Interview with Clara Fox

Here it is finally! My interview with the lovely Di of Clara Fox, a guest post for Vintage Shops Australia.

Clara Fox is one of my favourite vintage retail spaces in Melbourne and as I’ve come to know Di over the last few years I’ve lived in the city she’s been a wealth of knowledge and inspiration. It was such a lovely afternoon, filled with tea, cucumber sandwiches and gorgeous garments.

Read the whole interview here.

Vintage Shops Australia is a great online database that profiles vintage retailers in Australia. Thankyou to Pru and Tania for the opportunity to contribute to the blog and I look forward to working together again in the future!

Here are some photos and excerpts from the post.

GD: What had you been doing beforehand? Have you always been collecting vintage?

Always, yes. Well we didn’t call it vintage when I was younger but I was into second-hand clothing. I went to live with my aunt, I think I was around 15 and a half and her husband had just died. It was a big old house in Richmond, a big Victorian house. I remember she had two big wardrobes in my room and I wasn’t allowed to go in them, but I peeped into them one day and they were filled with, what her age group called (she’d be over 100 now) costumes. So they would see something or go into the city and draw something, then they’d go home and get them made. And there were all these beautiful, as I know now, 1930′s and 1940′s day dresses with little jackets- but they were all decaying. It was like they’d been locked away for 25 years then.

So from there I used to go around Richmond and Prahran and go into second shops because I had very little money and with very little money I could pick up a beautiful 1940′s black crepe that I thought was beautiful. Looking back, because I didn’t have a concept of how society viewed me as a young teenager, I just did my own thing. I was actually wearing these beautiful old garments, and that’s probably how it started for me.

Di had many treats for me!

 

GD: Do you have a favourite piece in your collection?

DI: I’ve been asked this question before, and I think it’s important to realise that in my case you don’t get connected to or caught up in one piece. When I was younger I had favourite pieces. If I was to say today what would be a favourite piece I guess it would be this crushed velvet dress which I acquired not so long ago. I love that, but I don’t have favourites.

One of Di’s favourite pieces

 

I think for fashion the mid-20′s through to the mid-40′s is a very exciting time. The emancipation of women, they got out of all that boning. Schiaparelli made beautiful knits and it was as if you could be tall or short in those days and they would cut the garments so that it gave you that sort of boyish look. If I could wear it everyday I would love to wear 20′s and 30′s.

GD: Is Clara Fox by appointment now?

DI: No, its all trial and error, nothing is ever set in concrete. Of course you can make an appointment to come here but I am open Wednesday – Saturday from 11-5, and as you can tell the back section has some beautiful pieces in it. I guess the front salon, which I’ve tried to recreate from memory and looking at wonderful old books, is that you wouldn’t want to have a crowd in here, so it’s more like a one-on-one. I even think that people wouldn’t really even wear all of it, it’s almost more about collecting it- as people would collect wine or paintings or motor cars. If you can afford it you should collect a couple of good pieces – everything that I’ve collected I haven’t been able to fit into!

GD: That’s what I do! I keep buying little 24 inch waist tap pants! And then I keep asking myself ‘why am I buying these’?

DI: It will be revealed to you at a later date, it’s a process.

The most beautiful collection of fabrics I’ve ever seen!

I got to try on my dream kimono. It was so beautiful!

 

GD: If you weren’t doing Clara fox, what would you be doing?

I’d be doing a lot of gardening, I love old fashioned gardens and I really love the old fashioned plants. Given that water is so precious in our society today, there are a lot of plants out there that are very hardy that you have to go and find, and are really beautiful. I’d also be growing food, I like the idea of growing your own food, And of course I’d still be collecting.

Di

Clara Fox

479 Brunswick St, Fitzroy North, Melbourne

Wednesday – Saturday, 11am – 5pm

(03) 9481 1990

Don’t forget to read more over at Vintage Shops Australia. And look out in October as I’ll be covering the Melbourne Summer Love Vintage Fair for them then!

xx

This Old Hat

As many of you wouldn’t know, I graduated from my course in Millinery Design and construction earlier this year. Coming from a fashion design background, when I moved to Melbourne from Brisbane I decided to focus in on millinery as hats have always been a constant love and fascination for me.

I studied at Melbourne Fashion Institute under Richard Nylon, who was such a charismatic and inspiring teacher.  He is one of the most renown Australian milliners of this time and it was such a privilege to learn from him. A blessing in disguise perhaps, but honing my skills only made me realise again how much I only find happiness in vintage, collecting and history. Whilst I’m glad I’ve studied design, as it’s given me an understanding of all aspects of garment construction, fabrics and techniques, there really is nothing like those designs of yesteryear!

My ambition is to one day, in the not-too-distant future, own my own small vintage and antique retail space, and I guess that with my skills there’s nothing stopping me from pursuing my own designs in conjunction with that. But for now I really am focusing on submersing myself in history, learning and listening and reading and watching and nurturing the magpie inside me as I build up my nest!

Tonight I went through some of the pieces I made whilst studying. One of my hobbies is collecting vintage and antique portraits of women, and I was influenced by these whilst I was studying.

This is a hat I made as an assignment for Melbourne Cup. For those who don’t live in Australia, Melbourne Cup is the nation’s major horse racing event in November, where ‘Fashions On The Field’ plays a huge part. Basically no-one really watched the horses, everyone just gets reeeeeeal dressed up and drinks too much. A lot of the fashion is AWFUL (think spray tanned women in neon one-shoulder dresses, strappy silver stilettos flung over their shoulder) but it’s a huge event for milliners as hats are compulsory for women at the big race days. I struggled to design something as accessible as a Melbourne Cup race day hat, so decided to just go BIG and over the top (because that’s normally the theme for race day).

It’s made out of vintage straw, crown-less and hand stitched on a brim block, with gathered velvet trim and a dupion silk hand-made flower.

This is another piece I made, whilst experimenting with wiring.

It’s a 1920′s inspired velvet covered wire headpiece with vintage flowers and leaves.

In other news, I have some really exciting things to share with you all soon, and I’m positively bursting about it! This week has been full of opportunity and it looks like the next couple of months will be jam packed for me. My lips will have to stay sealed for now….but stay tuned!

xx