Tim
Hamilton might be the poster boy for New York City coolness, but this is Paris
dahling, and time to prove yourself. Moving show city can be stressful
at the best of times – new audience,
atmosphere and expectations – but for Hamilton it seemed even more daunting. “Did they like it out there?” was one
of the first things Tim worryingly asked when Dazed made its way backstage.
Sure they did!
How
often do you see someone try to alter the
shape and function of a white shirt? Well, Hamilton did it by not only making
it collarless, but also adding a deep V-neck to it. Additionally he gave it a
front tail, as opposed to the more common backside version. Others had
adjustable waists, enabling the wearer to decide
shape and form.
Add
to all that his unusual choice of fabrics (key words
include industrial, vinyl, intergalactic dust and wax) and you have
quite an Paris opener. The collarless trend
continued on trench coats, some of them cut daringly
low on the chest. There was a shiny and shimmery feel to the collection due to
the vinyl and silver, but that was in certain parts levelled by the masculinity
of utility belts. For a designer who has worked with both American high street
kings (Michelle Obama favourites J.Crew
and polo shirt giants
Ralph Lauren), this was far from a commercially viable collection. But perhaps
Hamilton wanted to take on Paris with blazing guns? Well, guessing won’t get us
anywhere, so we asked…
Dazed
Digital: How is it showing in Paris compared to
across the pond?
Tim
Hamilton: This is an extreme high, this is like the real deal. No offence to
New York but Paris is better – there is so much going on back to back, there’s a
certain pace to it and everyone that was invited turned
up.
DD:
What was the red thread going through the collection?
Tim
Hamilton: The idea was to keep my New York roots - the well-suited and
dressed-up look, which I brought to Paris with toxic-coated material in a
minimal style.
DD: You re-worked the white shirt quite heavily for
this collection, didn’t you?
Tim
Hamilton: I’ve been doing the standard shirt for some time now, the one that
your mother makes you wear, and I thought ‘why not re-invent some new shapes’
so it’s almost like the longer shirts become
outerwear when they’re layered. With the different necklines I just wanted
something a bit more modern.
DD: It was all very dark and monochrome –
any chance of colours next time?
Tim
Hamilton: I love colour, but this time around, with the fabrics I was using, it was more suitable in darker
tones. I did inject some royal blue and a bit of navy, but I really felt like
the palette should be quite sombre. But I do like to experiment, so who knows
for the future!
DD:
What was your favourite piece from this
collection, what would you have bought for yourself as a customer?
Tim
Hamilton: I’d buy some of the outerwear, the coated and crackled pieces that
appear to be leather.