The BoF Podcast: Stephen Jones on the Craft of Millinery
In this week’s episode of Inside Fashion, BoF’s editor-at-large Tim Blanks sits down with Stephen Jones, the prolific hatter who has played a defining role in millinery for decades.
The author has shared a Podcast.You will need to accept and consent to the use of cookies and similar technologies by our third-party partners (including: YouTube, Instagram or Twitter), in order to view embedded content in this article and others you may visit in future.
LONDON, United Kingdom — His designs have crowned the heads of all kind of royalty — from Rihanna to Princess Diana — and have appeared in countless runway collections, including those of Comme des Garçons and Dior. But what drew Stephen Jones to millinery in the first place, and where does he place hats in the wider scope of fashion and culture?
"They communicate in a way that clothing can't," says Jones, who describes the world of hats as one of accessible entertainment and optimism, even in the bleakest of times. Such a philosophy goes hand-in-hand with the "mass entertainment" appeal of museum shows, which represent a large portion of Jones's accomplishments in recent years. His namesake exhibition at the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, on view now until June 9, 2019, is the latest in Jones’s work as a curator of hat-based museum shows.
But a hat, he notes, is not just designed to be a standalone sculpture, nor is it subservient to the cultural authority of its origins. Be it through couture collaboration or designing for a celebrity, "interpretation by others is the magical part," he says.
To subscribe to the BoF Podcast, please follow this link.
Subscribe to BoF Professional for unlimited access to BoF articles, plus exclusive benefits for members.
To contact The Business of Fashion with comments, questions, or speaker ideas please e-mail podcast@businessoffashion.com.
A majority of justices struck down the ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs that sent shockwaves through the fashion industry, setting the stage for a rush of brands trying to recoup duties they’ve already paid.
The ruling strikes down the so-called ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs that sent a shockwave through the fashion industry and sets the stage for a rush of brands trying to recoup duties they’ve already paid.
Sex sells — if anyone can figure out what sexy means in 2026. Robert Williams tracks the search for a new silhouette at Kering’s Gucci, LVMH’s Dior and more.
Christine Hunsicker admitted she falsified financial statements to promote CaaStle Inc. as a valuable, growing business when in reality it was struggling.