Gemma Ruse: I’d love to know when you set out to design a window, what is your primary objective? Is it the same from window to window, or from brand to brand, or does it vary depending on the concept?
Tamara Elmallah: I don’t think the process varies depending on the brand, but the brands have an identity, so certain materials will be right for one brand and absolutely not right for another. The purpose of the window is to communicate the story of the product or the collection and to evoke context and atmosphere around that.
You’re given the brief, but it’s always very visual for me. I usually have images or references in my mind that are triggered by the brief. It’s like a spider web or a domino effect. You think of an image and then you search for the image and that reminds you of another reference. I then gather everything by theme or perhaps materials and build out the mood boards.
The final result is usually an accumulation of elements that inspire me from a range of references. It could be an object, a specific shade of colour, the lighting from a show or the surprising way an exhibition used a material. It will usually be something quite abstract.
Gemma Ruse: Yes, that’s very evocative that you talk about a specific shade of colour or the way something is lit. It’s almost like you collect all these little nuggets from different things, put them into the melting pot of your brain and out pops something new!
Tamara Elmallah: Exactly. It’s weird how instinctive I find the process when creating the mood of a project. It’s very personal to each person.
Gemma Ruse: I agree. Give ten designers the same brief, you’re not going to get the same result from any of them.
You’ve touched on a few different types of projects that you’ve designed. Do you have a favourite type of project? Is it windows, events, experiences?
Tamara Elmallah: When I started at Louboutin and it became more varied, I felt extremely excited by the more spatial projects. We designed this huge exhibition in Paris, where we worked with experts and artisans in lots of fields. All those specialities combine together to impact your experience of a space and how you feel in that space, which is very different to a window.
With a window, you experience it from behind glass. You’re not interacting in the same way as you would in an exhibition, a show or even a showroom, where there are more opportunities to engage a visitor and affect how they feel in the space.