English For Life in the UK – Fashion and Design in the UK

What we mean by fashion and design. Some famous British designers, including fashion designers. Nouns and adjectives for materials.

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Episode 33: Fashion and Design

Mark

Hello and welcome to the podcast English for Life in the UK. This is episode 33 of the podcast, intended for intermediate-level learners of English. It's produced by a group of volunteer teachers from the St Augustine's Centre, in Halifax, Yorkshire, where we provide a range of support and advice to those in need, and particularly to asylum seekers, refugees and migrants.

However this podcast is for anyone who wants to improve their English and, at the same time, to learn more about life in this country. After this episode, we're going to take a short break of two or three weeks, and then we will be re-launching the podcast in a slightly different format. Until then, if you would like to tell us your views on the podcast, to help with the next stage, we have a survey available on our website :

www.staugustinescentrehalifax.org.uk

That's spelt: s-t-a-u-g-u-s-t-i-n-e-s-c-e-n-t-r-e-h-a-l-I-f-a-x

You'll find a link to the survey on that website. That is also where you can find the transcripts for all our episodes and links to all our episodes. The transcript for this one will be available in a few days' time. You can also contact us at our email address, which is englishforlifeintheUK@gmail.com and we would be interested to hear a bit about yourself and also what you think of the podcast and how it could be improved.

Today's episode is brought to you by Christine, Sheena and Mark and the focus is on fashion and design. In the transcript of this episode we will include some images, and links to images, to help to illustrate the things we're talking about. We hope you find it useful.

Christine

This week's topic is fashion and design in the UK and Mark, I think you're going to start by telling us what it tells us in the official study guide for the Citizenship Test.

Mark

Yes - thanks Christine. There's a short section on fashion and design in the UK and it starts with fashion, so maybe we should just explain: fashion is really about the style of clothes, but it's not just clothes - it's also things like hairstyle, shoes, jewellery, makeup - those things all become part of fashion. Fashion is usually associated with a particular period of time, so, for example, you can talk about the "fashion of the 1960's" or "this year's fashion" and, in the Official Guide, it mentions three different famous UK fashion designers, and I think Sheena is going to tell us a bit about each one of these. The ones they mention are: Mary Quant, Alexander McQueen and Vivienne Westwood. So, Sheena, what can you tell us about those three people?

Sheena

I think I will start with Mary Quant who I think is the most iconic fashion designer of the 1960's - or the "Swinging Sixties", as people often refer to it, now. Along with a French designer, she was responsible for maybe one of the - again - most iconic pieces of clothing, in the 1960's, which was the mini-skirt, which was a very short skirt: above the knee, often just 10 centimetres, or 4 inches, below a person's bottom. Made to wear with the fashion boots called "go-go boots", often the people at the time, often would wear false eyelashes and, like Mary Quant, would have Vidal Sassoon 5-point geometric hair styles and

Mark

What does that mean, Sheena? Describe that hairstyle.

Sheena

It would be a full fringe, coming into two points in front of the person's ears, showing the ears, and then two points at the back, but I don't know where the fifth point is!

I'm sure listeners can look up this hair style and then, the other thing I would say that was very fashionable in the Sixties, and I'm afraid I've been talking about female fashion here - because Mary Quant was more associated with female fashion - is wearing PVC, which was a sort of plastic vinyl material that was often in very bold colours - very bright or very deep colours - often raincoats, shoes, handbags, things like that.

Christine

I remember.

Mark

So do I, but of course, I did not wear a mini-skirt but I did wear flared trousers, so they are trousers where, at the bottom - at your ankles - they became very, very wide.

Sheena

That's right Mark - and how wide were you flares? You could have 22" (inches) I seem to remember, or 24".

Mark

I don't think mine were that wide.

Sheena

Very wide, isn't it?

Mark

So, tell us about Alexander McQueen.

Sheena

He came a lot later - in between, was probably Vivienne Westwood. But I'll talk about Alexander McQueen, since you've asked. I would say he is one of my favourite designers, mainly because anything I have seen of his fashion shows were so dramatic - totally outrageous - and, I'm sure, made headlines in every newspaper, the next day. He was from .... himself, from a very working-class background and he'd learnt the art of tailoring by working on tailored. He's well-known for his precise tailoring, and then, and also, the delicate beauty of his materials, but on top of this, the themes of his shows were the thing that got him a lot of attention and to start with, he didn't even want to sell the clothes, he was just making a name for himself. So his shows .... One of the most famous ones - was called "The Highland Rape" which was very political and it was about British - the British in Scotland, centuries ago, and one of his other shows was about "aliens", where all the hairstyles, the special effects, the make-up, were what made that a really dramatic show. If anyone wants to know more about him - there's a film about his life - I think it's just called "McQueen" - and it's really excellent for understanding the pressures of the business, and sadly, in 2010, I think it was, when he was only 40, he took his own life and I think that was because of the great pressure that he was under. His name lived on, however, because his assistant, Sarah Burton, designed Kate Middleton's wedding dress, so his inspiration and his influence, was still around.

Mark

Thank you - so what about Vivienne Westwood? You mentioned her ...

Sheena

OK - Vivienne Westwood was like punk clothing, at the time. But she's still ..., she's still designing now. She's been designing for 5 decades - she is a CND - so very political, very political designer.

Mark

Thanks Sheena. Christine - I think you're going to tell us a bit about the fashion industry generally.

Christine

Well what I was going to say is - it's a very important part of the British economy. It .... and it has been for centuries. In medieval times, the main export from this country was wool. So, fashion and textiles have been central to the UK throughout time. I think - well a few years' ago - there were £26 billion in the fashion industry, in this country - that's twenty-six thousand million pounds. And 800,000 jobs - people directly employed in the fashion industry - so it's often considered to be: "Oh, that's just a bit of fun", but it is quite central to our economy and, as well as the design and the production of clothes, there's quite a lot of fashion education in this country. People do travel to study fashion in this country. It's the UK's largest creative industry.

Mark

Interesting. Sheena - I think you said there were a couple of other fashion designers that you thought our listeners might be interested in.

Sheena

Yes - there's two there are ... maybe associated with celebrities - Stella McCartney, who was the daughter of Paul McCartney, one of the Beatles. She is a fashion designer and I think at first, she suffered from the fact that her name was well-known, but now she's really successful. She must have been, maybe twenty years now, I should imagine, she's been designing clothes. She's very successful; a lot of her clothes are now worn by celebrities - such as Madonna and Gwyneth Paltrow - and perhaps one of the most important things about her, is that she refuses to use fur or leather, because like her parents, she's always been a strict vegetarian.

Then the other person that I'm particularly interested in is somebody called Christopher Bailey, who again, came from a very ordinary background: his mother was a window dresser from CEO , he transformed the brand and it became one of the most successful.... you know, a really successful ..., a real success story and I just thought the fact that he lived in Halifax throughout this time, was very interesting to me.

Mark

Yeah ... we should say to all our listeners, that all those places that Sheena mentioned they are all local to us here, where we're recording this. And Sheena - I think you said there was a Turkish designer as well that you knew a bit about.

Sheena

I don't know a lot about this designer: I've just heard of him, myself, but apparently he is very up and coming and very popular at the moment. He's claimed to be a British designer. He's called Erdem - E-R-D-E-M - and he was born in Canada and has a Turkish background, but is being promoted as a British designer, but at the moment, he is, apparently .... he creates beautiful fabrics and his clothes are said to have an old-world elegance but they ..., at the moment, being currently worn by young women like Meghan Markle and Kiera Knightly. So, a very popular contemporary designer.

Mark

That's great - thank you. So the other part of this section, in the Official Handbook, is about design, more generally. We've been talking there about fashion design, but design is really about the process of planning and making things, and particularly objects such as furniture, ceramics, that's pottery, interior design - that means the design of the inside of houses, craftsmanship in general, the making of things, is again something that the UK has been famous for over the years, and still is today.

And again, there are some people mentioned in the Official Guide. One of them is Thomas Chippendale. Now, he was designing in the eighteenth century - and he designed furniture - wooden furniture of very high quality, which is still sought after these days - you pay a lot of money for - in an auction - for a Chippendale table or piece of furniture. So that's Thomas Chippendale.

The second one is Clarice Cliff - now she is a ceramics designer and, later in this episode, I'm going to interview Janice - who happens to be my wife - but is particularly interested in the design work of Clarice Cliff, so you'll hear a bit more about that, later in this episode.

And then, the third one that's mentioned in the book, is Sir Terence Conran and I think, Christine, you're going to tell us a little bit about him.

Christine

Yes, I mean the first thing I think I'll say is - it's quite sad - he died, just last week, so there's been a lot of acknowledgement of his contribution to design, in this country, over the last, what? - seven decades. He left school in 1950 and started working for an architect, but pretty soon he opened a furniture workshop and designed and made his own furniture. He's also known for other things, but the furniture I think is the primary one. In particular, in 1964, he opened a shop called Habitat and that's certainly how I know him, because the Habitat brand, the Habitat shops - there were some in the big cities, in this country. They produced elegant but very .. furniture with very clean lines - you might almost say, utilitarian - they mirrored their purpose: nothing fancy about it, but just elegant. And - I mean, these days - or later in the twentieth century, that look became very popular with the Swedish brand, called IKEA, opening stores all over Europe and indeed, all over the world. But Terence Conran was making furniture like that, even furniture that came in flat packs, some twenty years before IKEA. He's also ... he's contributed in lots of other ways. In 1989, he founded the Design Museum in London and that is, certainly, normally, a big centre, where anybody who's interested in design can go and look at aspects in Design.

Mark

Thank you very much, Christine. OK, so, Janice - I know that Clarice Cliff is one of your favourite designers - tell us a little bit about her.

Janice

Well, she was a fascinating woman: born at the end of the 19th century, in Staffordshire, which was famous for its pottery factories and she became a world renowned designer of pottery. She was a very poor girl, to start with, and came from a poor working-class family, one of eight children; left school at 13 and went to work in one of the pottery factories, where she learnt how to paint freehand, on the clay pots. She was obviously quite talented and she was noted - noticed, rather - by the factory owners. Because she started work in the factories just as the First World War was starting, there were lots of vacancies in the factories, because the men had gone off to fight, and she was promoted quite quickly and quite quickly became one of the top designers.

Mark

So tell us a bit about what kind of things she designed and what style she used.

Janice

Well she started off by painting clay figures - that was her main interest - and just decorating the pots, as she was told to decorate them, in the factory, but when she started to have her own ideas and started to experiment, she used very bright colours which were quite unusual, at the time, and she became very interested in the Art Deco movement.

Mark

So - what do we mean by Art Deco?

Janice

It was a fashion of design that became very popular in the 1920s and 1930s and it wasn't just pottery - it was painting, furniture, fabric - all sorts of things. Often very angular and very - sometimes you'd get lots of black and white things, but you'd also get things with really bright colours, and that's what interested Clarice. In the mid-1920s, she started developing her own lines of pottery and she used Art Deco shapes - quite a lot of angular, interesting-looking tea pots and jugs and plates, that were unusual, but became incredibly popular; very very bright colours, fabulous patterns, and that just carried on through the 1920s and '30s.

Mark

And I understand that, today, they're very highly collectible. Is that right?

Janice

Absolutely - she died in 1972, just as there was a reviving interest in the whole Art Deco movement and a lot of her designs were collected and looked at again. They'd gone out of fashion in the 1940's and '50's, and by the 1970's and '80's, bits of pottery that were really selling very cheaply, when they were first made, were becoming real collector's items, and now it's very, very difficult to buy a Clarice Cliff piece of pottery cheaply - they're all very, very expensive.

Mark

That's great - thank you very much - that's really interesting.

Language Support

This is the part of the podcast where we choose some aspect of language used in this episode and talk about it in a bit more detail. In this episode, because we were talking about fashion and design, we used a lot of words about ... to describe materials: the things that things are made of. So, in this episode you heard us talk about plastic, vinyl, which is a type of plastic, wood, wool, fur, leather, pottery, ceramics - those are all materials - and there are lots of others that we didn't use in this episode - for example, paper or glass, or cotton or nylon.

So cotton, nylon, wool are all fabrics or textiles, that are used to make clothes and other things, and then you've got lots of metals: brass or iron or steel or aluminium - and then you've got concrete and brick - so lots of words that describe different materials.

Now, those words can be used as nouns - so we can say:

"she makes ceramics" - or - "this shoe is made of leather" - or - "he likes to work in wood" -

so using them as nouns, or you can use them as adjectives.

In most cases, the noun and the adjective are exactly the same form. So you can talk about:

"a glass table" - or - "a pottery mug" or "a paper cup",

but there are a few where the adjectival form of the word changes. So, for example, you would not talk about "a wood table" - you would say "a wooden table" and likewise "wool" , as an adjective, would normally be "woollen" - so "this is a woollen jumper".

So I hope that's been helpful - I am sure you can look up those words to make sure you understand what they are in your own native language, but it's useful to know quite a few of those materials, to be able to talk about things.

I hope that's been helpful. A reminder again that you can find the transcript to this episode, which will also include some illustrations and links on our website

www.staugustinescentrehalifax.org.uk

and we will be back with you, after a break - a short break, two or three weeks - with a new episode. In the meantime, take care of yourselves and goodbye.

All Podcast Episodes 

Mary Quant. Source: wikimedia

Alexander McQueen design. Source: wikimedia

Vivienne Westwood. Source: Wikimedia

Stella MCartney. Source: wikimedia

Erdem. Source: wikimedia

Chippendale High Chest. Source: Flickr

Clarice Cliff pottery. Source: wikimedia

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