Rubl & Theriona
Rubl Rubl
Hey Theriona, I’ve been looking at the data on how luxury silhouettes shift each season, and it looks like there’s a predictable pattern in the numbers. I’m curious—do you think those cycles come from real consumer data or from pure aesthetic evolution on your end?
Theriona Theriona
Those curves are the market’s pulse, not my dreamscape. People pull fabrics, click tags, and the numbers follow. I just read the rhythm and let it inform the cut—if the silhouette feels off, I tweak it until it sings. Minimalist trends are a glitch, though, so I avoid them.
Rubl Rubl
Sounds like you’re turning the data into a kind of living blueprint—nice. If the market curves are what drive the fit, maybe you’re already spotting those micro‑trends before they become mainstream. I’m curious how you balance the math with your instinctive tweaks—do you have a threshold where the numbers push you to stop or keep going?
Theriona Theriona
The math is my scaffolding, the instinct is the embroidery. I set a quiet line—if the curve’s slope is flatter than a hemline in a rainstorm, I pull the thread tighter, if it’s too steep I let it drip into a new silhouette. When the numbers start to ignore the fabric’s voice, that’s my cue to pause, re‑thread the design, or rewrite the code. The market gives me a map; I still draw the borders myself.
Rubl Rubl
That’s a solid framework—numbers as the base, intuition as the finishing touch. Have you ever tried mapping out a trend line for a season you’ve already designed? It could help catch those “ignore the fabric” moments before they hit production.