Is a clotheshorse
born or made?
I think you become one, but you do have to have a knack.
When you grow into it, you usually find that it's in your
background. I was a thrift-store hound. You can be a thrift
clotheshorse with taste. My grandfather was heavy into clothes,
my grandmother, my mom, so it's a little of both.
Was there an epiphany that got you interested
in clothes?
Your fashion is often defined by your surroundings. I started
being around people who were stylists, or closets stylists,
around 1994. You have a moment where you realize it's just
completely unfair to let the girls have all the fun.
What do you think of the notion that
real men don't care about their appearence?
I think that's from a bygone era. The attention to detail
young people put into their fashion [now]... I see some
of these punk-rock kids on Hollywood Boulevard, and I don't
know if they're rich, poor or indifferent, but man, the
time they're putting into their piercings, their mohawks,
and into their boots and the tears in their pants.
Where do you stand on the metrosexual
phenomenon?
Come again? Rephrase that for me. I don't know what that
is.
A "metrosexual" is a straight
guy with the stereotypical tastes of a gay man. He gets
interested in interior design, fashion, grooming, and in
cocktails instead of a six-packs.
I didn't know it wasn't masculine to be into that kind of
stuff. About the time I got into fashion, I was traveling.
When you walk around Europe, the men are dressed and their
apartments are thought out, tastefully done. And they've
been in the French Foreign Legion and, like, killed 40 or
50 people. They don't have the fashion-equals-gaymale stigma.
That's a strictly American stereotype.
Who are your style icons?
The pillars for me are Run-DMC, Jam Master Jay and Gram
Parsons. The rodeo tailor Nudie Cohen in North Hollywood
defined rock 'n' roll style. He made Elvis' gold lamé
suit. Western moved from cowboy boots and shirts to what
became the Nudie Cohen style. Gram Parsons is like the signpost
for that style. Gram was waving the Nudie flag longer and
louder than anyone. And then Run-DMC and Jam Master Jay
with their Borsalino hats, and the leather three-button
blazers with the sneakers and the denim. That crossed over
from Jamaica to Brooklyn. Jamaican "rude boy"
style from the 1950s is a huge influence.
How big is your wardrobe?
I've lost track. Just T-shirts alone are a closet. I mean,
it's immense.
What's your biggest splurge?
Custom suits to your exact specifications. Lanvin [in] Paris.
Etro. And Jaime Castaneda [of Jaime Custom Tailoring] in
North Hollywood. He worked for Nudie Cohen, and he's still
doing the original Nudie [style].
Do you spend a lot on suits?
I'm over the top. I'll admit it. But I'll go into a thrift
store and find the perfect burgundy velvet double-breasted
jacket. So that dramatically lowers my average on expensive
suits.
Do women go for a sharp-dressed man,
as ZZ Top put it?
If a woman doesn't think a guy's cute and he comes on to
her, he's a cad. [But] if she likes his vibe and he comes
on to her, then he's got great on-liners. That's a bigger
conversation. I think [most] women dig guys who pay attention
to fashion detail. Johnny Depp is great. That guy's got
incredible attention to detail.
Do you think the average Angeleno puts
much effort into fashion?
Does the average person have time in their busy lives to
care about fashion? Fashion is a byproduct of having time
— and money to a degree. I saw a great interview with
Curt Cobain, who was like, "Man, when I didn't have
any money I used to relish going into the thrift stores
and finding that $10 cashmere sweater." So I'm not
saying you have to have money to be stylish. But you have
to have time, and you have to care.
Is style more important for performers?
If you're a public figure of any stature in any arena, it's
totally irresponsible to dress poorly. Look, every picture
I've ever seen of Kurt Cabain, the guy is so styled out
and looks so perfect. His cashmere sweaters fall in the
perfect spot. His jeans come down perfect. He paid attention
to detail. It doesn't have to be extravagant, it just has
to fall correctly. Especially in the arts. There's no more
pitiful sight than a poorly dressed rocker.
Is dressing a form of self-expression?
We're the only bird that can change its feathers daily.
That's to be taken full advantage of. |