
Style

Share
16th November 2022
10:40am GMT

Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
"She was always kind of the driving force in my life, without me realising it," Lia tells Her. "She was this really outspoken, 'took no bullshit' woman. But she had this tapestry called Disciplined Tulips, and I read into it way deeper than I was supposed to. It was looking at the idea of what a woman is supposed to be like in society, or what society expects them to be. Obedient, agreeable, don't take up too much space, don't be loud, fade into the background; it made me sad to think of her making a piece called that."
Lia's reflections on her aunt's work came to her when she was in recovery from an eating disorder.
[caption id="attachment_567426" align="alignnone" width="1228"]
Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
"It had taken over my life for many, many years," she explains. "I had let myself become this disciplined tulip. And so, I wanted a rebirth."
For Lia, fashion proved to be a driving force in her recovery.
[caption id="attachment_567427" align="alignnone" width="1228"]
Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
"All I had when I was in the depths of my eating disorder was my eating disorder. That was all I wanted. And then, as soon as I found fashion, it kind of flipped it on its head. Fashion was everything. It's really what saved me in the end. It turned me into this undisciplined tulip because I really saw my body for what it was."
The culmination of her recovery reflects not only in her collection, but in her design principles generally.
[caption id="attachment_567428" align="alignnone" width="1228"]
Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
"There was this idea that women can be beautiful, they can wear what they want, they can be who they want, they can do whatever they want with their bodies, but still be beautiful, but also strong and outspoken," she shares.
That, Lia says, is the idea behind her characteristic billowing tulle numbers.
[caption id="attachment_567429" align="alignnone" width="1228"]
Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
"They're quite big, they take up space, they demand the room," she says. "You put them on and you become this different person, this big, confident, loud person. It's all about this contrast of wanting to be beautiful and delicate, but also being a badass as well."
For her first solo show, Lia enlisted the help of two style interns, her family, spoken word artist Molly May O'Leary, and a group of models she's worked with many times in the past. This sense of community is what she finds so appealing about Ireland's fashion industry.
[caption id="attachment_567430" align="alignnone" width="1818"]
Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
"The Irish community brings everyone together," she says. "It's great that Ireland is so small, because I feel like if you're in London, it's not the same. I wonder, if I moved to London, would I feel that same sense of community? It's a totally different ballgame. You can be working with the top tier in fashion over there, but I think it's such a different vibe. For me, it's about creating a little family."
[caption id="attachment_567431" align="alignnone" width="1228"]
Photo: Isabel Farrington[/caption]
While she doesn't plan on moving abroad anytime soon, Lia teases a new venture she'd like to dip her toes in.
"I do love bridal," she teases, when I ask her what's next. "That's something I really want to explore. Alternative bride is something I really want to get into."
To shop Lia Cowan's line, head to her website right here.
Feature image: Isabel FarringtonExplore more on these topics:

Style
style