Skip to main content
获取造型灵感 热门女士服装 热门女士鞋履 热门箱包 鸡尾酒舞会下黑裙 丝绒时髦单品 23秋冬靴子精选 2023精选必备外套 女士新品毛衣精选 精选人气女装 新品上架 最新折扣 最大折扣比例 最高价格 最低价格 全部女装 服装 运动装 泳装 外套 连衣裙 袜类 夹克 牛仔裤 连体衣 针织衫 内衣 家居服 长裤 半身裙 短裤 上装 鞋履 靴子 平底鞋 乐福鞋 厚底鞋 高跟鞋 凉鞋 运动鞋 坡跟鞋 箱包 双肩包 腰包 手拿包 斜挎包 手提包 肩包 托特包 旅行包 钱包 配饰 箱包配饰 腰带 箱盒 口罩面罩 手套 头饰 帽子 珠宝 钥匙链 镜架 围巾 墨镜 领带 手表 美妆 洗浴护体 美容套装 香水 护发美发 美妆 美甲 护肤 防晒护理 工具仪器 牙齿护理 保健养生 最新折扣 古着 热门品牌 GUCCI BALENCIAGA JACQUEMUS ISABEL MARANT TORY BURCH OFF-WHITE VERSACE VALENTINO ESSENTIALS GANNI DIOR ALEXANDER WANG 新季球鞋甄选 获取造型灵感 热门男士服装 热门男士鞋履 2023精选必备外套 男士新品毛衣精选 2023秋冬人气包袋 潮酷皮革单品 23秋冬靴子精选 精选人气男装 新品上架 最新折扣 最大折扣比例 最高价格 最低价格 全部男装 服装 运动装 泳装 外套 帽衫 夹克 牛仔裤 针织衫 家居服 长裤 POLO衫 衬衣 短裤 西装 卫衣 上装 T恤 内衣袜子 马甲 鞋履 靴子 布洛克 乐福鞋 牛津鞋 凉鞋 运动鞋 拖鞋 箱包 双肩包 腰包 斜挎包 手提包 肩包 托特包 旅行包 钱包 配饰 箱包配饰 腰带 面罩口罩 手套 帽子 珠宝 钥匙链 镜架 围巾 墨镜 运动配饰 领带 手表 护理 洗浴护体 香水 护发美发 剃须商品 护肤 防晒护理 工具仪器 牙齿护理 保健养生 最新折扣 古着 热门品牌 GUCCI AMIRI Alexander McQueen BALENCIAGA BURBERRY ESSENTIALS FENDI OFF-WHITE PALM ANGELS RICK OWENS CASABLANCA VERSACE 新季球鞋甄选 获取造型灵感 精选人气童装 新品上架 最新折扣 最大折扣比例 最高价格 最低价格 全部童装 服装 连衣裙 夹克 牛仔裤 连体衣 紧身裤 外套 长裤 套装 短裤 半身裙 袜子 泳装 上装 运动服 鞋履 靴子 凉鞋 一脚蹬 拖鞋 箱包 双肩包 手提包 托特包 配饰 腰带 手套 帽子 装饰品 围巾 玩具 最新折扣 热门品牌 GUCCI BALENCIAGA BURBERRY DOLCE & GABBANA ESSENTIALS FENDI GIVENCHY KENZO OFF-WHITE STELLA MCCARTNEY VERSACE 童装节日特惠 获取造型灵感 热门家居 精选人气家居 新品上架 最新折扣 最大折扣比例 最高价格 最低价格 全部家居 卫浴用品 卫浴配件 浴室防滑垫 浴帘 毛巾 卧室用品 被子 被套 枕头 床单 家具 椅子 沙发 收纳柜 桌子 家居装饰 艺术品 蜡烛 日历 家居香氛 灯具 相册 相框 地毯 抱枕 厨房用品 酒具及配件 炊具及烘焙用品 刀具 饮具 餐具 食物餐具 厨房电器 厨房工具及配件 摆放器皿 桌布及配件 宠物用品 养猫用品 养狗用品 科技产品 照相机 耳机 音响 可穿戴科技产品 最新折扣 热门品牌 GUCCI DOLCE & GABBANA La DoubleJ OFF-WHITE VERSACE 家居折扣开启 获取造型灵感 热门美妆 精选人气美妆 新品上架 最新折扣 最大折扣比例 最高价格 最低价格 全部美妆 洗浴护体 沐浴油与沐浴剂 沐浴露与香皂 身体磨砂与去角质 身体护理油 手部护理 营养补剂 美容套装 香水 除味剂 试香套装 古龙水 护发美发 护发素 吹风机 发膜与滋养护理 洗发露 造型 彩妆 腮红 化妆工具 遮瑕 修容 粉底 唇膏 粉饼与散粉 妆前产品 卸妆 美甲 抛光 美甲工具 护肤 面膜 喷雾 颈部与肩部 晚霜 精华 深层保养 眼部护理 防晒护理 身体防晒 防晒美黑 脸部防晒 工具仪器 电子仪器 发梳 美发工具 睫毛与眉毛工具 化妆海绵 牙齿护理 漱口水 牙膏 剃须商品 须后护理 胡须油 剃须刀 剃须膏 剃须套装 保健养生 最新折扣 热门品牌 AESOP WESTMAN ATELIER CHARLOTTE TILBURY TATA HARPER AUGUSTINUS BADER DR. BARBARA STURM RÉVIVE OMOROVICZA LA MER 111SKIN 美妆新品上架 优惠券 SSENSE: 精选商品享低至5折优惠。<br>开始于 05/13/2024 REVOLVE: 美妆类商品享8折优惠。折扣码 BEAUTY20<br>05/22/2024 - 05/24/2024 Shopbop: 美妆类单品享85折优惠。折扣码 BEAUTY15<br>开始于 05/16/2024 Mytheresa: 现在选购享8折优惠,订单需满足最低消费金额。<br>05/13/2024 - 05/26/2024 CETTIRE: 精选商品享低至5折优惠。<br>开始于 05/15/2024 女士折扣 服装 箱包 鞋履 配饰 美妆 男士折扣 服装 箱包 鞋履 配饰 护理 美妆 香水 护发美发 彩妆 护肤 防晒护理 童装折扣 服装 箱包 鞋履 配饰 儿童护理 家居折扣 家具 家居装饰 厨房用品 宠物用品 科技产品 热门品牌 BALENCIAGA ESSENTIALS GUCCI JACQUEMUS LOEWE PALM ANGELS RICK OWENS VERSACE VALENTINO ZIMMERMANN 精选上装优惠 ACNE STUDIOS ALEXANDER MCQUEEN ALEXANDER WANG AMI ALEXANDRE MATTIUSSI AMIRI BALENCIAGA BALMAIN BOTTEGA VENETA CANADA GOOSE CASABLANCA DIESEL DOLCE & GABBANA DSQUARED2 ESSENTIALS FENDI GANNI GIVENCHY GOLDEN GOOSE GUCCI ISABEL MARANT JACQUEMUS JIL SANDER JIMMY CHOO JW ANDERSON KHAITE KENZO LANVIN LOEWE LORO PIANA MUGLER MAISON MARGIELA MARINE SERRE MARNI MIU MIU MONCLER NANUSHKA NIKE OFF-WHITE PALM ANGELS PRADA R13 RHUDE RICK OWENS SACAI SAINT LAURENT SKIMS STAUD STELLA MCCARTNEY STONE ISLAND STUART WEITZMAN THE ROW THOM BROWNE TOM FORD TORY BURCH TOTÊME VALENTINO VERSACE VETEMENTS WE11 DONE Y/PROJECT GUCCI
  • ModeSens / 
  • 博客 / 
  • Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research

Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research

SSENSE
SSENSE
2019-10-26

The London-Based Designers Explain How They Distilled a Hyper-Minimal Vision of Menswear from Rural Themes and Internet Fetish Videos


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


“The future isn’t glossy,” says Cottweiler co-designer Matthew Dainty, “Years ago everyone thought the future was a touchscreen phone. Now everyone’s walking around with a touchscreen phone with fingerprints all over it and dents and smashes in it.”


Sourced from the brand’s internet-based research practice, Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 collection is infused with references from agriculture and prison roof riots, as well as mud and quicksand fetish videos from online forums. It is not the most obvious source material for an independent label known for high-tech fabrications and uber-minimal takes on contemporary dressing. Yet their self-developed imagery—which includes catalogues of research and content behind every runway show—is the extension of a new type of relationship between fashion and subculture. Centered around the urban uniform of the tracksuit, Cottweiler’s collections propose a reworked vision of authenticity.Designer Isaac Penn spoke with Cottweiler co-designers Matthew Dainty and Ben Cottrell, who shared the research behind their Fall/Winter 2016 collection.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


Where do you find your images?Can you explain the community on mudboyuk.com?


MD: In the past, a lot of it has come from YouTube groups. These groups use tags and keywords, so you start to work out what kind of words they use in order to present various fetishes. The new collection was about guys who submerge their footwear—either trainers or boots—in mud, or various types of outdoor scenarios. When we started researching the YouTube videos, rather than actually just lifting those images straight off of YouTube, we recreated it ourselves in our own kind of way. There’s also a big relationship between Flickr groups and the YouTube community, and a lot of users who use both sites exclusively. It’s a way for us to get involved in the reason why these kinds of material objects are fetishized. Therefore we just do it ourselves, basically, but in our own way.MD: It’s a bit of a hidden community, and that’s what we like about it. A lot of people wouldn’t see it as something sexualized. So, it’s really about the viewer—about the viewer understanding the references.BC: I guess it could almost be misunderstood as product testing as well, because they’re similar to product testing videos.MD: Yeah, they’re very similar to product testing videos. If you’re going to purchase a waterproof boot or something, you’re going to see it being tested in water, in mud, and other outdoor scenarios. But the video will be titled with the full name and model of the footwear instead of some “mud” tag.BC: This whole community is kind of geeky-technical in a lot of ways.MD: There’s a list of tag words that you’re always looking out for, depending on what you’re looking for, so you kind of start to link with guys who are linked with other users who use the same tags in order for the YouTube search to bring up just their videos. But it’s quite obscure and quite hidden.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


But the people who are making these videos, are they middle-class laborers, or from the countryside?Your older videos showed boys showering fully clothed, and now you’re working with this mud aesthetic. How did this idea of moving things from a clean silhouette to maybe getting things dirty come about? It’s kind of like a taboo, especially in sneaker culture.


BC: I think it really varies.MD: Yeah, and I think that it’s quite important to say as well that it’s not necessarily a gay fetish. I think a lot people automatically assume that “fetish” equals something that gay guys are into. But we’ve reached out to a few of the community members over the years and they come from all walks of life. And all ages. It could be people that have an obsession with working class culture, which tends to be a Nike sort of fetish. But there’s also older German men who are really into water-sealed outdoor wear—more techy things.BC: Or young lads that work on farms, who are maybe 16 or 17 years old. They’re in the fields anyway, so they start to film themselves, probably a bit out of boredom? []MD: A mud fetish is actually quite a common thing—there are a lot of sites, like porn sites that show that kind of thing. But this is obviously different because it’s not pornographic in any way. For us, we’ve started using it as a way of considering how technical materials can work with natural materials and textures. For Fall/Winter 2016, placing textured bouclé knit with cellophane was our interpretation of envisioning these kind of technical, waterproof materials being submerged in natural, dirty materials.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


If a mood board is like a form of language for a designer, how does yours translate from content to product?


BC: I think it’s pretty literal in a lot of respects, especially color palette. The mood board is always reflective of the color palette and the textures we’re going to translate in the fabrication.MD: Also, we do a lot of research into clothing industries that are not related to fashion, like chemical protection, workwear, safetywear, even stuff that’s worn for catering industries. And a lot of the time in our research, those companies and those products tend to be on our mood boards. We always end up collaborating with one of them. Last season, for example, we used these cement finishing shoes, and that was one of the first items that went on our mood board.BC: There’s always a lot of home interiors as well.MD: If we’re looking at a particular wall finish, we would try to find a similar texture or finish in a fabric, and make it wearable.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


In the last collection there’s the landscape of wheat, the landscape of glass, and the landscape of roofs, which are all monochromatic environments. There seems to be this idea of uniformity even in the environments you choose.


MD: Yes, except the difference and the contrast is with something like the wheat, there’s no order to how it grows. It’s more of a feeling of nature and disorder. In contrast with the modern materials, it’s really about our perception of what the future is. The future isn’t glossy, clean materials, you know? Years ago everyone thought the future was a touchscreen phone. Now everyone’


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


Your collections are serial, they use similar patterns, and some of the aesthetics don’t really change. I’m interested in the uniform of these environments with the uniform of your garments. There is something so personal and private about your process in research and design. But in contrast, there is a greater communication between your ideas and a larger group.


MD: We’ve always worked instinctively, and quite spontaneously as well. Having said that, over the years we’ve tried to understand why we’re instinctively drawn to certain aesthetics. And I think from taking that point of view, it has created a pattern and uniformity from season to season. It’s our identity, and that never changes, it just evolves. And so the pattern sort of has the same rules, but grows and develops with us at the same time.BC: Well, I think it’s because we draw inspiration from stuff that’s familiar to a lot of people, you know? We never just pluck something out that nobody’s ever seen before, it’s always got references to home or everyday life.MD: Yeah, and I guess that kind of plays into the whole cult thing. We’re interested in groups and how groups form and what they use to relate to each other.BC: And educate each other.MD: And so there’s always a common doctrine between a group, or a sort of common theory that they follow, whether that be Hare Krishnas, skinheads, these YouTube groups, etc. Everyone has these common interests that they get really into and obsessed with. And in turn, we get obsessed by researching them. There are elements of obsession in our backgrounds as well. I had a kind of vaguely religious upbringing. Ben’s family were like teddy boys and skinheads and all this kind of thing. Ben’s dad was into rave culture, and that’s all about group mentality. It’s all about having a uniformity within a group—but that group standing out from the rest of society.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


You guys also stay away from prints. Why is it always a concentration on material instead of print?


MD: I guess it’s again a bit of a geeky thing. We’re really interested in fabrication. We’re also really interested in the way you can create light without color using layering systems and transparency.BC: We’re looking into embroidery a lot at the moment because we feel it adds quality to the garment—more so than print.MD: Embroidering onto technical fabrications feels like the sort of aesthetic that we were talking about earlier: clashing two worlds together. This contrast is imperative to what we do, but it’s always tonal and clean. We want the customers to be able to cross-merchandize their wardrobe season upon season. Besides, London is quite well known for print, and we wanted to set ourselves apart from that. We never wanted to be doing what was kind of saturated at the time, and when we started everyone was doing it.BC: We were told by a buyer once that we need to do more print, so we didn’t. []


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


With the colors of your past collection, the brown mud with the jade, you moved away from black and white. This must have been liberating for you.


MD: We like using white, we like using black, but we never mix them together. In the early days, when Ben and I first started making clothes for ourselves, we used to do a few white prints on black garments, but we soon realized that it wasn’t unique, it wasn’t original, and it was just all over the place. And we’ve always had longevity in mind. We’re always thinking about how we can produce something that is going to be around for a really long time—new pieces that become timeless classics. We’re always trying to avoid trends. The minute we see something that someone else is doing, we tend to kind of go the opposite direction. We always do a concept color. For Fall/Winter 2016, the sheaf was the main symbol, and therefore we did a few wheat-colored garments. And same with Spring/Summer 2016—we showed an all-white collection but we also refabricated it all in coral to represent the inspiration, which referenced Hare Krishnas and other religious dress codes.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


But it’s never a pop of color, as with most fashion brands.How do you put these synthetic and neutral colors together so it looks cohesive?


BC: No, not really. To be honest, we have quite a limited palette. We’re always in the blue, white, beige, black zone.MD: The brand identity has really become about making a subtle statement, and that’s exactly what it is. It’s not about being overly ostentatious, it’s not necessarily about wanting to stand out in a crowd. Instead, it’s about being noticed over time.BC: I mean, it’s instinct.MD: Yeah, it is instinctive. It goes back to us being quite obsessive about uniformity.BC: And I think we realized a couple of seasons ago that although the research that we gather had always been pretty strong, it felt more real if we actually created our own imagery and research.MD: Because whenever we do a show, it’s about a sensory experience. So, in order to make other people feel something, I think you need to experience and feel it yourself.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


Do you think your customers are aware of the honesty of your imagery and products, and how reflective it is of the brand identity?


BC: I think some of them are.MD: Some are, some aren’t.BC: We don’t put all our information out there, but if you want to discover more and you want to understand more, there’s plenty of material to go back through and find the connection between everything.MD: We don’t like to bombard people with information. So, for example, on our Instagram, we only post once every two weeks. Same with press, we don’t do every press opportunity that comes our way. We don’t do every interview.BC: We don’t share the research unless you come to the studio and actually see it for yourself.


Cottweiler’s Fall/Winter 2016 Collection Research


I think that there’s some code about how you wear your garments. It’s always a full look—there’s the bag, there’s the hat, there’s the top, there’s the pants.So, what is someone committing to when they buy this uniform?


MD: Yes.MD: We just like stuff that matches, to be honest. [] That kind of maybe goes into the whole uniformity side of things.BC: But I think it’s the same as creating these subcultures or these identities in groups. If you look at any decent subculture in the past, there’s a full look, there’s a head-to-toe look. You can’t just wear a pair of braces and be a skinhead. You’ve got to have the right cut of jeans, the right boots, do you know what I mean? If you’re committing to being a Cottweiler boy and you’re going to dress head to toe in Cottweiler, it would be weird to put it with another brand. You could, of course, but you’re committing to becoming part of the brand or group.