December 14, 2021 at 06:00AM
Welcome to the latest, highly exciting installment of Who What Wear UK’sBest Wardrobes in Britain. It’s where we do exactly what it says on the tin: delve into the most fantastical, awe-inspiring and downright influential wardrobes. We’re honing in on the women who cause the street style photographers to press their shutters asĀ well as the characters you don’t yet knowāthe ones who fly under the radar with secretly incredible clothing collections.
Everyone we photograph for our Best Wardrobes in Britain series loves clothes, but Candice Brathwaite LOVES clothes. Her walk-in wardrobe is more than just a storage space, as she says this is where she goes when she needs some time to herself. She visibly lights up when she talks about fashion and the way that clothes now make her feel. āWhen I was pregnant and after having kids I became very insular and everything was baggy,ā explains Candice. āThat showed in my personalityāI wouldnāt make eye contact and would hunch over. I see that in women wherever I go. They arenāt comfortable in their clothes, so they shrink. They have put themselves to the bottom of their to-do list. You just need to be told that spending time on yourself is allowed and worth it.ā
She is all too aware of the power of a great outfit and has carefully assembled a collection that truly feels unique to her. Youād be forgiven for thinking that the author, TV presenter and social media star is one of the most confident people out there, however she explains that she actually can be very insular and hates parties. Putting on a bright yellow Balenciaga coat or a dress exploding with feathers, however, is how she has the confidence to become the Candice we watch on TV.Ā She wants her clothes to always be a talking point and to embody the feeling of joy, and so is drawn towards colour, texture and sparkle.
We spent the day with Candice at her home in Milton Keynes, talking about what fashion means to her and quite literally dancing in the kitchen in Manolos. Her sense of style is truly infectious, and so keep scrolling to enter one of the most joyful, colourful wardrobes weāve ever visited.
How would you describe your style?
Risk taking, bright and unconventional.Ā
Have you always been interested in fashion?
I remember as a fourteen, fifteen year old, I used to buy Vogue with my lunch money and cut the pictures out. You couldnāt see the walls in my room, as I used Vogue as a wallpaper. Everywhere! I was always like āone of the first bags Iāll buy will be a Chanel classic flap.ā I was obsessed with the joy that clothes could bring, since I was very young. My mum and dad were obsessed with clothes too, as were my grandparents. They loved dressing up. My dad died when he was quite young at 41, and he had a great sense of style. He flew to New York once a year to buy cool coats and boots. My mum was the pretty girl at school and she always dressed in a really nice way. My grandad to this day is sharp as a knifeāheās a three-piece-suit-to-the-newsagents kind of guy. Also interestingly, I find with Black people itās deeper than that. When you are a Black person who has migrated to a place that is predominantly white, clothes are used as armour. I was raised by my grandad and he used to always say āif you donāt have a pound in your pocket, no one should know it by the way you are dressed.ā Black people use clothesāyou couldnāt get rid of racism, but you can use clothes to make someone question your class. I see that heavily in my grandparents generation. Now thatās not really the case I would say, but I do see that Black people use clothes as armour or as a way to express themselves, where other races donāt have to.ā
Do you do that with your own clothes?
I guess soāĀ I think with the way I dress people think Iām outgoing and confident and the life of the party. The reality is if you invite me Iāll always be busy washing my hairāif you see me you will know why that is funny. I donāt like to be at parties. So I think I use my clothes as a protective barrier and to bring the confidence, but also to start conversations. Even though Iām not the most confident, if I walk into the room in an acid yellow Balenciaga coat they will then kick off the convo and thatās quite helpful. I find bright clothes super comforting. Iām not against minimal dressing but it doesnāt suit me. Iāve come so far down this brightly coloured road, that when I wear muted things I just donāt recognise myself.Ā
Has that come with time or have you always loved bright clothes?
Itās come with timeā15 year old me would never wear bright clothes because I didnāt want to be seen or noticed. I would be in a grey tracksuitāI didnāt want to wear colour or for you to notice I had curves. Itās taken me a while to get here.Ā
When did you start feeling confident?
I was about 29/30 āwhen I had my first child I wasnāt expecting such blistering body changes. It wasnāt until I had my son on my 30th birthday that I started to come out of my shell. Having two kids made me more confident, as I donāt feel like I need to answer to anyone but them. I have to make sure they are well mannered, fed and warm, and everything else is āI couldnāt give a shit what you think.ā I no longer care if people do or donāt like my clothes.
Do you now just dress for yourself then?
Nothing excites me more than what I call the COS women. There is a certain type of woman who dresses in COS that sets my world on fire. I brought this conversation to social media, and so many women said that is because the COS women donāt dress for the male gaze. Itās comfort, sleek and chicāwhen I see that Iām like that is what Iām trying to be, just with colour. Jenna Lyons or Tracee Ellis Ross blow me away. Tracee Ellis Ross has a gorgeous feminine figure, but she dresses in what she wants and not for a man to see her in it. I have nothing against the bodycon era, because the roots of feminism should be choice. No outfit can beat a self assured woman. Most of the time when Iām admiring an outfit, itās not the outfit, itās how self assured she was to make that choice. That is what I find amazing about clothes.
What pieces do you always feel self assured in?
Now Iāve had kids, Iām all about structure. Even if itās something strapless, I need good structure from my underwear to my clothes. Then also due to my height, good tailoring is my thing after structure. I get almost everything tailored. I can depend on M&S trouser wise to get it bang on, but outside of that, no one is really thinking about a 5 foot, size 16 woman with an arse. Even though pictures on Instagram may make you think that. Even though I have that figure I donāt want to be in a tight dress. Getting the shoulders moved or whatever so something fits properly just makes such a difference.
What brands get it right in terms of size and fit?
M&Sāthey cut so well and are looser. Kitri ātheir lengths and proportions to me are bang on. I appreciate Sleeperās size range. What is really interesting out of the premium and luxury brands is Balenciaga has it bang on with the cut and fit. They cut for the self assured woman. A lot of other luxury brands make you feel like you need to be smaller. My dying wish would be that mid-range brands widen their sizing pool. There are so many mid-priced brands I like that stop at a size 14. The type of brand that are stocked in Liberty, but not Gucci, are about Ā£200-300 quid ā itās that kind of vibe, that doesnāt widen their sizes. I donāt understand the intent or maths behind stopping at a 14. The last time I was a size 12 I was 12! A lot of the clothes I wear they donāt actually closeāI still love them but they donāt fit quite properly. Either youāre spending big bucks or 50 quidābut the in-between prices are 6–14 maximum. This shirt Iām wearing now is Gucci and it went up to a size 16-18. Wicked! But Iād want even more because there are plus size women with the money to buy Gucci but they feel shut out. Donāt shut women out, itās annoying.
Do you think itāll change?
Now people are desiring a more curvaceous figure, fashion high and low needs to fall in line. I always think about it from a business perspectiveāif I ran a fashion brand, the smartest thing to do would be to make as many sizes as possible. Also when you make bigger sizes, donāt make a thing about it. It should have just been what it was.
Have you found it difficult to shop for that reason?
I have to adjust the gap between what I want and what I can actually have. On Net-a-Porter Iāll always look for something in a stretchy fabric or something oversized, because I know it’ll give me the least headache. You have to think differently. When you start looking at 16-18, you unfortunately have to rethink what you are looking at which isnāt necessarily fair. The oversized look doesnāt help either, as the size 6 women are wearing size 14 clothesāĀ but those true 14s canāt do that.Ā
There is a big problem with this and vintage…
Donāt get me started on the culture of āthrifted, thrifted.ā I love secondhand, so much of my clothing is secondhand. Itās almost like people want cool points for thrifting, not because they are thinking about the economy or the earth. That was never the point of these kinds of shops in the first place. Normally these people can afford to shop in Harrods, but if you go to the Salvation Army and buy the cool things, then what does that mean for the people who canāt afford a different option? Iām not saying donāt thrift, we need it for the economy and environment, but donāt make a point or trend of it. Itās like fashionās version of poverty porn. Raid your grandadās wardrobe first. These pieces can be hard to find or very exclusiveālike setting up an email alert for Chanel shoes isnāt thrifted.Ā
What pieces in your wardrobe mean a lot to you?
My Chanel handbag. People will probably be horrified to hear this, but I think this is why I have fun with clothes. Thereās nothing in my wardrobe that is precious. Iām not about the āsave for a good dayā life. Iāve had the horrors of seeing my friends dying of cancer young and my dad died really youngāyou can sit there and wait for an invite to wear this thing. But Iām going to wear it! If the thing said about me is āsheās always overdressedā- that is not a bad thing to put on my funeral sheet. āHere lies Candice, forever overdressed.ā Thatās what I want for womenāespecially Black women, who are often told āwork really hardā and are not encouraged to enjoy things. Whatever you have put emotional and financial value into and is on the top shelf, bring it down and enjoy it this second. My Manolos are battered and Iāve worn them to a grotty pub in East London. Itās all about joy! I wasnāt like that for a long time and it took me ages to get here. Thatās the key for meāhaving fun. We are always like āwhat is the next thing, the promotion.ā The joy of now is the mentality Iām aiming for, and my clothes are included in that. When lockdown happened I was doing full on photoshoots in my backyard. Covid taught us some harsh lessonsāwhat are you waiting for dude? Ok, have a plan, but leave that shitty man, the job that makes you cry every day, and wear the shoes. The next time a pandemic happens it could wipe us all out!
With luxury purchases how do you decide what to spend more on?
Even though I see the Hermes craze everywhere, that style of that bag is not me and I wonāt rock it. If I could afford it Iād buy two as investment pieces and keep them in their box, but that boxy style of bag is not me. So it comes down to how much will you wear it. What I have learned is now Iām older and have a little more money to spare, is that clothes of that ilk are investment pieces. The Gucci shirt Iām wearing I have no doubt my kids can wear this if they want to. Itās not going anywhere. When Iām buying into that fast fashion rotation, because youāve only spent Ā£10 for that bodysuit you are more likely to be like āthat is so last season.ā Nothing vexes my spirit more than Zara hauls. I want Zara hauls to die. Now! Death to the Zara haul! Youāve acquired stuff so quickly to make content, but I see the same content creators three weeks later ādecluttering their wardrobe.ā Because Iāve decided to save spend money in a different way, you arenāt getting a declutter video from Candice. Itās not a video you will ever see.
But then you canāt demonize the high street, because I remember once upon a time H&M was my high end and I remember having a Zara winter coat for five years and I rocked it. At the time that was all I could afford. So we have to strike a good balance. I would never demonize the high street because thatās someoneās version of Gucci, and they need to be able to feel good. But itās when people who could afford to invest, rely on these brands for content, and quick hits, thatās why we get in the mess weāre in. I always dreamt of being able to invest in clothes in the way I can now.Ā
If they could have the option they would invest, but this is their price point and bracket and we need to allow them to enjoy it. Donāt think theyāre now watching the conversation of āthe high street is the devilā and feeling like shit or like they are ruining the earth. That is not fair. They need to enjoy fashion in a way that doesnāt put them in debt, but the content creators who are doing hauls and buying Birkins, and then a week later theyāll do a video of them clearing it all out. People might read this and think āI hate you so much,ā but itās the truth.
What I love from Zara is earringsāIāve had so many Iāve glued back together Iāve worn them so much. One of my favourite handbags is from Pretty Little Thing and was Ā£12āok that is fast fashion. But I always say āis the fashion fast, or are we moving quickly.ā Guess what, if we slow down on how much we buy, they will slow down on how much they design.Ā
What high street brands do you love?
COS, I love COS. I find Arketās sizing really great and also love their kids clothes. I just found Stradivarius, and oh my god Stradi is the place to go. Love them! If you find a Zara piece youāll wear for five years, you canāt deny the brilliance of Zara. That is why they stay making buck. My eyelashes are from Primark and I buy 20 at a time and wipe the whole shelf. H&M Home is undisputed. You have to love the high street, we just need to be smarter about how we shop it.
Will fashion always be important to you?
Forever, ever ever ever ever! I see it as a great privilege to be in a position to show women how you can enjoy fashion when you donāt have the body type that fashion upholds as the highest. I get a great kick out of that. So many women come to my online spaces and say āI didnāt know I could wear that!ā People with my body type or similar, you get forgotten. So itās really cool to be in a position to show women how they can play with their clothesāitās so fun! I canāt tell you how many times someone chases me down the street and says āwhere is that from?ā That is influence! It isnāt just about having an online persona.
Do clothes impact your mood?
I put on my bright green Balenciaga coat and Iām a different person. When I was pregnant and after having kids I became very insular and everything was baggy. That showed in my personality- not making eye contact, hunching over. I see that in women wherever I go. They arenāt comfortable in their clothes, so they shrink. They have put themselves to the bottom of their to-do list. You just need to be told that spending time on yourself is allowed and worth it. If youāre not an influencer and you donāt work in beauty or media, youāre not told spending time on yourself is something you can do. Everyone deals with their mental health in a different way and you find ways that bring you joy.Ā
How do you find dressing for TV?
SO fun! I have the help of great stylists behind the Lorraine team, and they donāt like to style me because they know I like what I like. But the reality is Iām not going to talk about the high street wearing a Ā£500 shirt so I make sure what I wear is aligned with the audience Iām speaking to. I love that! I know the privilege I have in the jobs I doāĀ£800 on shoes is someoneās monthly wage. I am always aware of the different types of people that follow me. I recently spoke about my Bottega boots but did a blog post offering other options from Ā£30-Ā£800, so everyone can emulate that style. Weāve gone so far with luxury content creation weāve lost our way a bit. I am really conscious of that balance forever and ever. I see my yearly denim shop at M&S as an investment, as they fit and wash well. I donāt see the point of spending Ā£700 on jeans I will have to alter, and Iām willing to stand on a hill and say āM&S is where you need to be for a shorter curvier woman.ā But some people will be like āif itās not Gucci, Iām not interested.ā Whereas Iāll wear Gucci and M&S together, that’s literally what I’m wearing right now!’
Thanks for having us Candice!
Author Emma Spedding | Whowhatwear
Selected by CWC