How does HSDT operate as a collective process rather than a singular vision?
I’m steering the direction, but HSDT is a conversation amongst real family and friends. I’m very lucky to work with an organic team of people who’ve been on this journey with me for years. My brother Kev Bouquet has been by my side photographing our projects since we were teenagers. My partner Patricia Adorable is an architect, and we work together on all the spatial design. Then I have a small circle of close friends I’ve known for over a decade who work on our video campaigns, audio compositions, etc. It’s tight-knit, and it’s real.
The best results come from push and pull. We build through feedback loops, disagreements, edits, and refinements across design, image-making, and space. The collective part isn’t a tagline, it’s the method. The work improves when more eyes are on it, especially from people I trust and those who care enough to challenge it.
Can products actively shape culture instead of simply reflecting it?
Yes. Culture is not only what we consume, it’s what we repeat. If a product is designed with real intent and delivered with a real story, it can shift taste, create community, and become a marker for a moment. When it becomes part of people’s rituals, how they dress, move, and identify - it stops being an object and starts becoming culture. The responsibility is making sure the intent is grounded, not manufactured hype. If it’s done right, it can push things forward instead of just echoing what already exists.
What does New York represent in your personal and creative language?
New York is one of my deepest reference points. As the birthplace of Hip-Hop, its cultural roots are rich and deep. It’s the music and movies we grew up on, the energy of the streets, the attitude, the urgency. It’s also the design language of the city - from the iconic graphic systems Massimo Vignelli created, New York feels like culture and structure living on top of each other.
What I’ve always loved is that New York doesn’t let anything hide. There’s a certain honesty to it - the city rewards substance, and it exposes anything that’s just surface. If something survives there, it has earned its place.
That’s why this project felt like such a perfect fit when ASICS approached us to introduce the GEL-NYC 2.0. Even though we aren’t from New York, or even America, it felt like an authentic opportunity to tell a story I’ve been tied to my whole life. This wasn’t about borrowing aesthetics. It was about honouring a reference point that genuinely shaped my taste and interests. I don’t think I could speak on a project like this in the same way if it were based on, or named after another city. Anyone who knows me knows how much this truly means.
Where does the deep connection between HSDT and ASICS truly begin?
It begins with a shared respect for function and detail. ASICS has a performance DNA and an archive that’s incredibly rich, and I’ve always been drawn to brands that build from purpose, not image. The connection deepened when it became clear we could push design language together without losing the integrity of the product. It's always felt like a long-term dialogue, not a one-off collaboration.
If all of this points toward a future, what kind of world are you ultimately building?
A world where design has clarity again. Where objects are made with intent, and where culture is shaped by care, not just speed. I want HSDT to build work that sits across product, space, and image, but always feels human. If someone interacts with what we make and feels understood, like the details were considered for their real life, then we’re doing the right job.
For a moment, it felt like we all got a little lost in an oversaturated market of consumerism. Everything became louder, faster, and easier to copy.
Lately it feels like there’s a gradual shift happening - not just in design, but in how people choose what they live with. People are starting to value things made with care again. Craftsmanship is coming back in certain spaces. That feels like the right direction, and an exciting time to be building. I’m interested in contributing to that future - making objects and experiences that can slow things down, hold meaning, and last.