Fashion Forensics podcast artwork

PODCAST · arts

Fashion Forensics

Welcome to Fashion Forensics - the visual podcast where we examine fashion as a non-transaction with some of the world’s best artists, stylists, designers, photographers and editors, stripping it down to its core identity. My name is Angel Nemov, a fashion journalist and editor, and I want to examine how past imagery has shaped our present identity, and what that means for our collective future.How do we recall the visual moments in our lives that have shaped who we are? As the fashion and creative cycle becomes more and more overwhelming with imagery 24/7, what are the moments that have cut through that noise? Join me each week, as we analyse and reflect upon the most special moments in my guests’s lives that have made them into powerhouse creatives across fashion and design.This is Fashion Forensics.

  1. 18

    Francesco Murano on Designing for Beyoncé, Rafael Pavarotti and Independence | Fashion Forensics

    Very few designers can say that Beyoncé was their first ever client, and for Italian designer Francesco Murano that became the reality right after showcasing his very first debut collection in Milan, freshly out of university.Starting out in ceramics, Murano graduated in 2019 from Istituto Europeo di Design, and his seductive body-sculpting designs immediately propelled him to become one of the most exciting young designers across fashion. Mere two weeks after showcasing his graduate collection, Beyoncé's stylist, Zerina Akers, got in touch with Murano and became his very first client, thrusting him into creating the roots of his made-to-measure business. Coming into the Fashion Forensics hot seat, he shares how the past 5 years have propelled his brand, what it means to be an LVMH Prize finalist, and how his love for architecture is at the core of his creation. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  2. 17

    Sara Sozzani Maino on Franca Sozzani's Legacy, Nurturing Talent and Vogue Italia | Fashion Forensics

    Sara Sozzani Maino has had culture flowing through her veins her entire life. Rooted deep in her family, she has spent her life identifying the cross sectioning of fashion's influence on art and culture - a goal she set to pursue when she first founded Vogue Talents with Vogue Italia's Franca Sozzani back in 2009. Since then, Sozzani Maino has been integral in finding, nurturing and supporting emerging fashion designers, creatives and artists across the fashion scene through her role as the Creative Director of Fondazione Sozzani. With her support, the foundation has helped platform some of the most exciting new names across fashion - LVMH Prize winner Setchu, Luca Magliano, Francesco Murano and many others. Coming onto Fashion Forensics, she shares the imagery that kept inspiring her throughout her life - from her love for film director Michelangelo Antonioni, through Carlo Scarpa's architectural designs and Dr. Jane Goodall's message about our human nature. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  3. 16

    Giuliano Calza on Creating GCDS, Dressing BLACKPINK, and Alexander McQueen | Fashion Forensics

    Fashion designer Giuliano Calza grew up with the notions of the Neapolitan culture - having the space to explore the beauty of his surroundings from an early age, creating an imagination that always wanted more. His teenage years led him to become particularly interested in the Mandarin language, eventually moving to Shanghai where his identity began to reach its full form. After spending four years in China, Calza returned to create his own namesake label - GCDS - which now, ten years later, has become one of the fastest growing independent brands in fashion. Coming into the Fashion Forensics hot seat, he takes us on his unconventional journey of finding himself through his own imagination, his first impressions seeing Alexander McQueen's shows and what it means to create pop culture.  Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  4. 15

    Edward Buchanan on Debuting at Bottega Veneta, Virgil Abloh and Building Legacy | Fashion Forensics

    Edward Buchanan calls himself 'a designer's designer' through and through. From the American Midwest all throughout 30 years of living in Milan, his career has been nothing short of a whirlwind. Born in Ohio, Buchanan quickly became enamoured with sketching, which led him to begin working in the industry as a window dresser, before dipping into New York's Club Kid scene in the 90s. A fateful meeting at Bottega Veneta saw him pack his bags in 1995, and move to Italy to become the brand's first ready-to-wear designer. Since then, he has worked across some of the biggest brands in the industry, and be part of some of fashion's biggest creative projects. Coming into the Fashion Forensics hot seat, he dives into the imagery that defined his life - from being inspired by Nina Simone's artistry, all through taking his first bow at Bottega Veneta's very first runway show, coming full circle to starring in their SS25 campaign as one of the main talents. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  5. 14

    Deba Hekmat on Becoming a Gucci Girl, David Sims, and Carving Your Opportunities | Fashion Forensics

    For model and actress Deba Hekmat, fighting to make your own opportunities has been essential. Scouted into modelling at age 16, she came into the industry with a level-headedness and desire to learn and explore more on her own terms, only to keep reaping the rewards of authenticity by recently starring in multiple Gucci campaigns, as well as making her acting debut in Sasha Nathwani's latest film Last Swim. Coming into the Fashion Forensics hot seat, Hekmat dives into her early years growing up between South London and Cardiff, and how she has taken her Kurdish identity into the melting pot of cultures she grew up with. From being mesmerised with the levels of production the K-POP scene had to offer, all throughout seeing Azalea Banks's '212' music video and wanting to work towards creating performance and art of her own, Deba has seized opportunities and expanded into new heights in fashion and film, opening doors for others to follow. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  6. 13

    Anthony Turner on Guido Palau, Becoming a London Club Kid and Ethel Cain | Fashion Forensics

    In the world of session hairstyling, Anthony Turner is one of the 'enfants terribles' in his gothic ways of deconstructing glamour. Front lining some of the biggest fashion shows in the face of Prada and JW Anderson, he has created deeply deconstructed worlds of his own references and life path, which has not been easy. Starting hairdressing as a form of survival, Turner quickly became Guido Palau's first assistant, diving straight into the editorial world of fashion and art - reaching an accolade that few can boast about. Coming onto Fashion Forensics, he talks about the difficult beginnings that led him to become who he is today, and how because of it, he cherishes the balance of life and work way more than ever. Turner also discusses his underground references in the face of Dracula, Ethel Cain and escaping into his own meticulously constructed world through creating his own drawings of what lives inside his head. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  7. 12

    Conner Ives on Protect the Dolls, His Met Gala Looks & Designing for Rihanna | Fashion Forensics

    Conner Ives is someone who has had many home runs in his short career as a designer. After moving to London from Bedford, New York, he took on graduating from Central Saint Martins and putting all of his effort into building a fashion label that he has envisioned since he was seven years old. Since creating his eponymous label, he has achieved it all - dressing Adwoa Aboah for the Met Gala whilst being in his first year of university, attracting the attention of Rihanna and creating multiple custom looks for her [as well as working for her own label, Fenty], and later having his actual runway designs displayed within the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute exhibition - all whilst having an ethos of spotlighting and protecting the communities he cherishes, an example seen at the end of his AW25 show when he took his bow wearing a 'Protect The Dolls' t-shirt, advocating for the protection of trans people's rights - a cause that took culture by storm, raising over £900,000 thus far.Coming into the Fashion Forensics hot seat, the American designer talks about breaking the Internet with his 'Protect The Dolls' t-shirt, his first visual memories of wanting to be one with fashion, and how the support of his community is the reason for his success.Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  8. 11

    Standing Ground's Michael Stewart on Creating Couture, Ireland and the Celestial | Fashion Forensics

    Standing Ground's Michael Stewart spent nearly 5 years trying to show people his craftsmanship talents before being given the stage to do so.Known for his savoir-faire, his couture adjacent techniques in his work have propelled him to become one of the most exciting and special talents in the industry, however, this did not happen in peace. After spending almost 5 years gathering interest, the Irish-born designer made his debut under Lulu Kennedy's London-based talent incubator Fashion East and since then Stewart has built a world, full of sculptural perfectionism in everything he shows. Coming onto Fashion Forensics, he talks at length about his fascination with the celestial, outer-worldly folklore that informs us of our past and the interaction between Earth and the Cosmos, and how all of those elements have brought him to create a design world that feels unique.Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  9. 10

    Stavros Karelis on Raf Simons's Friendship, Future of Retail and John Galliano | Fashion Forensics

    When he first founded fashion retail space Machine-A in London, Stavros Karelis gave small and independent artists and designers a stage to express themselves upon.Quickly, the conceptual boutique became more than just retail, but a cultural hub frequented by artists and creatives like Scissor Sisters, Lady Gaga, Anna Trevelyan, Nicola Formichetti and more. Since its inception in 2013, Karelis has turned it into a global experimental space where young and exciting designers sit firmly alongside established brands, launching the careers of many of the industry's greats through giving them creative freedom in how their designs interact.Coming into the Fashion Forensics hot seat, he talks about his early British influences - from the cult classic Trainspotting all throughout The Prodigy, and how it all led him to pursue his ultimate goal of moving two steps ahead of the industry, and experiment. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  10. 9

    Sandra Choi on 30 Years at Jimmy Choo, Carrie Bradshaw and Princess Diana | Fashion Forensics

    Designer and Creative Director Sandra Choi has devoted her life into building a global shoe empire, starting out by learning the craft in her uncle Jimmy Choo's London workshop. Since then, 29 years later, she is still the core nucleus driving forward one of the biggest fashion brands in the world. Coming onto Fashion Forensics, Choi recalls the memories that defined her life - from accepting Princess Diana's request to create custom pairs of shoes to match her dress, through kitting out Carrie Bradshaw's shoe closet, moments before uttering the iconic "I Lost My Choo!" line, all through collaborating with fashion visionaries like Virgil Abloh, Rihanna and Beyoncé, her sharp focus has led her to become one of the leaders in the fashion industry, championing constant evolution. As she sits in the hot seat this week, Choi looks back on 30 years of designing shoes, and the decision behind bringing some of our most beloved icons back for their second act.Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  11. 8

    Cora Corré on Her Grandmother Vivienne Westwood's Legacy, Hope and Sex Pistols | Fashion Forensics

    Being raised by multiple generations of strong, resilient women, model and activist Cora Corré has carried the legacy of her grandmother - the ultimate punk disruptor and designer Vivienne Westwood - forward by making fashion think about what matters most. Expanding the humanitarian work of The Vivienne Foundation into further developing projects and raising funds for humanitarian crisis response funds, Corré has taken Westwood's all-important message of utilising your own platform to speak up about what matters most, and brought it into every part of her life. Coming on Fashion Forensics, she shares about her childhood filled with lust for exploration - from going to her very first protest at the age of four, all the way to showcasing projects about the Sex Pistols at school as her own form of defying the educational norms. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  12. 7

    Zomer on the Dazed Archive, LVMH Prize and Being an Independent Brand in Fashion | Fashion Forensics

    What is it like to be an independent brand in fashion in 2025? For Paris-based Zomer, it is stability - inside and out. After starting their brand in 2023, Designer Danial Aitouganov and Dazed Magazine Fashion Director Imruh Asha have achieved many accolades that have propelled them into entering some of the most sought-after spaces in the industry such as becoming LVMH Prize finalists in this year's edition, as well as a prime spot on the official Paris Fashion Week schedule. Coming on Fashion Forensics, the design duo dive deeper into their references and history - Danial’s time as a designer at Burberry, Chloe and Louis Vuitton, and Imruh’s illustrious storytelling across some of the world’s best editorials, and how their child-like curiosity continues to be stronger than ever. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  13. 6

    Lucien Pagès on Christian Lacroix, Coming Out in Fashion and the Colette Legacy | Fashion Forensics

    Fashion communications and PR specialist Lucien Pagès needs no introduction in the world of fashion and design. Starting out as an intern for Gianfranco Ferré during his tenure as the Creative Director at Christian Dior, Pagès went on to create a PR empire with the launch of his own agency in 2006 - Lucien Pagès Communication. Since then, he has looked after the vision and expression of the greatest fashion designers and brands of our time - Schiaparelli, Saint Laurent, Emilio Pucci, Jacquemus, JW Anderson, as well as discovering and supporting some of the most exciting young talent like Dilara Findikoglu, Duran Lantink and more. Coming on Fashion Forensics, Pagès shares the building blocks of his vision identity - from watching Joanna Lumley play Patsy in the iconic British comedy series Absolutely Fabulous, all through designing the very last capsule collection for the greatest fashion incubator Colette before it shut its doors, he relays that he never had a plan, but he had a vision for his life.Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  14. 5

    Corbin Shaw on Alasdair McLellan, Nadia Lee Cohen's Women and the Sheffield Way | Fashion Forensics

    Born in Sheffield, artist Corbin Shaw has always looked back onto the everyday British way of life for inspiration. Raised in the digital era of Tumblr, the Internet became an escapism for him, which later transpired as one of the main influences in him pursuing art and performance at Central Saint Martins. This path later led him to create contemporary work about the modern notions of masculinity, class and adolescence with some of the most established artists, photographers and editors like Alasdair McLellan, Katie Grand and John Joseph Holt. Coming onto Fashion Forensics,  Shaw is able to reflects back on his childhood influences like Cara Delevingne, memorable movies like Disney's 1941 make of Dumbo, and his current inspirations like Nadia Lee Cohen's 'Women", envisioning what his future holds in the performance and fashion space.Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  15. 4

    Cosima on Becoming Pierpaolo Piccioli’s Valentino Muse and Her Musical Identity | Fashion Forensics

    Musician, muse and artist Cosima has always walked a very personal road within fashion and music.Becoming Pierpaolo Piccioli's Maison Valentino muse and performing at his Haute Couture and ready-to-wear fashion shows further inspired her to express deeply hidden stories through making music, and devote her life to owning your own artist autonomy - something she has advocated for since her first record in 2016 and having launched her own record label.By becoming vulnerable through her music, she was able to create and nurture a community of like-minded souls, and inspire them with tracks like 'Somewhere' , 'To Build a House' and her latest single 'Angel Blonde (That's Life!)'. Talking about her inspirations on Fashion Forensics, Cosima describes her love for 1970s cinema by filmmakers like Rainer Fassbinder and photography icons like Nan Goldin as the building pillars of her point of view.Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  16. 3

    Jordanluca on Vivienne Westwood's Mentorship, Duggie Fields and the Idea of Love | Fashion Forensics

    What means the most for Jordanluca? Love. Every expression of it. Design duo Jordan Bowen and Luca Marchetto’s meet-cute moment famously occurred in the line for the toilets at a London gay club. Now, years later, they have built a monumentally disruptive fashion brand, have become husbands and shifted the modern perception of work-life balance within the fashion industry. Their story features two very different upbringings, but sharing the same joie de vivre of rebellion. Luca is a designer coming from the Italian mountains, obsessed with British culture and Vivienne Westwood’s ethos of understanding societal boundaries in order to break them. Jordan is a model, a hat designer and a creative who first interned for the great milliner Stephen Jones, and came from a family of London Punks and 1970s New Romantics, and later inspired greatly by his mentor, the late British artist Duggie Fields. Coming on Fashion Forensics, the design duo talks love, the importance of mentorship, and how important it is to captivate the sliding door moments in your life. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  17. 2

    Alexander Fury on Therapising Demna's Balenciaga and His Early Love for Galliano | Fashion Forensics

    Alexander Fury is a fashion editor and archivist who has hit every single touchpoint you can experience with the fashion industry. From the moment he witnessed Carla Bruni on the runway for John Galliano in 1995, he knew he wanted to devote his life to fashion. His early work with Nick Knight at SHOWstudio ushered in a fierce determination in taking apart and examining each particle that makes the industry - something he has led on to take across his work later on for Love Magazine, Financial Times, The New York Times and becoming the Fashion Features Director at AnOther Magazine.Leading Fashion Forensics’s debut episode, Fury talks at length about the imagery that has stuck with him throughout his life - from being 12 years-old and witnessing Alexander McQueen and Vivienne Westwood’s fashion shows through newspaper cut-outs, all the way through spending six months with Demna in preparation for his Balenciaga Couture debut back in 2021. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

  18. 1

    This is Fashion Forensics

    Welcome to Fashion Forensics - the visual podcast where we examine fashion as a non-transaction with some of the world’s best artists, stylists, designers, photographers and editors, stripping it down to its core identity. My name is Angel Nemov, a fashion journalist and editor, examining how past imagery has shaped our present identity, and what that means for our collective future. How do we recall the visual moments in our lives that have shaped who we are? As the fashion and creative cycle becomes more and more overwhelming with imagery 24/7, what are the moments that have cut through that noise? Join me each week as we analyse and reflect upon the most special moments in my guests’s lives that have made them into powerhouse creatives across fashion and design. Watch the full video episodes exclusively on YouTube every Tuesday. Subscribe to Fashion Forensics on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you get your podcasts.    Join us for more on Instagram and TikTok. @FashionForensics

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Welcome to Fashion Forensics - the visual podcast where we examine fashion as a non-transaction with some of the world’s best artists, stylists, designers, photographers and editors, stripping it down to its core identity. My name is Angel Nemov, a fashion journalist and editor, and I want to examine how past imagery has shaped our present identity, and what that means for our collective future.How do we recall the visual moments in our lives that have shaped who we are? As the fashion and creative cycle becomes more and more overwhelming with imagery 24/7, what are the moments that have cut through that noise? Join me each week, as we analyse and reflect upon the most special moments in my guests’s lives that have made them into powerhouse creatives across fashion and design.This is Fashion Forensics.

HOSTED BY

Angel Nemov

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Fashion Forensics have?

Fashion Forensics currently has 18 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Fashion Forensics about?

Welcome to Fashion Forensics - the visual podcast where we examine fashion as a non-transaction with some of the world’s best artists, stylists, designers, photographers and editors, stripping it down to its core identity. My name is Angel Nemov, a fashion journalist and editor, and I want to...

How often does Fashion Forensics release new episodes?

Fashion Forensics has 18 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Fashion Forensics?

You can listen to Fashion Forensics on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Fashion Forensics?

Fashion Forensics is created and hosted by Angel Nemov.
URL copied to clipboard!