Representing the creative future

Royal College of Art  –  Jun 2018

"The weirder, the better." Dive into the minds of RCA's MA graduates

A little insight into the magical, absurd, grotestque and wonderful worlds of a few of this year's graduates.

Royal College of Art  –  Feb 2018

Transforming the mundane with Bianca Saunders

The work of the RCA graduate explores black masculinity and gender expectations in London.

Designers To Hire

London-based knitwear designer Eleana Burrow’s design process based on her instinct

Designing is a response to her own life, so practicality meet emotions, textures, lines and shapes to structure the fluid silhouettes in her knits

Royal College of Art  –  Jan 2018

Grand Theft Artist, Per Hansson

The RCA grad talks heavy metal, cowboys and Lamborghinis.

Designers To Hire

Shanghai-based designer Zheng Lu believes the future is mechanical

A collection about rebelling against industry norms, Zheng Lu’s search for a well-oiled fashion system led him to create workwear with his own spin on anti–fashion

Designers To Hire

Ellen Fowles: “Fashion is for everyone regardless of age or ability”

Meet the graduate breaking stigma with her functional yet affordable adaptive wear

Designers To Hire

Søs Christine Hejselbæk on 3D-printing away a carbon footprint

The designer discusses making photosynthetic sculptures for the body

Designers To Hire

Jaden Cho on Non-objects

The South Korean designer wants to redefine the role of couture in modern society

Royal College of Art  –  Oct 2017

RCA grad Richard Szuman proposes a new take on sustainability

The recent graduate spoke about his struggles on the MA, the inspiration behind his final collection, and showing at Helsinki Fashion Week.

Royal College of Art  –  Sep 2017

RCA grad Yvonne Lin loves oppositions

Her graduate collection, Vulnus Cura, looks closely at brokenness as a process of mending

Royal College of Art  –  Aug 2017

RCA grad Kira Goodey on mastering the art of spontaneity

From London to Tokyo and back, this designer had no limits when it came to finding inspiration for her three-dimensional designs.