DAISY LOWE

“In a Fault cover shoot with Daisy Lowe – a British model largely pigeon-holed for her curvy figure – Page obliges the request to highlight those curves with the help of a dramatic piece of wearable sculpture by Serbian designer Ivana Pilja in a shoot that toyed with the typecasting, if not dismantling it altogether: “We wanted to go beyond the purely sexy girl to create something cooler – a look that wouldn’t undermine the artistry,” recalls Page”.


“Subtle subversions of celebrity stereotyping (without veering into PR-terrifying territory) is something of a favourite past-time for Page.”

Schon! Magazine

PIXIE LOTT

“English singer Pixie Lott appears in cover shoot in a mix of young labels such as a lace catsuit by PPQ (then a key brand for London’s Saturday night flash-trash club kids) and mega, although equally fun-inflected houses such as Kenzo and Moschino.”


“There is always a sense of humour nestled among the bravado, underlined via a riot of colour and that distinctive penchant for excess.”

Schon! Magazine

LITTLE MIX

“Hyper-successful British girl group Little Mix at the time of their ‘Hey, How you Doin?’ collaboration with American superstar Missy Elliot where Page referenced classic Elliot looks from the ‘90s including customised caps and beanies – at the time a far tougher street style vibe than the more cartoonish televisual concoctions the group was generally styled in.”


“Page’s entertainment-centric vision of fashion; a sensibility inherently imbued with character creation on a slightly-more-epic-than-average scale”.

Schon! Magazine

CAROLINE FLACK

“A shoot with the late TV presenter Caroline Flack depicts the tragic star not as the ultra-mainstream Love Island host of more predictable shoots but channelling a bohemian, end-of-the-summer festival sensibility that invokes a beautiful, ethereal fragility. Flack wears a 70s-inspired dress by British designer and sustainable materials innovator Jane Bowler constructed from recycled plastic alongside a series of decorative masks and headpieces.”


“I have always loved to deal in fantasy, but grounded in reality.”

Marika Page

SOPHIE ELLIS-BEXTOR

An additional story with pop star Sophie Ellis-Bextor, set in a location resembling the roaring twenties style decadence of the Orient-Express, sees the singer in a mix of vintage pieces by glam-supplying clubland entrepreneur Liz Mendez; garments from classic labels including Vivienne Westwood, Ossie Clarke London, milliner Philip Treacy; and special headpieces from Filipina designer Miche Dulce, who has worked on projects for avant garde music stars from Lady Gaga and Adam Ant to Italian super stylist Anna Della Russo.


“Page’s looks aren’t for wall-flowers, reflecting her belief in the importance of meeting a persona head on – willingly summoning a sense of bravado to deliver a true mindset shift.”

Schon! Magazine