You can make jeans and a t-shirt super stylish. It's what you make of it, you know?
I'm really a classicist at heart - with a bit of madness!
Just because you work in the fashion industry, it doesn't mean you live your life in fashion.
I always try to appreciate the most fleeting moments. The idea of the acrobats constantly tumbling and trying to adjust - I think that is what we do with aesthetics. It is a cyclical rhythm
You know, for myself, my personal journey has been a very fortunate one and I would say to people it's like the stars lined up and the skies opened up and the sun shined and I met the right people - was at the right time. And, most importantly, you know I love what I do.
When I say that I'm a businessperson and a dressmaker, it's the truth. I run a business, and I make dresses, I make blouses.
When people ask about inspirations, and you're like 'oh, it was a flower or a mountain or a pony', some people just think you're insane. I'm worried to come across that way.
One of the reasons I wanted to collaborate with Target is because I felt that together we could create a collection that would inspire - one that is cool and chic, but still very accessible.
Since an early age, I've been intrigued by the idea of design evolution.
I love crazy, gaudy bling.
I have always had a relationship with clothes.
Being from a very traditional Chinese-American family, my parents believed the only options to have a successful life were to be a doctor, a lawyer, an engineer or a business person.
I try to always have flowers in the house. I have a florist in Chinatown, and they deliver orchids every two weeks. I like living with living things.
My mother has become my daughter and I've become her guardian.
I don't have a life where it's galas, posh affairs. It's me, my dog and a sofa. And a TV.
My mother was a seamstress, so making clothes was not something you would willingly go into.
I'm such a technophobe.
I'm not such a public person.
I swear by the invigorating shampoo and conditioner by Como Shambhala. When you’re in need for a quick mental vacation, it does the trick
I started in college as a business major and finally transferred to home economics and studied making clothes.
I think my parents were immigrants, you know, so I guess I would be first generation. Growing up in California.
There is a secret hippie within me.