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The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Best of The BoF Podcast: Clare Waight Keller on Finding Opportunity in Discomfort

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Business, Fashion & Beauty, Arts

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 29 August 2025

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Clare Waight Keller’s career in fashion has been defined by her versatility as a designer and desire to step outside her comfort zone. She started out specialising in knitwear at the Royal College of Art before taking on a role in knitwear at Calvin Klein, before moving on to Ralph Lauren. She returned to Europe to work at Gucci under Tom Ford, and then stepped into creative director roles at Pringle, Chloé and Givenchy. Last week, it was announced that she was becoming the creative director of Japanese clothing retailer Uniqlo, which is targeted at the masses, not the classes. 


Seeing new challenges as an opportunity to learn and grow, has led Clare to make many unexpected decisions from the start of her career. 


“Those moments when you are pushed to your boundaries and don't quite know how to navigate… bring a great sense of drive for me. I love the idea of being uncomfortable with what I'm working on because it makes me learn quickly,” she said. “I enjoy the process of change, and I guess that's why I've worked in so many different places.”


This week on The BoF Podcast, BoF founder Imran Amed sits down with Clare to discuss her varied career path and her experience working in American, Italian, British, French and now Japanese fashion companies and how this has shaped her outlook on the industry.


Key Insights

  • Growing up in Birmingham, England, Waight Keller was captivated by the vibrant subcultures she encountered. That influence led her towards art school, and eventually, fashion. “I distinctly remember standing at a bus stop, going to college, with punks, skinheads or goths — people who really expressed themselves through fashion and took it to a real sense of identity,” she said. “They just seemed like the most interesting people. I wanted to be part of that.”


  • After working for predominantly male creative directors, Clare felt it was time to express her own perspective, leading her to the creative director position at Chloé in 2011. “There's such a sensibility that women have in fashion because you try it on yourself, you wear it, you feel it,” she said. “I'm putting together what I believe to be my point of view of fashion."


  • Waight Keller’s move to Uniqlo marked a shift from working in the world of luxury to mass fashion, which has required some adjustment. “Understanding the scale was just extraordinary. In luxury fashion, you work on a much smaller scale, even at big brands,” she said. However, with this came new opportunities. “With that scale comes incredible access to innovation, amazing fabric mills, and quality.” 


  • Even as her career flourished, Waight Keller came to discover the inherent gender bias women face in the industry. “It's still fairly male-dominated in management and across the business side of fashion ... I had to make my family work around my career because even a season out in fashion can put you back a year, and people look at you differently.” With that, her advice to fellow female designers is not to “be afraid of a challenge and having to learn on the ground."


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.

0:07.6

Welcome to the POF podcast. It's Friday, August 29th.

0:11.8

Our summer break continues and we're sharing some of our favorite episodes from the archive.

0:17.3

This week, we revisit my conversation with Claire Waite Keller, whose career in fashion has been defined by her versatility as a designer and her desire to step outside her comfort zone.

0:29.0

Seeing new challenges as an opportunity to learn and grow has led Claire to make many unexpected decisions right from the start of her career.

0:37.6

Most recently, Claire was appointed creative director of Uniclo,

0:41.3

the Japanese clothing retailer known for its high-quality basics,

0:45.7

aimed at the masses, not the classes.

0:49.0

Those moments when you are pushed to your boundaries

0:52.6

and you don't know quite how to navigate it,

0:55.5

you need to find quickly how to do things, sort of a survival instinct, I suppose, brings a great

1:03.0

sense of drive for me. I really love that idea of being sort of uncomfortable with what I'm

1:10.6

working with because it makes

1:11.7

me learn quickly. I'm someone who really enjoys the process of change and I guess that's why

1:17.0

I've worked in so many different places. This week on the BOF podcast will examine Claire's

1:22.7

very career path and experience working in American, Italian, British, French, and now Japanese fashion

1:29.2

companies and how this has shaped her outlook on the global fashion industry. Here's Claire Waite Keller

1:35.7

on the B.OF podcast. Claire Waite Keller, welcome to the BOF podcast. Nice to be here at Emron. Where in the world are you today?

1:46.5

You're like quite the jet set traveler at the moment with your work taking you from one place to another.

1:52.9

I know you were just in New York, but are you back in London now?

1:56.7

No, still in New York, but leaving today. So I came back from Tokyo last week. So yes, been traveling a bit.

2:03.7

Well, there's so much to discuss with you today. And obviously, we were very excited and interested to hear about your new role as creative director at Uniclob. I wanted to start much earlier on in your life to get a sense

...

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