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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Samuel Ross on Fostering Inclusion in Creative Industries

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 7 July 2023

⏱️ 16 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

British fashion designer Samuel Ross opens up to BoF editor-in-chief Imran Amed about his work to foster more diversity in fashion.


Background: Creative industries still have a long way to go before they become truly inclusive, according to Samuel Ross, designer and founder of London-based fashion label A-Cold-Wall and industrial and product design studio SR_A. 


“There's not enough diversity in the sector for high achievers who should be there,” he said to BoF founder and editor-in-chief Imran Amed on stage at WPP Stream, during the annual Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.


This week on The BoF Podcast, Amed and Ross explore the designer’s creative processes, his approach to engaging younger customers as well as his mission to build a more inclusive creative sector.


Key Insights:


  • As a multi-disciplinary artist, working in fields ranging from architecture to furniture design, Ross takes a “democratic approach” to his work. “I try not to operate across a hierarchy when it comes to creativity. I care as much about the texture of a raw cut glass as… I do about the reverence of a chapel,” he says. 
  • He also leans into technology — be it through gaming or augmented reality — to create experiences that resonate with younger consumers. “We're using [digital] play as a handshake with the audience base to get onto those channels and to build a new relationship through product and add new characteristics to product,” explains Ross. 
  • Social media also enables Ross to forge an organic connection with his community of followers. When the designer posted about A-Cold-Wall’s most recent Nike collaboration on Instagram, for example, it garnered more than 24,000 likes in 17 hours. “It's really about driving the founder-consumer connection where possible,” said Ross. 
  • It was after sharing his thoughts on the fashion industry’s inclusivity shortcomings on social media that Ross decided to be more proactive about enabling change in the industry by creating concrete opportunities for people traditionally excluded from the industry through the Samuel Ross Black British Artist Grant Programme, which provides funding and mentorship to young designers, artists and other creatives. “I had to look in the mirror and say, ‘Well, what am I actually going to do about this?’ he says.


Additional Resources:





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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:08.4

Welcome to the Bof podcast. It's Friday, July 7th.

0:12.7

Creative industries still have a long way to go before they become truly inclusive.

0:17.8

That's according to Samuel Ross, designer and founder of the London-based label,

0:22.5

a Coldwall, an industrial and product design studio, SRA. A few weeks back, Samuel and I had a

0:29.1

conversation on stage at WPP Stream during the annual Can Lion International Festival of Creativity.

0:36.4

He shared the early progress that has come from creating

0:38.7

the Samuel Ross Black British Artist Grant Program. It was really about making sure that we

0:44.5

identify the problem. There's not enough diversity in the sector for high achievers who should be

0:49.6

there. This week on the BOF podcast, we explore Samuel's creative processes, his approach to engaging younger customers, as well as his mission to build a more inclusive creative sector.

1:01.6

Here's Samuel Ross on the BOF podcast.

1:06.4

Before we have the next speakers on, I just want to let you know that these speakers have flown in just for this one session.

1:12.5

They've only got 15 minutes and they've basically done 36 hours of travel between them to get here for this 15 minutes.

1:17.5

So it's a super special and they're both too modest and humble to tell you.

1:21.1

So it's my great pleasure to introduce Imran Ahmed, the founder of Business and Fashion and Samuel Ross, a founder of A Cold War, Imran.

1:27.9

Thank you. the founder of Business and Fashion and Samuel Ross, a founder of a Cold War, Emeran, Iverture.

1:38.4

Quite an intro, thank you, Ella.

1:48.2

Back in 2013, then relatively unknown Virgil Ablo, appointed Samuel Ross to be his first design assistant on his fashion brand Pyrex Vision. A couple of years later, at the ripe age of 24, Sam launched

1:55.2

his own luxury brand, a cold wall. In 2015, he went on to collaborate with Nike, Converse, and Doc Martins. In 2019,

2:06.6

he launched the product and industrial design studio Samuel Ross and Associates, where he co-created

2:12.7

a Hublo watch, worked on perfume bottles with Aqua de Parma and headphones with beats by Dr. Dre.

2:20.0

And this year, he came out as an artist with an exhibition of paintings and sculpture at the

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