THE FOOL DESIGN COLLECTIVE [1967] Drop by George Harrison's place in Surrey and your eye is drawn to his fireplace, opulently decorated all over with highly-coloured painted scenes of lush reclining figures and drooping vegetation. The same fauna and flora bustle over John Lennon's piano and the guitars and drums of The Cream. The same style is apparent on the dream-like covers of the new LPs of The Hollies and The Incredible String Band. Should you wonder where The Procol Harem got their scarlet performing clothes or what Marianne Faithfull can have been wearing as she rushed through airport customs, the source is the same: The Fool. The Fool: Simon (left), Marijke, Barry and Josie, at home in Montagu Square, London. Since The Fool (they take their name from the joker in tarot cards) arrived in Britain a year ago from Holland via North Africa, they have found that the way they dress, paint, and the way they think have become an influential part of the pop scene. In the new year, for the first time, their clothes and paintings will be on sale to everyone. The four who are 'The Fool' live and work together behind a pretty midnight-blue door decorated with six-pointed yellow stars in Montagu Square. Simon Posthuma, at 28, is the eldest: tall, Van Dyck featured, with long, black, curling cavalier hair. He is a painter and mentor to the group. Marijke Koger, 23, with long blond hair, was a commercial artist in Amsterdam and she now designs posters and clothes along with Josie Leeger, 24, who formerly marketed her own fashions in Holland. The only British member, Barry Finch, 24, met the others when he was working in publicity for the Saville Theatre and got them to do a poster for a pop concert. Impressed with their exotic talents, he found it easy to settle down as their full-time organiser, promoting their ideas of hippy 'love' along with them. Tall and curly-haired, Josie Leeger wears clothes of her own design which always pile layer upon layer of exotically shaped garments upon one another, each in a sumptuous material. The Fool group love to buy many of their fabrics from Liberty's furnishing department. Visit them any day of the week, even on a Monday morning, and they open the door caparisoned in splendour. In the living room, hung with fringed shawls, their own paintings, and musical instruments and heavy with the scent of joss sticks― Barry is wearing a blue silk trouser suit, rajah-collared, with bright silk collages on the chest. Simon is in dark-red knee-high boots with patterned Turkish pants billowing over the tops. His blouse is full-sleeved, of patterned silk with a jewelled chain over it. Marijke wears a blue-patterned headscarf held on by a narrow-shaped cap that has a Hans Anderson flavour. Over her flared, red and orange mini-skirt she wears a multi-coloured blouse; over the blouse a green brocade jerkin; and over the jerkin a silk coat with long wide sleeves. Josie with short, dark, curly hair has on red tights and sandals, a different red mini-skirt with a gypsy flavour. Over her Indian silk blouse a patterned bodice and over that an embroidered neckband and collar. It's like a non-stop production of 'Scheherezade'. Simon and Marijke appear to be figures from a fairy tale. With his cavalier locks, Simon carries off the red velvet Turkish cape and brocade pants with ease. Marijke goes in for a delicate green and blue silk coat with wide flowing sleeves, Designs like their clothes will be on sale at their new boutique opening at 94 Baker Street, London W1, later this month. The Fool's appearance in the film 'Wonderwall' (1968). So effectively do they wear these romantic clothes that in less than a year they have become cult figures on the London pop scene. The ultimate proof of this was when they were asked to appear in a forthcoming film, 'Wonderwall', as themselves. It was clothes like these that made the Beatles' wives envious when they met the Dutch group. These surely were the most beautiful people of all. The Fool group made a number of outfits for Cynthia Lennon and Pattie Harrison so that by the time the Maharishi arrived on the scene the girls were already dressed for the part. Their clothes were such a success and so unlike anything else around in the summer that the Beatles decided to set up the Dutch group in a shop, financing it from their company called 'Apple' which has a moneyed finger in a number of pies. The shop opens this month at 94 Baker Street, is wholly designed by The Fool. Simon says "It will have an image of nature, like a paradise with plants and animals painted on the walls. The floor will be imitation grass and the staircase like an Arab tent. In the windows will be seven figures representing the seven races of the world, black, white, yellow, red etc. There will be exotic lighting and we will make it more like a market than a boutique." It will sell their paintings as well, and the jewellery they are going to import from Morocco, children's clothes in the same style and birthday cards and posters. It will even sell small musical instruments. The Fool's costume for a forthcoming ballet, 'Adam and Eve'. The clothes that Marijke and Josie have designed for the shop―they completed about 100 new outfits―are already in production. Some of the samples are an orange, embossed-velvet coat with long sleeves, narrow at the wrist but puffed above the elbow. It is aimed to sell at about 10 guineas. There are brocade trouser suits and heavy tapestry outdoor coats, mini-skirts with long skirts to add for evening at about 7 guineas. The Patterns are a little less riotous than the Fool wear themselves but, says Marijke, "It's a gradual evolution for the people who will wear our clothes as it was for us. We have been dressing like this for eight years but gradually we have added things. Boys and girls can't go to the offices dressed quite like we are. But we have made velvet suits for boys and dresses for girls that they could begin to wear everywhere. And gradually they will add extra things ― a pretty bodice on top of something they may already have ― and they will learn to be more creative. That's how it should be for them to do something too." All four believe that bombarding their generation with exotic colours and clothes is a missionary work, and part of spreading their view of life. Says Simon in expressive if sometimes Dutch english, "When they used to open shops it was just after the bread of the people, not turning them on. We want to turn them on. Our ideas are based on love. If you're doing things for people you must be part of the people. Not set yourself up as something extraordinary." Barrie nods: ''You know the Co-op was originally a good idea. We want to plough back what we earn to give more entertainment to people ― even cheaper. They believe fashion reflects the fact that the world is shrinking. Marijke says, "All the people of the earth are forced to come together now and this expresses itself in fashion. And to get people to do things for themselves is the final thing.'' Our ideas come from every country ― India, China, Russia, Turkey. And from the sixteenth century to the twenty-first centuries. There's a bit of everything. Elements of many lands, and many periods, mix in Marijke's designs. Charming and high-minded, they are vegetarians and tee-total. "We believe in reincarnation," Simon asserts. "It is the only logical idea. Once we thought about it we just knew that it was true. You are what you made yourself. And every race and nationality is joined. There is a general spirit of revival going on. And we should be governed by people who have regard for our spiritual life. In the future people will have more leisure and they will have to develop their inner eye. They will want to get to know the supreme power, love." Though their flat is scattered with books by Rudolf Steiner and a dutch medium, Josef Rudolf, the Fool feel the pull which the whole pop world is experiencing from the Orient, "a fund of spiritual strength", they say. Then they must have been among those who went to hear the Maharishi on his last visit to England? For a moment an expression of sinful pride, like that of a bourgeois who has bought a colour television, crosses their faces. "No," they say quietly. "We have our own swami." Fashion drawing by Marijke: like all her designs, it has a hothouse, flower child appeal. IMAGE CREDIT & LINKS All content scanned and transcribed by Sweet Jane from an original article by Maureen Green for The Observer, 3rd December 1967. All photographs by Ronald Traeger. View some of my previous Fool Design Collective, Apple Boutique and Beatles Posts. And here, you'll find Felicity Green's report on the Hippie Fashion Scene in 1967. Discover more about the photographer Ronald Traeger. Visit the official website of the artist Marijke Koger-Dunham. And view a short film clip of Marijke & Simon of The Fool Action Painting in 1972. The 1968 film "Hot Millions" provides a rare glimpse inside the Beatles owned and operated Apple Boutique. Watch 'The Fool and the Radiating Spectrum' a montage of Fool film footage. The Fool Design Official Facebook page. The Fool's Yosha and Barry Finch are on Reverbnation and also on Youtube., plus an interview with Simon Posthuma. And finally, The Summer of Love with Marijke of The Fool a recent documentary about the Artist Marijke Koger (artist for The Beatles, Cream, Procol Harum, The Aquarius Theater and more). It mainly focuses on the years 1967-68, but also includes her early career and subsequent creations.
Item specifics Condition New: A brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging (where packaging is ... Read more about the condition New: A brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging (where packaging is applicable). Packaging should be the same as what is found in a retail store, unless the item is handmade or was packaged by the manufacturer in non-retail packaging, such as an unprinted box or plastic bag. See the seller's listing for full details. See all condition definitions opens in a new window or tab Origin Americas Signed No Color Multicolor Material Paper Orientation Vertical Subject Movies Personalize No Brand Yahuu Ella Inc Department Unisex Kids, Adult, Teens Type Poster Care Instructions Easy Care Customized No Style Art Deco Theme Art Original/Reproduction Reproduction Country/Region of Manufacture United States Room Closet, Dining Room, Entryway, Garage, Greenhouse, Living Room, Kitchen, Office, Sunroom, Study
Rachel MacFarlane’s paintings of Canada look like beautiful alien landscapes.
THE FOOL DESIGN COLLECTIVE [1967] Drop by George Harrison's place in Surrey and your eye is drawn to his fireplace, opulently decorated all over with highly-coloured painted scenes of lush reclining figures and drooping vegetation. The same fauna and flora bustle over John Lennon's piano and the guitars and drums of The Cream. The same style is apparent on the dream-like covers of the new LPs of The Hollies and The Incredible String Band. Should you wonder where The Procol Harem got their scarlet performing clothes or what Marianne Faithfull can have been wearing as she rushed through airport customs, the source is the same: The Fool. The Fool: Simon (left), Marijke, Barry and Josie, at home in Montagu Square, London. Since The Fool (they take their name from the joker in tarot cards) arrived in Britain a year ago from Holland via North Africa, they have found that the way they dress, paint, and the way they think have become an influential part of the pop scene. In the new year, for the first time, their clothes and paintings will be on sale to everyone. The four who are 'The Fool' live and work together behind a pretty midnight-blue door decorated with six-pointed yellow stars in Montagu Square. Simon Posthuma, at 28, is the eldest: tall, Van Dyck featured, with long, black, curling cavalier hair. He is a painter and mentor to the group. Marijke Koger, 23, with long blond hair, was a commercial artist in Amsterdam and she now designs posters and clothes along with Josie Leeger, 24, who formerly marketed her own fashions in Holland. The only British member, Barry Finch, 24, met the others when he was working in publicity for the Saville Theatre and got them to do a poster for a pop concert. Impressed with their exotic talents, he found it easy to settle down as their full-time organiser, promoting their ideas of hippy 'love' along with them. Tall and curly-haired, Josie Leeger wears clothes of her own design which always pile layer upon layer of exotically shaped garments upon one another, each in a sumptuous material. The Fool group love to buy many of their fabrics from Liberty's furnishing department. Visit them any day of the week, even on a Monday morning, and they open the door caparisoned in splendour. In the living room, hung with fringed shawls, their own paintings, and musical instruments and heavy with the scent of joss sticks― Barry is wearing a blue silk trouser suit, rajah-collared, with bright silk collages on the chest. Simon is in dark-red knee-high boots with patterned Turkish pants billowing over the tops. His blouse is full-sleeved, of patterned silk with a jewelled chain over it. Marijke wears a blue-patterned headscarf held on by a narrow-shaped cap that has a Hans Anderson flavour. Over her flared, red and orange mini-skirt she wears a multi-coloured blouse; over the blouse a green brocade jerkin; and over the jerkin a silk coat with long wide sleeves. Josie with short, dark, curly hair has on red tights and sandals, a different red mini-skirt with a gypsy flavour. Over her Indian silk blouse a patterned bodice and over that an embroidered neckband and collar. It's like a non-stop production of 'Scheherezade'. Simon and Marijke appear to be figures from a fairy tale. With his cavalier locks, Simon carries off the red velvet Turkish cape and brocade pants with ease. Marijke goes in for a delicate green and blue silk coat with wide flowing sleeves, Designs like their clothes will be on sale at their new boutique opening at 94 Baker Street, London W1, later this month. The Fool's appearance in the film 'Wonderwall' (1968). So effectively do they wear these romantic clothes that in less than a year they have become cult figures on the London pop scene. The ultimate proof of this was when they were asked to appear in a forthcoming film, 'Wonderwall', as themselves. It was clothes like these that made the Beatles' wives envious when they met the Dutch group. These surely were the most beautiful people of all. The Fool group made a number of outfits for Cynthia Lennon and Pattie Harrison so that by the time the Maharishi arrived on the scene the girls were already dressed for the part. Their clothes were such a success and so unlike anything else around in the summer that the Beatles decided to set up the Dutch group in a shop, financing it from their company called 'Apple' which has a moneyed finger in a number of pies. The shop opens this month at 94 Baker Street, is wholly designed by The Fool. Simon says "It will have an image of nature, like a paradise with plants and animals painted on the walls. The floor will be imitation grass and the staircase like an Arab tent. In the windows will be seven figures representing the seven races of the world, black, white, yellow, red etc. There will be exotic lighting and we will make it more like a market than a boutique." It will sell their paintings as well, and the jewellery they are going to import from Morocco, children's clothes in the same style and birthday cards and posters. It will even sell small musical instruments. The Fool's costume for a forthcoming ballet, 'Adam and Eve'. The clothes that Marijke and Josie have designed for the shop―they completed about 100 new outfits―are already in production. Some of the samples are an orange, embossed-velvet coat with long sleeves, narrow at the wrist but puffed above the elbow. It is aimed to sell at about 10 guineas. There are brocade trouser suits and heavy tapestry outdoor coats, mini-skirts with long skirts to add for evening at about 7 guineas. The Patterns are a little less riotous than the Fool wear themselves but, says Marijke, "It's a gradual evolution for the people who will wear our clothes as it was for us. We have been dressing like this for eight years but gradually we have added things. Boys and girls can't go to the offices dressed quite like we are. But we have made velvet suits for boys and dresses for girls that they could begin to wear everywhere. And gradually they will add extra things ― a pretty bodice on top of something they may already have ― and they will learn to be more creative. That's how it should be for them to do something too." All four believe that bombarding their generation with exotic colours and clothes is a missionary work, and part of spreading their view of life. Says Simon in expressive if sometimes Dutch english, "When they used to open shops it was just after the bread of the people, not turning them on. We want to turn them on. Our ideas are based on love. If you're doing things for people you must be part of the people. Not set yourself up as something extraordinary." Barrie nods: ''You know the Co-op was originally a good idea. We want to plough back what we earn to give more entertainment to people ― even cheaper. They believe fashion reflects the fact that the world is shrinking. Marijke says, "All the people of the earth are forced to come together now and this expresses itself in fashion. And to get people to do things for themselves is the final thing.'' Our ideas come from every country ― India, China, Russia, Turkey. And from the sixteenth century to the twenty-first centuries. There's a bit of everything. Elements of many lands, and many periods, mix in Marijke's designs. Charming and high-minded, they are vegetarians and tee-total. "We believe in reincarnation," Simon asserts. "It is the only logical idea. Once we thought about it we just knew that it was true. You are what you made yourself. And every race and nationality is joined. There is a general spirit of revival going on. And we should be governed by people who have regard for our spiritual life. In the future people will have more leisure and they will have to develop their inner eye. They will want to get to know the supreme power, love." Though their flat is scattered with books by Rudolf Steiner and a dutch medium, Josef Rudolf, the Fool feel the pull which the whole pop world is experiencing from the Orient, "a fund of spiritual strength", they say. Then they must have been among those who went to hear the Maharishi on his last visit to England? For a moment an expression of sinful pride, like that of a bourgeois who has bought a colour television, crosses their faces. "No," they say quietly. "We have our own swami." Fashion drawing by Marijke: like all her designs, it has a hothouse, flower child appeal. IMAGE CREDIT & LINKS All content scanned and transcribed by Sweet Jane from an original article by Maureen Green for The Observer, 3rd December 1967. All photographs by Ronald Traeger. View some of my previous Fool Design Collective, Apple Boutique and Beatles Posts. And here, you'll find Felicity Green's report on the Hippie Fashion Scene in 1967. Discover more about the photographer Ronald Traeger. Visit the official website of the artist Marijke Koger-Dunham. And view a short film clip of Marijke & Simon of The Fool Action Painting in 1972. The 1968 film "Hot Millions" provides a rare glimpse inside the Beatles owned and operated Apple Boutique. Watch 'The Fool and the Radiating Spectrum' a montage of Fool film footage. The Fool Design Official Facebook page. The Fool's Yosha and Barry Finch are on Reverbnation and also on Youtube., plus an interview with Simon Posthuma. And finally, The Summer of Love with Marijke of The Fool a recent documentary about the Artist Marijke Koger (artist for The Beatles, Cream, Procol Harum, The Aquarius Theater and more). It mainly focuses on the years 1967-68, but also includes her early career and subsequent creations.
Azzurro dell’acqua, azzurro dell’aria. E lei proprio tra i due, rossa sugli scogli bianchi come una goccia di sangue che gli anni abbiano solidificato. Vi mettevo finalmente piede, borsa in spalla, mentre la barca spariva verso il continente in un ribollire di schiuma, motori al massimo, come se temessero i sortilegi di una sirena.
Top models Guinevere Van Seenus, Saskia De Brauw, Vittoria Ceretti, and Lily Cole are styled by Marie Chaix in ‘Fool’s Paradise’. Photographer Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott are behind the lens for Vogue Italia September 2018./ Hair by Paul Hanlon; makeup by Thomas De Kluyver
Mona Lisa- Discovering Fools Paradise Limited Run Vinyl & PVC Sculpture Artwork by Modern Pop Art Artist Straveling Muzeum. 2022 17.24 ZCWO and Straveling Muzeum embark on a new project in collaboration with Fools Paradise, to create a unique Mona Lisa like you’ve never seen before! Showcasing a Fools Paradise creative design style, this project humanizes Mona Lisa's iconic image and integrates a splicing mechanical feature to the design that cuts the outer shape of the helmet into 12 distinct layers, adding that feel of technology to this classic piece of art. Featured In the helmet, the cartoon image of Mona Lisa from ZCWO's previous blind box work echoes. The combination of real and cartoon characters is interesting in this collaboration style. The product is a blend of the never fading, classical art & fashion elements, showcasing the Mona Lisa’s history, and charm. The striking piece recalls Fools Paradise’s Super Recall art toy which of course was inspired by Total Recall’s stunning scene and concept.
Rachel MacFarlane’s paintings of Canada look like beautiful alien landscapes.
It is better to be unhappy and know the worst, than to be happy in a fool's paradise.
Injecting new life into the 1982 Disco classic “Do It To The Music” by Raw Silk from West End Records, UK producer Michael Gray offers a dazzling reinterpretation. Infused with glamorous Disco House…
Top models Guinevere Van Seenus, Saskia De Brauw, Vittoria Ceretti, and Lily Cole are styled by Marie Chaix in ‘Fool’s Paradise’. Photographer Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott are behind the lens for Vogue Italia September 2018./ Hair by Paul Hanlon; makeup by Thomas De Kluyver
Ralph Waldo Emerson quote about foolishness from Self-Reliance: “Travelling is a fool's paradise. Our first journeys discover to us the indifference of places.”
EARTHMAN // XL • Price 335 USD (Free global shipping) • Made to Order • THIS IS PRE-ORDER ITEM, Approx Ship out within 1-3 months. (Production time depends on factory, we do NOT guarantee the shipping date, please noted you already know it may probability to delay before you submit the order) • Approx 63 cm in Height • Material : Vinyl, PVC • Prototype shown, final product may be slightly different • Product details could be subjected to change without further notice • Shipping period will be one month, and it is base on priority basis on when the order is placed • 台灣的朋友請留下中文地址, 姓名及聯絡電話 • 香港地區的朋友請留聯絡電話 • 台灣及香港地區免運費, *快遞公司有機會收取上門費用或偏遠付加費 • Please check the product info before you submit the payment, make sure you understand the shipping terms. No refunds after submitting Order. • When you decide to make the payment for pre-order, its means you clearly understand and accept the terms of the reservation. www.foolfoolshop.com
Rachel MacFarlane’s paintings of Canada look like beautiful alien landscapes.
The legacy remains and the memories forever fogged into history, Treasure life, treasure the memories, homage to the late Kobe, XL LEGEND // TWO FOUR no doubt widely regarded as one of the greatest
Top models Guinevere Van Seenus, Saskia De Brauw, Vittoria Ceretti, and Lily Cole are styled by Marie Chaix in ‘Fool’s Paradise’. Photographer Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott are behind the lens for Vogue Italia September 2018./ Hair by Paul Hanlon; makeup by Thomas De Kluyver
Do not feel envious of the happiness of those who live in a fool's paradise, for only a fool will think that is happiness.
Rachel MacFarlane’s paintings of Canada look like beautiful alien landscapes.
佐野 洋子(さの ようこ、Yōko Sano) (1938.6.28 - 2010.11.5.) Japanese Writer -- A Cat who lived a million lives There is a cat who had lived a million lives; He died a million times; and re-born a million times. He had a distinctive coat like a tiger; he is a very impressive cat. A million people had loved him; and cried for him when he died; But this cat had never shed one drop of tears. Once, he was King's cat. He didn't like the King. The King was at war all the time. He put the cat in a special made basket; took the at to the wars. One day, the cat was shot by a flying arrow. The king held the cat, crying in the battle field. King had no mood for the war any more; he returned to the castle, buried the cat in the garden. Once, the cat was raised by a sailor. He didn't like the sea. Sailor had traveled around the world with the cat. One day the cat fell into the water from the ship. The Cat couldn't swim and he drowned. The sailors hold the cat's wet body in his arms, cried out aloud. He buried the Cat in a city park far away from the sea. Once, the cat was raised by a circus magician. He didn't like circus. The magician put the cat into a box every day, then cut the box in half with a saw. When he took the unharmed cat out of the box, the audience applauded. One day, the magician accidentally cut the cat in half. The magician holding the cat's in his both hands, burst into tears. The cat was buried in the circus's backyard. Once, the Cat was raised by a thief. He didn't like the thief. The thief always took the cat with him. They walked in the streets in the nights. The thief walk like a cat. The thief broke in the families with dog. When dog barking toward the cat, he took advantage to open the family's vault. One day, the cat was killed by a dog. The thief holding the diamonds and the dead cat, walking in the dark street, cried. The cat was buried in the thief's small yard. Once, the cat was raised by a lonely old woman. He didn't like the old lady. The old lady holding a cat, looking out a small window, sit all day. The cat laid on the old lady's lap all day, sleeping and napping. Finally, the cats got older and older, then died. The wrinkled old lady holding the wrinkled old cat in her arms, cried all day. The Cat was buried under an old tree in the yard. Once, the cat was raised by a little girl. He didn't like the little girl. The little girl always carried the cat on her back, or hold the cat tightly when she slept. When the little girl cried, she cried over the cat's back. One day, the little girl carried the cat on her back again. The strap wrapped around the cat's neck accidentally. The cat was strangled to death. The little girl holding the limp cat, cried all day. Finally, she buried the cat under a tree in the garden. However, the cat did not care for his own death. One time, the Cat was not raised by anyone. He was a wild cat. The first time, he was his own master. The Cat liked himself this way the most. He was already a beautiful tabby cat. Now of course he became a very strong wild cat. All the lady cats wanted to marry him. Some brought him big fishes; Some brought him the best rat meat; Some brought him precious gifts; And some are licking his hair, The Cat just said: "I died a million times. Who can match against me. " He still like himself the most. There was a beautiful white cat. She didn't look at the Cat. The Cat walked up to the white cat, said: "I died a million times!" The white cat simply replied: "is it?" The Cat was a little angry, because he liked himself so much. The next day, and the third day, the Cat walked to the white cat, said: "You haven't even live one life to end, right?" The white cat still simply answered: "oh." Once, the Cat walked in front of the white cat. He did three somersault in the air and said: "I used to be a circus cat!" The white cat still simply respond "yeah?" "I have lived a million times ......" In the middle of the sentence, the Cat changed to ask: "Can I stay by your side?" The white cat said: "Okay." Since then, the Cat stayed by the side of the white cat. The white cat gave birth to many cute white kittens. The Cat no longer say "I have lived a million times...". He liked the white car and the kittens the most, more than like himself. Finally, all the kittens had grown up, left them one by one. "These kids have become very impressive wild cat!" The Cat said, satisfying. "Yeah." The white cat grunted softly. The white cat was more and more like an old lady. The Cat had became more and more gentle. He also made a soft grunt from his throat. He wanted to stay with the white cat together forever. One day, the white cat was lying on the side of the Cat, motionless and quiet. The Cat cried, for the first time of his life. He cried from morning to night, from evening to morning, He cried a million times, Days and days passed. At one noon, The Cat stopped crying. He was lying on the side of the white cat, quiet and motionless. The Cat never make it for another reincarnation.
Top models Guinevere Van Seenus, Saskia De Brauw, Vittoria Ceretti, and Lily Cole are styled by Marie Chaix in ‘Fool’s Paradise’. Photographer Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott are behind the lens for Vogue Italia September 2018./ Hair by Paul Hanlon; makeup by Thomas De Kluyver