Highsnobiety

Not In Paris is back for its latest edition. Shop the collection on June 19 from the Highsnobiety Shop and iOS App.

Y/Project is a special club. On the streets of Paris, East London, or Berlin, there exist some particularly striking garments — asymmetrical, buckling in twists and folds, simultaneously growing and decaying around their (equally sculpted) owners. Perhaps you’ll see one; perhaps you’ll even compliment it. But an innocent inquiry as to said garment’s source will earn you a look from the owner that’s part thrilled, part pitying, and part supercilious. Because you didn’t know.

“Y/Project has turned into my world”: Glenn Martens, adoptive father to this club, has taken time out of his double creative directorship (he also heads up Diesel, but you knew that already) to tell me about it. And, despite a punishing schedule — and the fact he spoke to us what-feels-like-yesterday for our Frontpage story — he is thorough, considered, perhaps even tentative. “At Y/Project,” he muses, “we try to give questions, but never answers.”

Like many exclusive clubs, Y/Project was inherited. Yohan Serfaty was the original ‘Y’; after the designer’s untimely passing in 2013, Martens took the reins of a brand “in mourning.” The challenge to step out of Serfaty’s shadow was immense (and shadow it was: the early collections of Y/Project are dark and austere, like a rough-edged, leather-bound Rick Owens). The process was slow and respectful at first, but Martens “wasn’t Yohan.” The direction had to change.

Daniele Mango / Courtesy of Y/Project

And so, Y/Project was rebuilt: rebuilt with architectural precision, radically distorted; rebuilt with vast sheets of denims and leathers fashioned into garments both cavernous and revealing; rebuilt, crucially, with a newfound army of young, adoring fans.

But the techniques, the silhouettes, the rigidity of material and fluidity of result, are what live on. Serfaty, Martens says, was a “master in leather, which defines a specific way of cutting and constructing garments,” and to which the brand has remained faithful. As the red thread across its entire lifetime, Y/Project’s signature became not the look of its clothes but the way they were made – in constructing a brand, the construction of garments came out king.

The intricacies, the insider quips, the references both medieval and modern, came later. Martens pinpoints the first dedicated womenswear collection, AW16, as a turning point. Realising Y/Project’s femininity seemed only to solidify its new direction. (Martens’ favorite look was an androgynous one: a single-sleeved gray hoodie tucked into triple-belted, chapped jeans.) Here, the “Belgian surrealism, the jokes, the opulence and versatility — which are the defining pillars of Y/Project”, really came to life.

Not everything worked immediately, though. Martens recalls the infamous Y/Project ‘Janties’, a pair of denim underwear which, upon their release 7 years ago, wound up on the Ellen DeGeneres show as one of the most ridiculous items ever designed. But this doesn’t phase Martens – in fact, it’s the closest he ever comes to boasting. “We’re often a bit ahead of time,” he smiles. “It’s nice to see that the ‘Janties’ have been adopted by many other brands.”

When a label achieves cult status, people wear it to join the club — beautifully constructed clothes, so the thinking goes, stand in for a beautifully constructed identity. But true membership of the Y/Project club requires more than a vague cultural awareness or a healthy bank account.

The designer explains: “there are multiple ways to wear a jacket. If you want you can wear it as styled in the show, if you want you can deconstruct it, or you can take layers off to be more revealing and sexy. Many different personalities or moods can be represented in one piece.” Chuck Y/Project on for a quick, clouty fix, and you’ll be sniffed out. Like Martens, Y/Project’s family know that its beauty is in questions, not answers. “Who am I? How do I feel today? How do I want people to perceive me?” Well, that’s up to you. “Every single garment is free to interpretation,” says Martens. Keep guessing.

We Recommend
  • Akwaba! Champion x Highsnobiety x La Sunday Is a Full-On Fashion Fête
    • Culture
    • sponsored
  • The Mark of the C: Champion x Highsnobiety Take on Not In Paris
    • Style
    • sponsored
  • Cedric Grolet, Y/Project, & More: All The Collabs Dropping for Not In Paris
    • Style
  • Dad Caps Are All the Rage & Here Are 10 You Should Cop Now
    • Style
  • Glenn Martens: Work Hard, Play Hard
    • Culture
What To Read Next
  • Vans' New Hiking-Style Shoe Is Stylishly Stocky
    • Sneakers
  • From Nike to Clints, Browse This Week’s Best Sneaker Releases
    • Sneakers
  • Ljubav's Latest Collection Is a Full-Circle Moment
    • Style
  • Is This Deconstructed New Balance Its Next Protection Pack?
    • Sneakers
  • CASETiFY’s Sonny Angel Collab Is Peak Cute
    • Style
  • Stüssy's Refreshed Granddad Nikes Are Ready to Shine Bright
    • Sneakers
*If you submitted your e-mail address and placed an order, we may use your e-mail address to inform you regularly about similar products without prior explicit consent. You can object to the use of your e-mail address for this purpose at any time without incurring any costs other than the transmission costs according to the basic tariffs. Each newsletter contains an unsubscribe link. Alternatively, you can object to receiving the newsletter at any time by sending an e-mail to info@highsnobiety.com

Web Accessibility Statement

Titel Media GmbH (Highsnobiety), is committed to facilitating and improving the accessibility and usability of its Website, www.highsnobiety.com. Titel Media GmbH strives to ensure that its Website services and content are accessible to persons with disabilities including users of screen reader technology. To accomplish this, Titel Media GmbH tests, remediates and maintains the Website in-line with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), which also bring the Website into conformance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.

Disclaimer

Please be aware that our efforts to maintain accessibility and usability are ongoing. While we strive to make the Website as accessible as possible some issues can be encountered by different assistive technology as the range of assistive technology is wide and varied.

Contact Us

If, at any time, you have specific questions or concerns about the accessibility of any particular webpage on this Website, please contact us at accessibility@highsnobiety.com, +49 (0)30 235 908 500. If you do encounter an accessibility issue, please be sure to specify the web page and nature of the issue in your email and/or phone call, and we will make all reasonable efforts to make that page or the information contained therein accessible for you.