Son of a Saville Row master tailor, the young David Eilers displayed a precocious sense for design using the finest fabrics. Never scared of the white chalk or sharp pins, he apprenticed tirelessly under the very best craftsman, some of which serve British royalty to this day.
But there was more to David Eilers. As a young man he matriculated into the prestigious UDK (Universität der Künste) to study fine art. He became an expert in the work of Georg Baselitz. Known as a Grenzgänger, or border crosser, Baselitz's work is characterized by contrariness, discomfort, and suspicion of authority.
David sowed his proverbial oats in the popular night haunts of Sisyphos and Tresor. The pulsating beats sharpened his senses, and his chemically induced visions gave birth to the brave world of fused fashion - combining British old German neu. Not for everyone, David Eilers fashion was born much like astrophysical fusion.
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