Photography Willy Vanderperre, Styling Olivier RizzoFashionNewsRaf Simons reveals Mrs Prada wants him to resurrect his label somedayIn a new interview with AnOther, the designer expands on his decision to step down from his eponymous brandShareLink copied ✔️March 2, 2023FashionNewsTextDaniel RodgersRaf Simons, AnOther SS2322 Imagesview more + In November of last year, Raf Simons closed his namesake label with little explanation, broadcasting the news on Instagram in a sparse post which thanked his team and followers for the memories. Though many assumed that Simons was prepping to take over Prada (sans Miuccia) the designer had long been critical of the pressure that fashion places on its designers. And after 27 years, Simons had given enough. Now, in a new interview with AnOther, the designer expands on his decision to step down: “It was a very difficult moment,” he said. “At the same time we danced, we had champagne – because I also felt very sure about doing this.” “I wanted to change my life. Being independent in a small brand that is so in need of me daily, it’s emotionally, psychologically, a very different kind of situation than when I’m a creative director in a brand,” he added, reflecting on his tenures at Dior, Calvin Klein, Jil Sander, and Prada. Though Simons had considered selling the company to a big conglomerate, he also knew that would have meant severing its soul. “The real reason is that I wanted to have a little bit more of a life for my love, for my parents, for my dogs, for my friends. To be able to travel and move a little bit. To not always have to say to people, ‘I can’t, too much work.’ That’s the main reason.” It would seem Raf Simons doesn’t want to not be in a situation for even an hour where he’s not enjoying himself. In a statement that will stir hope in grailed.com users, the designer refused to rule out the possibility of the brand returning at some point in the future – be that via art, music, or clothing. “I don’t want to sound pretentious, but I constantly have ideas for Raf Simons,” the designer explained, and it would seem Miuccia, too, would like to see that happen. “She said, ‘It’s amazing. It’s yours. You just stopped the whole thing. Within two or three years, you miss it, you come back. You can do whatever you want’.” Elsewhere, the designer rolled back the tape on his debut fashion show, staged in a “crappy” youth club-slash-underground theatre in Paris, and his swansong collection, which was hosted at Printworks in London. The parallels, he said, were accidental. “Not to be critical – but probably, inevitably, to be critical – I think that everything became very hierarchical in terms of how brands deal with their audiences,” he explained. ”And I didn’t really want it for the London show. In terms of, ‘OK, what’s the hierarchy of the seating? Who sits where?’ I just said, ‘Let as many people in as possible, as many as security will allow, all kinds of people.’ Which was always the idea.” On sale internationally from March 23, the SS23 edition of AnOther magazine is fronted by cover stars Shygirl, Cate Blanchett, Yves Tumor, and Diego Calva, with further interviews from Nicolas Di Felice, Willy Chavarria, Yohji Yamamoto, Raul Lopez, and Karoline Vitto. You can pre-order the magazine here. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORECrack is back at McQueen! Plus everything you missed at Paris Fashion WeekZimmermannKindred spirits and psychedelic florals: Zimmermann heads to 70s Sydney VanmoofDJ Fuckoff’s guide to living, creating and belonging in Berlin‘We must find joy’: Pamela Anderson on her starring role at Valentino SS26Ottolinger SS26 is coming for your girlfriends Casablanca SS26 prayed at the altar of HouseMatthieu Blazy blasts into orbit at his first-ever Chanel showCeline SS26 wants you to wear protection Anatomy of a fashion show: Sandra Hüller opened Miu Miu SS26Jean Paul Gaultier SS26: Inside Duran Lantink’s disruptive debutComme des Garçons SS26 was a revolt against ‘perfect’ fashionIn pictures: Chaos reigned at Vivienne Westwood’s Versailles boudoir