Boutique Boutique
france
PANIER Boutique Boutique 0 0
PANIER
Votre panier est vide
Résumé de la commande et validation

Réduction

Livraison

€ 7.90

Remise sur la livraison

- € 0

Paiement total

€ 0

Mode d'expédition
DHL Economy
Coût
€7.90
Durée
2 à 7 jours ouvrés. La date de livraison estimée pour votre commande sera calculée une fois que l'adresse de livraison aura été renseignée au moment de placer votre commande.
2-3 jours ouvrables
Free Shipping From
€99.00
Mode d'expédition
DHL Express
Coût
€19.99
Durée
2 à 7 jours ouvrés. La date de livraison estimée pour votre commande sera calculée une fois que l'adresse de livraison aura été renseignée au moment de placer votre commande.
1 business day
Vous pouvez bien évidemment nous retourner votre produit Urbanears s’il ne vous donne pas entière satisfaction. Tous nos clients disposent de 30 jours pour nous retourner leur produit. 


Lorsque vous exercez votre droit de rétractation, vous êtes, en tant que client, responsable des frais de retour. Le coût de l’article vous sera remboursé par nous.

Pour en savoir plus sur nos conditions d’achat, cliquez ici.
Votre sécurité reste notre priorité. Toutes les transactions sur ce site sont traitées par Adyen, un portail de paiement en ligne sécurisé qui crypte les données de votre carte au sein d’un environnement hôte sécurisé.

Adyen est parfaitement conforme à la norme PCI niveau 1 (le niveau le plus élevé) et est contrôlé par Trustwave, un organisme de certification et d’assurance qualité indépendant du Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council. Cela signifie que nous respectons les normes les plus strictes du secteur en matière de protection des données et de sécurité de réseau. Toutes les données des cartes sont donc en sécurité chez nous.
Pour en savoir plus sur nos conditions d’achat, cliquez ici.

EMMA FRIDSELL ON VINTAGE CLOTHING, COLORS AND STUFF.

Drawing inspiration from four-year-olds and her grandparents’ closet, Emma is using wild colors and textures as her armour on her quest to set fashion free.

Hello Emma, what’s in the making?

Right now, I am actually hunting for apartments. I don’t know for sure where I will end up, but I have my mind set on Copenhagen.

stories - Emma Fridsell image 1
stories - Emma Fridsell image 1
stories - Emma Fridsell image 2
stories - Emma Fridsell image 2

What’s something you’re working on that you really can’t tell us about?

Hmm…

A clue?

Yellow.

Where do you find inspiration

I love to observe how 80-year-olds and four-year-olds dress. They care the least about what other people think, so they’re the most free to me.

Can clothes tell stories?

Vintage clothes tell the best stories and sometimes they let you come up with a story yourself. I have a vintage wool scout jacket from England with a beautifully embroidered boy’s name on it that his mother probably spent a couple of hours making. The jacket makes me think about that boy who’s most likely a middle-aged adult at this point.

And vintage things are kinder to the planet?

It goes without saying that vintage is more sustainable. But I think the uniqueness and the stories of specific pieces of clothing adds yet another element of sustainability, because you want to hold on to personal stories for a long time. And you can because the quality back in the day was much higher than today. I regularly wear a shirt that’s 70-years-old that my great grandmother used to wear.

But do fashion people really care about the planet?

There are of course those who really don’t care. There are those who care a lot and would never put on anything new. Then there are people like me who care a lot, but act on it in a far from perfect way. I try to only shop vintage for example, but doing what I do, I sometimes feel like I’m doing more harm than good.

What got you into fashion in the first place?

I set out to become a doctor pretty early on. I went to a high school where most of the students were overachievers, including me. Everyone reached for perfection and most dressed the same somber, expensive way. Then, at some point when I was probably close to a breakdown, I ended up in my grandparents’ closet where I started, you know, excavating.

MY

FRIENDS

THOUGHT

I

WAS

DERANGED

...

I found some hideous yet beautiful skirts and my grandpa’s mustard yellow skiing outfit from the sixties. So I put together an outfit and walked to school in it the next day. My friends thought I was deranged, but I loved the feeling of sticking out rather than trying to fit in and haven’t looked back since.

That’s all you needed to do?

Well no. I’ve worked as a stylist assistant for many years, unpaid. Then, I’ve fought myself into the scene in other ways.

At one point, I dressed up and went to The Stockholm Fashion Week uninvited. I basically stood outside the venue and pretended to be part of the scene, until a photographer came up to me and started asking questions.

Also, while working in a store I ambushed a girl called Tyra-Stina who I was only following on Instagram, and who was a huge inspiration to me at the moment. We had an impromptu Aperol and then joined forces, sneaking into fashion events together. From there my following grew bigger.

So now you’re an influencer.

Yes, but when I started out I set a very clear goal and I knew exactly what kind of influencer I didn’t want to be. I don’t love how the Swedish fashion industry works, how it’s elitist and based on who you know. I’m in it to change things around. Fashion to me is a creative language, not an industry.

Give us a piece of advice on how to master the world of vintage fashion?

Find a tailor that you like that’s not too expensive. Shoutout to Ersoy Skrädderi & Kemtvätt at Kungsholmen.

What’s that smell in vintage clothing stores?

I really don’t know what it is exactly. My mom hates it, but it makes me calm. Probably because I associate it with the me-time I spend browsing around in stores with my headphones on listening to music. It's a Pavlov's dog thing.

What color is the future?

Cobalt blue. Because thinking too much of it makes me anxious. There are so many things I want to do so I panic a bit just trying to fit it all in one lifetime.

stories - Emma Fridsell image 3
stories - Emma Fridsell image 3
stories - Emma Fridsell image 4
stories - Emma Fridsell image 4


But you’re very red today.

This is my way of keeping the blue in check. It’s all a balance act. On a serious note though, I use vibrant colors to shield myself from things, like a social armour. When I wake up not feeling well emotionally, a colorful and extravagant outfit lets me shift people’s attention away from stuff that I need to keep for myself. If that makes sense?

Do you feel sorry for color blind folks?

If you can’t fully appreciate a furry satsuma orange hat, or lime green things, or that very last part of a perfect sunset. Then yes, I feel sorry for you.

The boring ones at the party are the ones dressed in all black?

Many times yes. But there are also the super creative kind of people who seem to conserve their creative energy, for other outlets, by keeping their style as simple and colorless as possible.

What’s the least sustainable fashion pose?

I’ve seen many people pose in a bridge position lately, you know when you’re upside down with both hands and feet on the floor. Super unsustainable.

What noise do you want to cancel?

Chewing noises.

What would you like our product designers to look into next?

Please look into making headphones in vintage satsuma-colored fake fur.

...

PERFECTION

IS

BORING

What’s your end goal?

Since fashion lets me be more of who I am, and more free, I want to spread my gospel and inspire millions of people around the world who experience fashion the other way around, as a restraint and a constant headache.

It might seem insignificant that so many people, mostly girls and women, could spend a day deciding what to wear before going outside, but their anxiousness is holding them back in a very real way. So that’s one of my end goals. But I don’t strive for perfection anymore, perfection is boring.

*Check out more of Emma here*

Instagram