vsszan805040907071.jpg vsszan805040907072.jpg Jocasta Innes' House, Spitalfields. Photograph by Jan Baldwin for The World of Interiors
          vsszan805040907073.jpg Jocasta Innes' House, Spitalfields. Photograph by Jan Baldwin for The World of Interiors
          vsszan805040907074.jpg Masseria Cimino, Puglia. Photographs by Renae Smith
          vsszan805040907075.jpg vsszan805040907076.jpg vsszan805040907077.jpg vsszan805040907078.jpg Nakamura Takuo outside his home in Kanazawa. Photograph by Sophie Ashby
         
This month’s guest on The Modern House Podcast is fashion designer Charlie Casely-Hayford, who started his eponymous label with his late father, Joe Casely-Hayford OBE, aged just 22 years old. Listen to the episode here.

Charlie,
aged 34, seems to be have been destined for a career in fashion, with his
parents having partnered on various trend-forming brands since they first met
in the late 1970s. He recalls a childhood in which no boundaries between home
and work existed, where waking up at 3am to the sound of his parents discussing
different cloth samples was a regular occurrence, and trips to Paris Fashion
Show constituted family holidays.

Joe,
who passed away last year, is remembered as a pioneering designer who stitched
together influences from London’s subcultures, religious clothing and Savile
Row tailoring into clothing that was subversive, grown-up, wearable, cool and
punky all at the same time. Now carrying the baton of his father’s legacy,
Charlie reflects on his father’s life and work in the episode, explaining how
he has only truly comprehended the impression he made on him in the last year.

Charlie’s
own starting point a designer was through art, studying first at Central St
Martins, interning at the White Cube gallery and then studying Art History at
the Courtauld Institute. It was at St Martins, though, that Casely-Hayford
first became interested in fashion as a way to express and explore identity,
and has turned his hand to styling and designing ever since.

From
his home in Spitalfields, east London, which he shares with his wife, interior
designer Sophie Ashby, Charlie reflects on his aesthetic, work, life,
appreciation of Japanese craft and shares how he sees his retirement looking
(spoiler: there’s a fair bit of chess and oil painting). Plus, as always, find
out what he picked as his top three living spaces around the world. Make sure
to subscribe to the podcast so that you never miss an episode, and if you could
rate and review us, we’d be more than grateful. As ever, happy listening.
The Modern House Podcast

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