops because they thought our trousers and skirts were too expensive. I simply told them it doesn't work that way, our tops will never go with cheaper bottoms,” added Qiu.

In the latest developmen­t of his brand, Qiu set up a Japanese branch of his company and has been actively engaging with local retailers after hosting its first showroom last November, after relocating to Tokyo three seasons ago.

“I named my company ‘Bonsai' because I want it to embody the spirit of a bonsai. It's small and beautiful but can live up to a thousand years,” he added.

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 ?? ?? Qiuhao's tabi and fashion accessorie­s.
Qiuhao's tabi and fashion accessorie­s.
 ?? ?? Here and below: Looks from Qiuhao's 38th collection.
Here and below: Looks from Qiuhao's 38th collection.
 ?? ?? Qiu Hao
Qiu Hao

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