Fashion

Collina Strada’s Hillary Taymour on Building and Nurturing Community in a Pandemic 

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For Taymour, the current crisis is a prime opportunity to communicate the brand’s ethos, even if some may have initially misinterpreted the fashion face masks as wildly overpriced at $100, without fully parsing their charitable backstory. “People don’t necessarily understand how things are made, and that we don’t have a huge factory where we pay fast fashion prices—that I’m paying one person from home to sew them herself, and that the money is really going to the five other masks we’re making for medical workers,” Taymour explains. “It’s such a different time, and I think it will change the way customers react further down the line, but it’s been a hard connect, I think, for some people.”

On the other hand, she’s been happy to welcome a new audience to the brand through the attention her masks have received, whether providing them with a guide to make their own, or simply taking the opportunity to speak openly about the ins and outs of running an independent brand in 2020. “I do think now that there’s so much time, people are definitely reading the fine print, and if you tell a story to someone they’re actually going to hear it,” Taymour adds. “You definitely have people’s attention. I feel the kind of engagement we’re getting is so different from before, but different in a positive way, and the more transparent you are right now, the better.”

It’s a sense of community and creativity that is embedded in the brand’s DNA. As one example, Taymour’s partners in quarantine are the photographer Charlie Engman and model Sasha Melnychuk. Their talents came in handy when Taymour decided to create a quarantine collection from fabric scraps and an accompanying look book to raise funds for 22 charities earlier this month, serving as a timely reminder that having limited resources on hand doesn’t inhibit our ability to create. “I really believe that right now we have a huge opportunity to be creative, and I’m in a lucky position where I get to work with friends who are artists and get to make things that make people happy,” she notes. “If that’s what I can give back to society right now, when things are feeling dark and depressing, then I’ll do that.” It’s something Taymour is thinking about on a smaller scale too, like her daily commute. “I’m walking to my studio almost every day and mostly wearing Collina Strada, which is brightly colored anyway, but also these crazy face masks that we’ve been making. It’s so funny watching people’s reactions when they pass me—the other day I heard someone say, ‘Oh wow!’ I think you can still bring a little bit of joy right now through things as simple as fun patterns and crazy colors. It’s cheering.”