sartorialist toronto

The Sartorialist Shoots Toronto

When word got around that world-famous style photographer The Sartorialist was coming to town, Toronto's fashion fiends dared not step out of the house in anything less than full-on fierceness lest they be snapped by the master of street style.

Holt Renfrew held a cocktail reception on Wednesday to welcome Scott Schuman, the man with one of the most-trafficked fashion blogs in the world, with 120,000 visits a day and dozens and dozens of comments on every post.

(I went with a ridiculous pair of vintage green suede shorts and a vintage sequined top, along with an old Peter Bettley hat and sky-high heels. I was interviewed for Fashion Television, but whether it would've been Sartorialist-worthy on the street, I'll never know!)

sartorialist torontosartorialist toronto

Teeny-tiny and impeccably dressed, the dapper Schuman bounded to the mic to answer a few questions. Some of the fashion faithful leaned forward to hear what he had to say, although those by the bar were causing enough of a din that someone kept utter piecing whistles to get them to shut up and actually listen to what the revered style-spotter was sayin'.

A little tipsy and charming as hell, the Sartorialist said this:

On Toronto:

"I've already been to Toronto, and have seen the coolness, the chicness of it, so I'm not surprised by what I see--the genuineness, the subtleness, the sexiness of it."

On a challenge that goes with the job:

"It can be difficult to stay in that moment and articulate how I felt at that moment, after I have colour-corrected and cropped. If there's anything I feel bad about, it's not being able to write about certain photos the way I felt at that moment."

On blogging:

"I don't consider myself a blogger, but instead more of a fashion photographer and fashion editor. Blogging was just a medium that was easy to do and that I could maintain myself and not expensive.

On beauty:

"The girl on the cover of my book, people always comment on how beautiful she is--she's not perfect, but she knows how to make what she has work for her. She's physically flawed--she walks with a limp, one side of her face is a little different than the other, and one arm is slimmer than the other--but I don't see them as physical imperfections. I like that she seems perfect, but she's not. You don't have to be perfect to be beautiful."

sartorialist torontosartorialist torontosartorialist toronto

Photos by Stefania Yarhi.


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in Fashion & Style

Here are the best Black Friday deals at Costco Canada

Toronto women make history with Nike partnership

Leon's and The Brick face allegations of deceptive marketing practices

Toronto fashion week kicks off with a spotlight on emerging Canadian designers

Canadians could cash in on class-action lawsuit filed against Old Navy and Gap

Toronto's island airport will be home to 3 nights of fashion shows

Toronto business that's been around since 1929 announces sudden closure

Breathtaking new Toronto building is home to 4-nights of fashion shows this week