Clare Waight Keller Is Uniqlo’s New Creative Director
Fashion

Clare Waight Keller Is Uniqlo’s New Creative Director

Clare Waight Keller is Uniqlo’s new creative director.Photo: Courtesy of Uniqlo

Clare Waight Keller’s debut Uniqlo: C collection launched last September, and it’s safe to say that the new sub-label has been a success. Today, she’s here in New York to show off the new fall season, and she comes with a new title: creative director, meaning she now oversees not just the Uniqlo: C line she was hired to develop last year, but also the brand’s core offerings, which so many of us know and love and wear so often.

You know which ones I mean: all the cashmere, the merino, basically anything under the LifeWear umbrella. “What you’ll start to notice,” Waight Keller says, “is that within some of those core programs there’ll be new fashion shapes, and there’ll be new silhouettes that drop every other month, to really bring in the freshness.” Among the developments that will register, she explains, are updates to the overall color palette. “I’ve got my hands all over that.” On the women’s side, look for more femininity, more prints, and more exploration in terms of pattern and cut, and younger, trending silhouettes. “Uniqlo appeals to such a big audience,” she says, “but a big chunk that they really capture is that younger age bracket. It’s a fast-moving market, so there’s a lot to learn there.”

Waight Keller hails from the salons of Paris; she was at Givenchy for three years and at Chloé for six before that, and she’s upfront about the learning curve at Uniqlo. “In the fashion industry, especially luxury, it’s all about change, change, change. What are the new proportions? The new silhouettes? That’s important to keep things moving, but the truth is, it’s the timeless pieces that people buy in a big, big way.”

One of the first categories she’s turned her eye to is denim. A new wide-leg style has become “one of the globally top-selling styles” since launching. In menswear, you can expect softer tailored jackets and “more interesting oversized shapes.” Then, as September edges into October her new Pufftech styles will start filtering into the stores, and she says it’s not just the palette that will be new, but also the proportions and “the way that they’re styled.”

Waight Keller has noticed her own style changing since starting to work full-time at Uniqlo. These days she’s pairing her tailored jackets with white tees and cargo pants or men’s parachute pants. “The Uniqlo customer has this sort of everyday casualness which is really quite appealing,” she says. “It’s a bit more active-sporty than the very refined, let’s say, wardrobe I had before. I’m enjoying the fact that everything’s cotton and fresh and washable.”

What about all those fall 2024 season headlines touting the return of dressing up? “I don’t see it myself,” she says. “I travel so much”—indeed, in between our conversation in late August, which she conducted from the English seaside, and her arrival in New York, she was in Japan for several days of work—“I’m observing people constantly and the big takeaways are that everyday style has evolved from Covid. There’s a relaxed sense of wanting to look smart-ish but actually feel super-comfortable. This is my mission at Uniqlo: to create that comfort with a strong sense of fashion, because I think that’s the sweet spot—something that feels great, makes you look good, but actually has a complete ease to it.”

There’s one more growth area she wants to talk about. “I’ve got a very good collection of flat shoes now. That’s always the go-to, on the run, with travel. But there’s still not a good selection in the market. That’s a category that’s going to expand [at Uniqlo], as well.”

Uniqlo: C, fall 2024 Photo: Courtesy of Uniqlo
Uniqlo: C, fall 2024 Photo: Courtesy of Uniqlo
Uniqlo: C, fall 2024 Photo: Courtesy of Uniqlo
Uniqlo: C, fall 2024 Photo: Courtesy of Uniqlo

This article was originally published on Vogue.com

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