
Spongebob Playing bicycle Water

Any catalog of the things that have inspired my work over the course of a lifetime would be incomplete without the inclusion of Deyrolle. I can't entirely explain its magic, or why it is so intricately woven into the fabric of my imagination, but one of my earliest clear memories is of my parents taking me to Deyrolle for the first time when I was a toddler. It instantly set a spark to my imagination.
Not long ago, someone told me that Deyrolle had been destroyed by a fire. I felt the bottom drop out of my heart. Of course, all of France rallied at its side, and before long it had been restored to much of its former glory (the New York Times did a wonderful article on its phoenix-like fall and resurrection, whence all of these photos). Upon seeing the photos from after the fire, I have to say that in their own way they are very nearly as magical and inspiring as was Deyrolle intact.
There is no way for me to accurately describe the alchemy of Deyrolle's effect on my life, from the paint colors to the cabinetry, from the orderly glass cases of insects to the marvelous expressions on the faces of the shop's erstwhile denizens. So let this, in brief, serve as my little love letter to 19th-century entomologist Jean-Baptiste Deyrolle and his legacy.
Thank you, Jeanne-Baptiste. Who would I be without you?




Ziegfeld Girls.



White.
photo: vee speers
photo: I wish I could remember why I found this one. I'm sure someone can inform me...
photo: Sophie Cuvelier
Photo: via google



This girl, from Milk Magazine's own street style section, look de rue, keeps popping into my head, and one of these days I know some part or essence of it will pop up in my work.


My grandparents:
My grandmother Christiane (with her new husband, left, and his equally-towering brother) on their wedding day in Italy.
My grandfather, J. Constant "Jack" aka "The Captain"
This is my grandmother, my mother and I in Brissac, Herault, Languedoc, the year that my grandparents were in the process of restoring their 11th-century chateau (you can still see sky through some of the upper windows, but the restoration was well underway).
My mum and I in the orchard below.
Amelia Earhart.
"The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity. The fears are paper tigers." - AE
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
"A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away." - AdS-E