Eyestylist

| Eyestylist 30th April 2022

Veronika Wildgruber

Multitalented designer Veronika Wildgruber began her career in eyewear alongside the celebrated Alain Mikli in Paris. After that, the young creative went on to win a Silmo D’Or with no less than her first ever frame design. Twelve years later, with commissions by brands including Hermès under her belt, Eyestylist catches up with the now established and highly regarded director and founder of her namesake eyewear label. 

 Tell us about your early life, and the journey you have taken in order to get to where you are today? I studied industrial design in Bolzano, Northern Italy. I think when I applied, my first intention was to be a graphic designer. I had liked my classes in industrial design and communication design and actually right up to the first half of the year, I realized that I really wanted to do product design and create objects. So, I graduated in industrial design and my plan was to become a furniture designer or a household object / interior designer. Then, I started to work in Paris doing an internship with a designer who was working with fashion as well as in product design.

Tiberius by Veronika Wildgruber

I intended to stay in Paris for four months, and in the end I stayed for years. After the internship I got into working a freelance job which rolled into another freelance job and so forth. Eventually, I began working for an Italian designer who shared his space with an eyewear maker Jacques Durand who was working alongside Mikli at the time. He was a big name in the city – everybody was talking about Mikli. To be honest, I didn’t really know Lee’s glasses because I was not involved with and didn’t have any contact within the industry. I never truly thought about working with him. It was all very new for me. In the moment it was more like an arrangement, sort of like “let’s share the space and maybe my assistant can give you some assistant work as well”. Then, from my perspective, it was solely about a paid job – you know, of course a rarity in the design area. So I said, yes. I think he also believed it was interesting to have somebody who was a designer, but didn’t know anything about his area – something that would make it interesting, and someone he would actually quite like to do some projects with.

He asked me to help on some collections and to design with my own eye. I have to say it wasn’t something I was always yearning to do, but I thought I’d like a bit of a challenge. It wasn’t at all a window into my future career at first, but it was more like, why not try it?

I crafted my first design with cardboard because I didn’t really know how to approach it. So, then we created the prototype frame with a model maker in acetate and presented it at Silmo in 2010 – and it won a Silmo D’Or! It felt like my first real moment after joining the eyewear world. It was a big surprise.

Briggs by Veronika Wildgruber

At the time I didn’t have a brand or a name in the industry, so the frame was just a number, without even a title. I think that kind of led me to believe I had a talent for design in this area, and pushed me to start this journey. I thought, if I am going to do it, I’ll do it with my own name – not as a collaboration or in a position working for someone else – but to try it for myself. From then on it was a strange and slow start: four pairs of glasses and two years later another four pairs of glasses and so on. It was never really a launch, you know, or a collection. That’s why I consider my growth into this world really organic; I wasn’t jumping in the deep end, I wanted to keep up my work in furniture design too – I would’ve felt as though I was cheating on my original dream if I had neglected it.

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| Eyestylist 28th April 2022

Rolf Spectacles: an innovation agenda

Eyestylist Exclusive: The Austrian label has a series of developments to announce, with  innovation at the heart of every frame

Rolf Spectacles, one of the pioneering small companies in the eyewear business, which remains true to its focus on quality and innovation in producing natural products with respect for the natural environment, has launched the first texture for its 3D printed plant-based frames. “This is the first release in the 3D printed substance mount collection made from castor beans,” Bernhard Wolf told Eyestylist. “There are more to come.” This first texture announced in March (https://www.eyestylist.com/2022/03/rolf-spectacles-adds-texture-to-plant-based-frames/) has a detailed pattern that reproduces the textures of natural structures like rock, dry earth. “If you look closely the pattern fades out towards the temple tip, this has taken a lot of tests and trials to get right, all done in our workshops in Austria. We are now working on new texture effects, always inspired from nature around us – the next one will appear in the regular substance line.”

In true Rolf style, away from the eco hype, the team has continued quietly through the last months in developing the possibilities of the 3D printed plant-based eyewear, while also turning attention to the development of 3D printed titanium designs. “We are always building our skills to create everything here in one place….we are completely self-reliant, everything is done in-house and finishes by hand with a process that strives for quality, continuity in innovation and always with transparency and  a genuine respect for nature and the environment. Above:  Brothers Bernhard and Roland Wolf, Rolf Spectacles

Rolf Spectacles – the new texture in the substance mount collection

Meanwhile, other new projects have been evolving successfully. With several new dads among the team at Rolf, a kid’s collection was inevitable. “The great thing about the plant-based 3d material is its comfort and durability, it’s ideal for youngsters,” Bernhard told Eyestylist. “We are going to launch five new shapes for kids in four colours. We have also studied the possibilities of a really extremely comfortable Asian fit, this material offers the right versatility, strength and style.”

Rolf Substance: new styles for kids
Rolf Spectacles: Evolved – close up of model Ardea

In the  wood collection too, time and effort has been spent in researching bestsellers, whether shapes or particular colours of natural wood to further develop the line to accommodate what the customer really wants. “We have been able to put a lot of work into creating combinations of favourite wood colours, and the results are really something – you can play with two types of wood on the front and the lining for very different effects in the mix of colours and grains.” Rolf Spectacles will exhibit at the trade fairs MIDO and Opti. To find out more about their natural collections, visit www.rolf-spectacles.com By Clodagh Norton – All rights reserved.

| Eyestylist 27th April 2022

RCA student Maria Nava wins at 100%

‘Spectral Objects’ recognised for innovative design combining a futuristic concept with modern making techniques and traditional craft

Maria Nava, a second year student studying Fashion – Wearable Technology, has won the RCA x 100% Optical competition in 2022. The competition asked the  students to reflect on the past “to see into the future”, using – specifically – repurposed acetate. The brief stated that the eyewear designs needed “to feel good and make us feel good, sexy, attractive, defining who we really are”. They pointed to fit, facial type, head measurements and relevant styles based on head size, prescription and context for the wearer and their lifestyle and habits.” All designs had to be made using the recycled acetate.

Nava’s design was characterised by a structure that fits over the head. The purpose of the artifact, explains the designer of the winning work, was to trigger conversations about our bodies, and question how our identity can morph, change and evolve in a direct relationship to contraction and expansion movements over a human face. The headpiece contracts and expands in three main areas, at the ears, nose and eyes. Freedom is given to the wearer to adjust or modify selected pieces in these three main areas. This allows each individual’s anatomy to fit in but also experience comfort and discomfort.

Maria Nava, RCA – the winner of the RCA x 100% competition in 2022

The designer achieved the flexible structures by combining traditional and modern making techniques such as 3D printing, CNC machining, painted gradients, sculpting and hand finishing.
Upcycled materials such as acetate sheets (from Algha), repurposed acrylic pieces and resins are used in the elaboration of the design piece. For more details about the artist: https://wip2022.rca.ac.uk/students/maria-fernanda-nava-melgar

This feature was written by Clodagh Norton – all rights reserved

| Eyestylist 26th April 2022

Italian independent eyewear: Tree Spectacles

Contemporary. luxurious and minimal, by design

A dynamic brand that continues to propose a minimal Italian design style with intriguing, playful colours. The most recent Tree Spectacles collections include a balanced mix of materials, and most importantly Japanese titanium and Mazzucchelli acetate. A combination of pure titanium and beta titanium ensures a light and comfortable fit while a unique aesthetic is based on reflections and effects of light in specialised colours and modern combinations. In the acetate collections, Tree has evolved a subtle mix of materials where the bold and structured acetate front is combined with titanium temples. Above: Tree Spectacles uses fine quality Italian acetate from Mazzuchelli 1879

Tree Spectacles: bold constructions with shiny and matt surfaces

For MIDO 2022, the Italian optical trade fair which takes place this coming weekend, the Co-Founder of the brand, Marco Barp told Eyestylist that he is preparing to present four further models – two for men and two for women. The new styles expand on the current success of the collection at Tree. The women’s styles have a bold and striking look with thick acetate structures which frame the eyes.

“We have continued to introduce vibrant colours, with more transparent effects. For the first time we have introduced acetate temples on acetate fronts as normally we combine materials such as acetate with titanium. This is a new series with temples that have a strong fashion look always with a structured and yet minimal design aesthetic. The men’s models are real classics with a 70s look. Here we are also introducing full acetate for the first time  – and we have worked on a very particular finish with an artisanal execution that is really exclusive.”

Tree Spectacles: model Midas comes in some dramatic, super modern colour combinations as well as timeless colour mixes

“The 1970s forms and shapes are returning. We are developing ideas influenced by this direction. With Tree, we can present almost any type of shape while always being coherent with our philosophy of design. All our ideas, from the finishing and the colours, right through to the overall design, are presented according to our very particular view point…” Marco Barp, Co-Founder, Tree Spectacles

With its clean and minimalistic approach to design and strong Italian identity in terms of style and colour, Co-Founder Marco Barp expands on this coherent evolution of the collections, always respectful of the core values of Tree. “Our DNA is very much about a very modern approach with a minimal aesthetic and we continue on this path as we put out new products. We like everything to be very clean and we will continue to evolve this style occasionally adding very different flashes of colour or details that are inspired by the world of fashion. As Italians we are completely surrounded by the world of fashion …but we try to continue also to produce our ideas guided by a clean and minimal style. Our collections will evolve like this, even if we will introduce 1970s inspired designs – something we are already working on for the season ahead.”

On colour, we asked Barp to explain his current favourites in the collection. “I’m very enthusiastic about the brilliant colours for women like fuchsia and red, and certainly tones of lilac and pewter blue that we have introduced in recent collections… for men, we focus on a palette that is more subtle with dark blues, browns, and transparent grey or solid black. We also have some very distinctive opaque finishes that we will show this weekend in Milan.”

About Tree Spectacles – Marco Barp, Co-Founder of Tree Spectacles has grown up in a family of eyewear producers in Belluno, Italy. His first collection launched at MIDO in 2012, the result of intense R&D to create niche ‘Made in Italy’ products in layers of wood ‘sandwiched’ with carbon fibre – a design innovation which was quickly praised (and patented) for its lightness, comfort, flexibility, and unique beauty. Today the company produces a wide variety of collections including luxury and design series in titanium, beta titanium and cellulose and bio acetate. 

For more information about Tree Spectacles visit www.treespectacles.com

 

| Eyestylist 20th April 2022

Cat’s eye …of the season!

l.a.Eyeworks cat’s eye Cowgirl – a feline beauty

Exceptional angles, keen edges, pointy corners, and a classically oriented inner eye shape: all the details of the Cowgirl offer a “sharply-tailored” design for ’22, as the cat’s eye frame shape gets a fresh vote of confidence as one of the staple looks for Spring. The frame is proposed in several different luxe patterns and deep, infused colours, each one conveying a particular mood and character, an edge with elegance, or a perfectly individualistic and alluring style.

“Although inventive variations of cateye designs are deeply ingrained in the house codes of l.a.Eyeworks,” notes Brent Zerger, Director of Communications, “the expressive, angular brow of Cowgirl performs an especially fancy rope trick of projecting both power and elegance.” Above: ad campaign featuring LA-based DJ and poet, Mia Moretti in the Cowgirl in colour “Comet” – Moretti is one of the latest faces to feature in the brand’s portrait campaign of artists, actors, activists and muses, from LA.

 

Cowgirl by l.a.Eyeworks – top, in the colour “Threads” and below in red “Bottle Rocket”

With so much history that has gone before, the Cowgirl cat’s eye pays homage (with respect) to the idiosyncracies of the iconic feline shape while also playing out a dramatic statement in contemporary colours and patterns which all come together in a powerfully provocative way. To get your hands on one of these styles, which, from what we hear, are already flying off shelves, find out details at http://www.laeyeworks.com/detail/cowgirl CN