With my BFA collection, I want to highlight and pay tribute to the first regular subculture I came in contact with as a child, and let it meet the world in which I as an adult have found my belonging.

With this collection, I invite you to exchange the bare walls of Graffiti and abandoned warehouses

...

which you strive to enrich for my textiles and my shapes.

These walls are yours, please, adorn them.

LOOKS DESCRIPTION.

Look 1: (From left)
Here is an asymmetrical shirt that is cut according to the shapes of Graffiti. Even the trousers are cut in a special way to get the asymmetry in the Graffiti transferred to the garment in the best way.

Look 2:
This look I wanted to symbolize a feeling of having taken the Graffiti wall from the streets and transferred it to the body.

Look 3:
A more classic jacket with Japanese "sashiko" stitches. The jacket is cut so that my brothers Graffiti "tag" goes around the body (C E on the front and D S on the back of the jacket)

Look 4:
This is also a more classic silhouette in the base where the sleeves stand out with their flat and curvy shapes of the graffiti letters.

Look 5:
Larger jacket with a big hat where the round shapes meet the "sashiko" stitches crooked feeling. The pattern construction on the sleeves is split witch forms them three large folds you see on each sleeve.

Look 6:
This look is the only one that the Graffiti color was applied afterwards when the garment was already finished. I wanted to make a dispute where the Graffiti should also be allowed to follow my existing shapes and not the other way around as on the other looks. I wanted to achieve a feeling that a whole asymmetrical Graffiti letter is taken from the streets and applied directly on the body.

Look 7:
The asymmetrical jacket where one leg of the pants comes out and shows my brothers Graffiti "tag". This jacket is more worn in it´s print which is a feeling of a very old Graffiti painting that was done by my older brother in the late 90´s and still on the street today.

Look 8:
A clash between something classic like a shirt and a Graffiti wall from the street into one and the same piece. As you can see the pattern making on the sleeves and the shirt is once piece.

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Type

Prints, Textiles, Women's, Pattern cutting, Men's

Methods

acrylic paint, hand painted, Graffiti prints, Hand stiches, Zero waste pattern construction

Materials

silk, vegan leather, Waxed cotton, wool jersey, wool hats