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@chupsteretteIf you've spent nearly a decade working in the fashion industry like me, you come across a
“It was one photo in particular that stuck out to me: Rei, in an undated photo, with her hair swirling about in the wind. She’s in a black top, with a moto jacket casually thrown on top. She looked intimidatingly cool, a portrait of an Asian woman who was breaking boundaries by showing clothes that she designed in Paris," she says of her septuagenarian style-icon. "That led me to her runway creations, which were beyond my imagination. They were somber, with a ton of black, but never boring: Everything felt like a fantasy world that I wanted to live in. I was hooked and I found myself saving images not only of her runway clothes but also her personal style."
Embracing the edgy sartorial side of things, Tsui's style isn't centered around chasing trends, but rather around choosing unconventional pieces that also hold timeless appeal, "[Rei's style] exudes a sense of confidence because it’s not particularly trendy but neither is it not trendy. The likelihood that you’ll bump into someone with your exact outfit is pretty rare and I never feel like anything looks dated. I love how Kawakubo’s style exists in its own world where the woman who wears it knows she looks weird and she doesn’t care if you think that — in fact, she’s proud of it. And that’s exactly my attitude in life," says Tsui.
To see how the Brooklyn bred editor pulls off her cool take on the "grandma" look, keep scrolling ahead.