“Miss Sohee was actually my Instagram handle before it became my brand name,” says Seoul-born designer Sohee Park. Indeed, the story of Miss Sohee sounds like a very Gen Z fashion fairy tale. A lockdown-era graduate of Central Saint Martins in London, Park never got to do her final end-of-year fashion show in 2020. Instead, she released a set of images online of the iridescent, ombre-hued gowns that made up her first collection, which quickly captured the imagination of fashion folk. That initial set of looks got featured on the cover of Love magazine, in editorials for W, Tatler, and Vogue editions around the world, even in a shoot featuring Bella Hadid. Then, Miley Cyrus chose a confection-like pink and lime-gold gown from Park for an appearance on The Graham Norton Show. This was followed by Cardi B, Gemma Chan, and most recently, Anya Taylor-Joy. And all through, the name Miss Sohee has stuck.
Park is part of a new guard of designers—along with names like Tomo Koizumi, Ganni, Harri, and Peter Do—who have catapulted to fame thanks to Instagram. “It just naturally put me in a situation where I had to launch my brand,” she says from her studio in London. But unlike other 28 year olds, she chose to capitalise on that fast-burning virality to enter the slow, rarefied world of haute couture. “I was always in love with the process of making, and with couture, it’s almost like being a sculptor. You’re following these traditions and techniques that have been passed down generations, but since I’m young, I’m able to look at things with a fresh eye and think outside the box.”