Friday 8 April 2016

New Website

Here it is!  http://www.hindukushclothing.com/

Also from now on I will be moving my blog posts to a page my new website, which is here - http://www.hindukushclothing.com/blog/

Thanks for following me!


Saturday 7 November 2015

Raincoat Pattern

It's been a depressingly long time since my last post... apologies to anyone who noticed. But I have been busy - a new website is just about to be ready - a post will follow when it is, and I have been working on a rain coat...

I plan to use denim for the raincoat and then treat it with water repellent, much like an old fashioned canvas tent. So it won't be waterproof against a prolonged downpour but it will fend off a standard London shower. I also want to use pure cotton rather than a rubberized material  so that I can print a design onto it - something which I have been wanting to do for some time after having been inspired by the adire cloths of Nigeria.
fashioned canvas tent. So it won't be

Below is what I have come up with (printed through an acetate stencil). I think I might use a lighter denim when I get a sample made. I hope that the imagery is self explanatory - the Hindu Kush meets South London.


The imagined raincoat

Sketched design

The print

As a pattern

Sunday 28 June 2015

Studio Shots

My friend James is always very well dressed indeed. Furthermore, he can conjure on demand a wistful look, as if lost in a reverie of past romances in far off places. This makes him ideal model material, as yet unexploited. Until now....




















Saturday 27 June 2015

Hot in the Cold

I have been working on a drawing over the past few days. It will be inset into the lining of a new jacket that I am working on.

This new jacket will be extra warm, with a thick, but lightweight quilted lining. I thought that I might call it something like the 'toaster' or perhaps the 'melter'. Better suggestions would be more than welcome.

The drawing is very cold... with a little bit of heat provided by 'Hindu Kush'.









Monday 20 April 2015

The Full Monty


Depending on how moved you are by packaging you may or may not find this an interesting post... I have spent all most all of my life with only only a very modest interest in packaging, however the past month has seen my emotional engagement with packaging go from 'minimal' to 'obsessive'. For those of you who share my current obsession with packaging I hope you find the following striptease-like sequence of photos as exciting as I do.




















Saturday 21 March 2015

The Hill Jacket in Brown

A couple of weeks ago an experiment arrived back from the factory: the Hill Jacket in brown shu, with brown horn buttons and a dark green moleskin collar lining.

Shu comes in shades of grey, from almost white to almost black. The grades are achieved by mixing darker and lighter wool. The kailey sheep which produces the wool used for shu doesn't come in brown, so walnuts soaked in water are used to achieve a quite unusual range of redy, beigey browny hues. Shu is not dyed into any other colours.

I think the experiment was a success!










Sunday 22 February 2015

Matching Fabric Samples

I have been going through swatches of different English-made tweed-like fabrics from the venerable mill Abraham Moon and Sons (established in 1837). Moon's range of lambswool and merino wool cloths compliment the more robust shu very well indeed, so I am keen to use Moon's cloths with shu in future Hindu Kush jackets. The soft handle of Moon's cloth can be employed very usefully around the collar of my jackets, so that the wearer's face comes into contact with something slightly more comforting than the shu. (I don't want to put shu down, it's handle is soft too, not scratchy like a thorn-proof cloth).

In the most recent Hindu Kush jacket, currently calling it's self the 'Donegalistan' British cloth and shu compliment each other very well indeed. It is something which I am super keen to build on in future jackets!


Swatches from Moon's and shu.


Shu swatch

The Donegal tweed used in the Donegalistan


The Donegalistan with tweed collar and piping.