Quotes
“A few of the influences on my career so far have been Isamu Noguchi, Irving Penn, and seeing the riots of 1968 in Paris.”
“A great thing happening now in art is that artists are using the figure, the body, clothing, life.”
“All of my work stems from the simplest of ideas that go back to the earliest civilizations: making clothing from one piece of cloth. It is my touchstone.”
“A-POC respects that there is a fine balance between the value of the human touch, which can be called artisanal, and the abilities of technology. I like to think of it as poesy and technology.”
“A-POC unleashes the freedom of imagination. It's for people who are curious, who have inner energy - the energy of life and living.”
“Architects always have a feel for time - the generation they live in - as we do, and they are always striving toward boundless adventure.”
“Boys have been wearing skirts for some time now. My three assistants wear mini skirts. They come to work on their motorcycles wearing mini skirts. The French saw the idea on the streets and have done it in better fabrics, and now everyone says, 'Ah!'”
“By the way, Marilyn Monroe was a size 14.”
“Clothing has been called intimate architecture. We want to go beyond that.”
“Clothing is the closest thing to all humans.”
“Design is a vital component to the enrichment of our everyday lives. Japan has a very rich history and culture of design, and I feel it is a very important dialogue to open and keep evolving.”
“Design is not for philosophy it's for life.”
“Designers must be increasingly sensitive to our Earth's dwindling resources. It is our responsibility.”
“Even when I work with computers, with high technology, I always try to put in the touch of the hand.”
“Everything is an experiment.”
“Frank Gehry not only understood my sense of fun and adventure but also reciprocated it and translated that feeling into his work.”
“From the beginning I thought about working with the body in movement, the space between the body and clothes. I wanted the clothes to move when people moved. The clothes are also for people to dance or laugh.”
“Function alone does not make clothing appealing.”
“I am always looking to the future of making things.”
“I am most interested in people and the human form.”
“I am neither a writer nor a theorist. For a person who creates things to utter too many words means to regulate himself - a frightening prospect.”
“I am not really interested in clothing as a conceptual art form.”
“I am not sentimental about the past. I like to think about what is next.”
“I am very interested in the culture of paper.”
“I became a fashion designer to make clothes for the people, not to be a top couturier in the French tradition.”
“I believe that all forms of creativity are related.”
“I did not want to be labelled 'the designer who survived the atomic bomb,' and therefore I have always avoided questions about Hiroshima.”
“I do not create a fashionable aesthetic... I create a style based on life.”
“I gravitated towards the field of clothing design, partly because it is a creative format that is modern and optimistic.”
“I have worked with several dance companies.”
“I love to be free to explore, research, and evolve.”
“I make clothing, and I don't care about trendy things.”
“I never thought fashion was the job for me, because I'm Japanese. Clothes! That was a European, society thing.”
“I realised I wanted to make clothing which was as universal as jeans and T-shirts.”
“I respect men and women who age and are proud and don't lose energy. I think fashion forgot those people.”
“I sent 200, 300 of the clothes that I had made, and the dancers chose what they liked.”
“I started to work with cotton fabrics. I used cotton because it's easy to work with, to wash, to take care of, to wear if it's warm or cold. It's great. That was the start.”
“I suppose there are many, but I cannot imagine ever having a more perfect collaboration than that which Penn-san and I shared. It was based upon mutual trust, respect, and a desire to have our own work pushed to new places. And it always resulted in delight.”
“I tried never to be defined by my past.”
“I very much like dance and dancers.”
“I was always interested in making clothing that is worn by people in the real world.”
“I'd rather look to the future than to the past.”
“If you look back throughout history from the ancient Egyptians onwards, most cultures started making clothing from a very basic premise: a single piece of cloth.”
“In fashion, you need to present something new every six months, but it takes time to study things. Development is very important.”
“In Paris, we call the people who make clothing 'couturiers' - they develop new clothing items - but actually, the work of designing is to make something that works in real life.”
“In the Eighties, Japanese fashion designers brought a new type of creativity; they brought something Europe didn't have. There was a bit of a shock effect, but it probably helped the Europeans wake up to a new value.”
“In the past, art was admired and revered from afar. Today, there is more of an interactive relationship between the art and the person who admires it.”
“Indian clothes are usually tight.”
“Indian paper is famous, Egyptian papyrus, Chinese paper... every country has used this natural material. But the problem is it's going to run out because it's very difficult work.”
“I've never been involved in any kind of political movement.”
“Many people repeat the past. I'm not interested. I prefer evolution.”
“Many people will say, well, clothes should be worn; but I think people can look at them in public, like seeing a film. I think museum exhibitions are very important.”
“Men have been buying my women's coats for years.”
“Most of us feel some kind of uncertainty, with the population increasing and resources decreasing. We have to face these issues.”
“My design is no design.”
“My fascination has been the space between cloth and the body, and using a two-dimensional element to clothe a three-dimensional form.”
“My generation in Japan lived in limbo. We dreamed between two worlds.”
“My touchstone started out being - and is still - exploring the ways by which to make clothing from a single piece of cloth.”
“Of course there are many ways we can reuse something. We can dye it. We can cut it. We can change the buttons. Those are other ways to make it alive. But this is a new step to use anything - hats, socks, shirts. It's the first step in the process.”
“One of my assistants found this old German machine. It was originally used to make underwear. Like Chanel, who started with underwear fabric - jerseys - we used the machine that made underwear to make something else.”
“Our goals must be to find new, environmentally-friendly ways by which to continue the art of creation, to utilize our valuable human skills, and to make things that will bring joy.”
“Paris is an old and traditional place; it needs new blood.”
“Paul Poiret did wonderful things because he was so influenced by motifs, but Vionnet really understood the kimono and took the geometric idea to construct her clothes - and that brought such freedom into European clothes in the 1920s.”
“Retire? Never! We are far too busy!”
“Technology allows us to do many things, but it is always important to combine it with traditional handcrafts and, in fact, use technology to replicate dying arts so that they are not lost.”
“The combination of human skills with technology will always be at the root of any solution to the future of making clothes.”
“The core spirit of Pleats Please is joy, and what better emotion to wear on your skin every day?”
“The future of fashion is light, durable clothes.”
“The important thing is to make something. In reality, it's not important that a designer be known by name - you can remain anonymous. Even the status of a designer will undergo changes, I believe.”
“The joining of the Japanese with the French should make a new movement. I think it should be good for Paris.”
“The purpose - where I start - is the idea of use. It is not recycling, it's reuse.”
“There are no boundaries for what can be fabric.”
“To be honest, I think we should find first the possibility to make it. Research is first - if you're not interested, you never can find something. Many things happen from forgotten machines - ones that are no longer used.”
“We can also cut by heat - heat punch. And we also can cut by cold - extreme cold. When you cut with heat, it makes a mark. With cold, no mark. It depends on the fabric.”
“We have to keep a very tight check on quality.”
“Well, what I'm doing is really clothing. I'm not doing sculpture.”
“When I first began working in Japan, I had to confront the Japanese people's excessive worship for foreign goods and the fixed idea of what clothes ought to be. I wanted to change the rigid formula of clothing that the Japanese followed.”
“You see it in the many bouncing clothes that are not just pleats. To make them, two or three people twist them - twist, twist, twist the pleats, sometimes three or four persons twist together and put it all in the machine to cook it.”