Your creative output is influenced by a lot of experiences and exploring art galleries. How do these passions translate into your design process?
C.K. I'm very passionate about art in general, and I'm very passionate about craft, fashion and historic culture. For me, they are linked to each other because to reflect on art is to reflect on our society, on the world. And the same for clothes. It is very intrinsically linked to culture, to the habit. When I look at art, it's always an opportunity to translate some colors and some reflection. Talking about the 70s, those women that were starting to do feminist movements but inspired by textile they took back their history through needlework, through knitting. They did some new work. I look to Louis Bourgeois or later, Tracey Emin or Sarah Lucas, all those great women that make art and textile as a way of political commentary and our own voice through feminist art.
C.K. I have done a lot of sports since I was eight years old. I played handball, but many other sports too. That gave me a strength, a way of viewing healthy competition. Stay healthy, stay motivated. I have this will to overcome myself. I've also seen team spirit because even when you do a sport, even with cycling, you need people who have the best bicycle the best seat and also clothes to help you to perform and to beat yourself. Today, I'm not a professional, but it gives me my mental strength. Every morning I do sports at 6am. It's kind of a routine. It helps me to keep my inspiration high and to also maintain my focus. That's very important. I like to cycle in Paris a lot. Not in competitions, but I would sometimes do some cycling with some friends. It's also a way to gather and put energy together. That's great!
Your collaborations with sportswear brands like Puma or A.C. Milan showcase your ability to bridge couture and sportswear. With your experience in bringing haute couture to street style, what unique perspective do you bring to sportswear collaborations?
C.K. Collaborating with sports brands is to always look with a fresh perspective and to bring the excellence, the beauty and the world of couture, the perfection of couture, into sportswear, but also the world of beauty. With Puma, I reworked a lace print with very dynamic colors and some very feminine details inspired by corsets. I was playing with different kinds of fabrics with A.C. Milan, I was playing with a print and making very digital, turning the club to the future. It was inspired by art, inspired by technology, inspired by the new youth and new energy that I think the club is getting. It's always about bringing new perspectives, but in excellence in terms of refinement of techniques and finishing.
C.K. If you look at couture, it's all about detail. It's all about construction, it's all about your beauty. But, in sportswear, what is interesting is it is also a lot of very specific stitching. Machines that give you and allow you to do free movements, to make yourself comfortable. Being comfortable for me is to be confident. And, when you bring the beauty, the comfort, the confidence and the sense of detail into some products I think the magic appears. And, also for women, to make them feel strong, powerful and confident. That's what I always try to do.
Let's talk about your work with Jelenew. What inspired you to partner with a brand dedicated to women's cycling?
C.K. Working with Jelenew was very inspiring because it's one of the first brands that make clothes for cycling for women and designing for women. They think about their body shape, a sense of sophistication and about finishing. That was very interesting to see. The level of complexity and high quality that those products have was interesting. I wanted to inject a certain level of lifestyle, what it is to wear clothes in this universe, before and after workout because their product is conceived for competition. I wanted to complement this, thinking in the same way, but thinking about how I can inject fashion, a bit of style, while still being about comfort and very good quality clothes. This was very nice. The fabrics come from Japan. They are very nice, very soft jerseys with finishing which are inspired by couture. They have a sophisticated palette of colors with a very good match.
C.K. It is about giving confidence and power to women, to make them feel good and comfortable while also being very stylish.
C.K. This collaboration embodies a sense of freedom. When you cycle, when you take your bike, you have speed and you feel free. I wanted this collaboration to also give strength to women and give them freedom. I wanted to give them the opportunity to take power of their own lives and their own view and become what they want to be.