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About 14 years ago, designer Rachel Scott saw an article in her local Jamaican paper about a group of women on the north coast of the island who had a knitting circle, of sorts. They would meet up to crochet, embroider, and share ideas. The story struck a chord with Scott, who is Jamaica-born and has a lifelong interest in crafts and crochet. And so on her next trip home to the Caribbean from Italy, where she was living at the time, Scott made it her mission to find that group. “I drove for hours asking, ‘Do you know miss blah blah blah from this part of Saint Mary?’” says Scott, who is now based in New York, on Zoom. “I eventually found them, and met with one lady who had been practicing this form of embroidery where they pull the threads and embroidery around it. It’s something they’d been doing for centuries. She learned from her mother; her mother learned from her grandmother. There was this intergenerational knowledge being passed down. I thought that was incredible and always wanted to find a way to work with them.”
A decade and a half later, she is. Scott’s new brand, Diotima, launching today, represents a beautiful collaboration between the designer and this circle of talented artisans. Working with the original group from the newspaper article years ago, as well as several independent artists in Kingston, Jamaica, and another group from the north coast, Scott offers an elevated take on crochet.
Scott, who grew up in Kingston and is currently the vice president of design at Rachel Comey, always knew she wanted to incorporate her heritage into her design. Throughout 2020, she had a bit of a break from the daily grind of the New York fashion scene and began to think more seriously about what she wanted to create on her own. “Everything happening last year in America gave me more strength in thinking that there was time and space for every voice to participate,” she says. “I waited a long time. It was a moment I needed to speak.”
Her collection is inspired in equal measure by her upbringing in a Jesuit school in Kingston and the dancehall scene in Jamaica of the ’80s and ’90s. One of the key pieces is her uniform skirt, a tea-length, khaki, pleated garment remixed with slits up the side. “Many of the schools are Catholic, so there’s this decorum of how you should dress,” Scott says. “I was playing with that and trying to subvert this idea of being proper.” Dancehall signatures informed her suits. “It’s so interesting the way they play with tailoring and the women play with being powerful but also sexy,” she says.
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