4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 7 March 2025
⏱️ 62 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Born in Sardinia on a sailing boat to self-described “adventurous” parents, Francesco Risso grew up in an environment that fostered independence, spontaneity and a deep need to create. After formative years at Polimoda, FIT and Central Saint Martins — where he studied under the late Louise Wilson — he joined Prada, learning firsthand how to fuse conceptual exploration with a product that resonates in everyday life.
Now at Marni, Risso continues to embrace a method he likens to an artist’s studio, championing bold experimentation and surrounding himself with collaborators who push each other to new heights of creativity.
“Creativity is … in the way we give love to the things that we make and then we give to people. I feel I don’t see so much of that love around,” says Risso. “We have to inject into products a strong and beautiful sense of making. That requires craft, it requires skills, it requires a lot of fatigue, it requires discipline.”
Risso joins BoF founder and CEO Imran Amed to explore how his unconventional childhood shaped his creative approach, why discipline and craft remain vital to fashion, and how meaningful collaboration can expand the boundaries of what’s possible.
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0:00.0 | Hi, this is Imran Ahmed founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. |
0:08.0 | Welcome to the Bof podcast. |
0:10.5 | It's Friday, March 7th. |
0:12.8 | Francesco Rissa was born on a sailing boat near Sardinia in 1982. |
0:18.0 | He grew up in an environment that fostered independence, spontaneity, and a deep need to be creative. |
0:24.6 | After formative years at Polymota, FIT, and Central St. Martins, he joined Prada, learning first-hand |
0:31.6 | how to use conceptual creative exploration to create products that resonate in everyday life. |
0:39.0 | Now, as creative director of Marnie, Rissot continues to embrace a method he likens to an artist |
0:44.6 | studio, championing bold experimentation and surrounding himself with collaborators who push |
0:50.6 | each other to expand their forms of creative expression. |
0:57.2 | This approach stands in contrast to a fashion system that has become overly productized, commercialized, and corporatized. |
1:02.6 | The making of great clothes that stands for a long time in years, |
1:09.7 | it's not a thing that can be made in a short spam of a season, in a short |
1:17.1 | spam of a click. I think we have pushed ourselves to produce massively and continuously and |
1:26.6 | relentlessly. |
1:28.5 | And the demand has eaten its own animal. |
1:35.3 | And I feel it's a great time to slow things again. |
1:41.6 | This week on the BOF podcast, I sit down with Francesca to explore how his unconventional |
1:47.1 | childhood has shaped his unique creative approach, why making and craft remain vital to fashion, |
1:54.8 | and how meaningful collaboration can expand the boundaries of what's possible. |
1:59.8 | Here's Francesco Rissau on the BOF podcast. |
2:05.8 | Hi, Francesco, welcome to the BOF podcast. |
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