The (Haunted) Fairytale Atelier: A Conversation with Linda Friesen
March Issue, Wedding, Style, Interview, Fashion Amanda Kotiesen March Issue, Wedding, Style, Interview, Fashion Amanda Kotiesen

The (Haunted) Fairytale Atelier: A Conversation with Linda Friesen

Exploring the gothic imagination behind one of bridal fashion’s most distinctive couturiers

By: Amanda Albert

Once upon a time, a wonderfully weird bride wandered through an endless forest of boring bridal salons brimming with underwhelming ivory gowns. Every rack looked the same, every dress scrubbed of mystery. How dull and disappointing…

At the edge of that forest, stood a delightfully different door. Inside waited an atelier where soft velvet replaces itchy tulle, where storied shadows are welcomed in for afternoon tea and beautiful brides who dream in darker colours bring their visions to life <3.

That atelier, our atelier, belongs to Linda Friesen, a designer whose work reads like myth rendered in real-life. From her studio, Friesen creates gowns shaped by historical memory, narrative imagination, fantasy + fairytale and a romantic gothic sensibility that allows fantasy to coexist with expert craftsmanship.

Brides arrive at her door in search of something that doesn’t exist on ordinary racks, then leave carrying a garment that feels born from their most authentic selves.

In Friesen’s world, couture becomes a form of storytelling, with every seam, silhouette and shade serving the spell of a dark fairytale. Here, we step inside her studio as she reflects on the stories that shape her signature style.

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Garments with a Pulse: A Conversation with Beloved Fashion Designer, Evan Clayton&nbsp;
Fashion, Interview, January Issue, Culture Amanda Kotiesen Fashion, Interview, January Issue, Culture Amanda Kotiesen

Garments with a Pulse: A Conversation with Beloved Fashion Designer, Evan Clayton 

An exploration of early inspiration, gothic influences and his latest collection

By: Amanda Albert

Fashion, at its highest level, is wearable sculpture. It is an art form designed to move the body and the mind, in tandem.

Because it resists practicality, it is often misunderstood as excessive, theatrical or, frankly, weird. What it truly resists is complacency.

Evan’s work belongs to this lineage of fashion as cultural intervention. Each collection is built as an emotional architecture rather than a seasonal offering designed to dress trips to the grocery store.

His garments carry narrative, emotion, defiance and devotion with weight meant to endure. On the runway, the story each collection carries unfolds as performance art.

In an era that largely flattens fashion into trend cycles, Evan insists on depth. He designs not to decorate the body, but to transform how we experience it.

We had the pleasure of sitting down with Evan to discuss his latest collection, what came before and what we can expect next.

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