On Being Ready

Over the past five years, Katherine Bucknell has embodied our concept with consistency. Building, rather than accumulating, she builds and reconfigures. A liner here, a collar there. She understands that sustainability isn't a buzzword, it's a daily practice.

As a writer, traveller and early advocate, Katherine Bucknell represents the living argument for what we set out to do. She doesn’t just wear Marfa Stance. She understands it – and this is why she was the perfect guest writer for the first ever issue of The Stance. Thank you, Kate.

Katherine Bucknell

media-with-text

Christopher Isherwood wrote Goodbye to Berlin, which Cabaret is based on, and A Single Man, adapted by Tom Ford as his first film. As a young man, he enjoyed the freedom of Weimar, witnessed the rise of Hitler, and ran from the Nazis with his German boyfriend who was arrested by the Gestapo. Afterwards, he settled in Hollywood to write for the movies. He also became a Hindu, practiced non-attachment, and translated the Bhagavad Gita with his Indian guru.  

At 48, he began a relationship with the love of his life, Don Bachardy, an 18-year-old Los Angeles native and, later, a celebrated portrait artist. They made a home together openly in the conformist 1950s and became arguably the most famous gay couple of the 20th century, the subject of Hockney’s double portrait, set in their living room and auctioned at Christie’s for 44 million dollars in November 2025. 

Nowadays we can hardly imagine the gay world that lay hidden last century—the difficulty, the danger, the pain, the excitement, the fun, the complexity of a community functioning in secret because homosexual acts were punishable by life imprisonment and even by death. Isherwood’s books aimed to change the society into which he was born by changing popular taste. He was an activist through his art, which was acutely observant, dark, irresistibly readable, and often very funny.

When he was eight, his mother had read him a story by an Anglican Bishop, Samuel Wilberforce, “Agathos, or the Whole Armor of God,” intended to teach children about spiritual readiness. Agathos wears a full suit of armor even while sleeping, ready to fight the dragon. The other soldiers grow bored waiting and cast off their armor. Of course, they are eaten, but Agathos, still ready, vanquishes the dragon when it comes. 

All his life, Isherwood aspired to readiness—spiritually, personally, and for his writing.  He learned to make himself at home in any geographical location and any social milieu. Choice of costume had to be right. At boarding school, he felt depressed by his uniform because it obliterated his personal identity; in adult life he associated military uniform with social conformity, against which he rebelled.  His clothing was part of his imaginative agency, his readiness to meet whatever comes rather than be taken by surprise.

hero-image
media-with-text

When he went to China with his friend the poet W.H. Auden to write a book about the war between China and Japan, he reported that Auden wore “an immense, shapeless overcoat and woollen Jaeger cap” as if “dressed for the Arctic regions” while his “own beret, sweater, and martial boots” would not have been “out of place in Valencia or Madrid.”  He was imagining himself as a war correspondent at the Spanish Civil War, a better-known war to his readers at home, and he was also making fun of his need to dress up. (He often made fun of the things about which he felt very seriously.) One night, he and Auden travelled on a Chinese train making a run past Japanese guns on the north bank of the Yellow River. Due to the risk of shelling, Isherwood—like Agathos--slept in his clothes, “not wishing to have to leave the train and bolt for cover in my pyjamas,” as he wrote. Auden, “with his monumental calm,” undressed completely.  

Later, they were overtaken by the hotshot British war correspondent Peter Fleming, elder brother of James Bond creator Ian Fleming and a model for Bond. Fleming was a consummate professional, and he was professionally outfitted.  “In his khaki shirt and shorts, complete with golf-stockings, strong suede shoes, waterproof wrist watch and Leica camera, he might have stepped straight from a London tailor’s window, advertising Gent’s Tropical Exploration Kit,” wrote Isherwood with more than a hint of mockery.  But he also recorded that Fleming was disciplined, naturally brave, able to outwalk everyone on the expedition, and could speak Chinese.  In short, he was a born leader. He raised everyone’s game so he could get to the fighting over mountain passes and through torrential rain.  

Americans often quote Thoreau’s maxim to beware of enterprises requiring new clothes, but we need to have the right clothes to be ready. With Marfa Stance, every piece is carefully thought through to address whatever might happen during a busy day or a challenging trip—rain, wind, cold, even boredom.  It’s like a suit of armor in which you can fight any dragon. The pieces are beautiful in an authentically utilitarian way, with waterproofing, huge pockets, drawstrings for exact fitting. If you get cold, you can add a layer, if hot, remove a layer. And if you get bored, you can change the collar or the hood. You can even turn the piece inside out. Preparedness is no trivial matter. It allows us to focus on our real mission.

media-with-text

When he went to China with his friend the poet W.H. Auden to write a book about the war between China and Japan, he reported that Auden wore “an immense, shapeless overcoat and woollen Jaeger cap” as if “dressed for the Arctic regions” while his “own beret, sweater, and martial boots” would not have been “out of place in Valencia or Madrid.”  He was imagining himself as a war correspondent at the Spanish Civil War, a better-known war to his readers at home, and he was also making fun of his need to dress up. (He often made fun of the things about which he felt very seriously.) One night, he and Auden travelled on a Chinese train making a run past Japanese guns on the north bank of the Yellow River. Due to the risk of shelling, Isherwood—like Agathos--slept in his clothes, “not wishing to have to leave the train and bolt for cover in my pyjamas,” as he wrote. Auden, “with his monumental calm,” undressed completely.  

Later, they were overtaken by the hotshot British war correspondent Peter Fleming, elder brother of James Bond creator Ian Fleming and a model for Bond. Fleming was a consummate professional, and he was professionally outfitted.  “In his khaki shirt and shorts, complete with golf-stockings, strong suede shoes, waterproof wrist watch and Leica camera, he might have stepped straight from a London tailor’s window, advertising Gent’s Tropical Exploration Kit,” wrote Isherwood with more than a hint of mockery.  But he also recorded that Fleming was disciplined, naturally brave, able to outwalk everyone on the expedition, and could speak Chinese.  In short, he was a born leader. He raised everyone’s game so he could get to the fighting over mountain passes and through torrential rain.  

Americans often quote Thoreau’s maxim to beware of enterprises requiring new clothes, but we need to have the right clothes to be ready. With Marfa Stance, every piece is carefully thought through to address whatever might happen during a busy day or a challenging trip—rain, wind, cold, even boredom.  It’s like a suit of armor in which you can fight any dragon. The pieces are beautiful in an authentically utilitarian way, with waterproofing, huge pockets, drawstrings for exact fitting. If you get cold, you can add a layer, if hot, remove a layer. And if you get bored, you can change the collar or the hood. You can even turn the piece inside out. Preparedness is no trivial matter. It allows us to focus on our real mission.

media-with-text

I first noticed Marfa Stance on social media during the pandemic. The Signature Quilt. I remember how vividly it struck me, a completely new look, technical and austere, in attractively unfamiliar colors that spoke to both city and natural world. The model was rangy and tall, with strong planes to her face, no visible make-up, hair scraped back hard. She looked edgy and hip, and also powerful and able-bodied.  During the pandemic, when so many of us were confined to our sofas, a quilt was exactly what was needed. Soft, comfortable and safe. An embrace. This quilt, though, was well able to get up off the sofa as we ventured back to a busier life.  

In Isherwood’s first novel (All the Conspirators), the protagonist wants to be an artist; his mother wants him to stick to his career in insurance—a safe bet.  Their conflict is so extreme that he runs out of her house into a putrid London fog and wanders the streets. In a pawn shop, he buys an old overcoat which comforts him through a lonely night in a cheap hotel.  The coat smells of horse medicine. Isherwood’s real-life father was a cavalry officer, brilliant with horses, killed in World War I. The comforting overcoat in Isherwood’s novel recalls the safe embrace of the father he adored.  The father who was also a painter of professional standard and who would have understood the artistic inclination of Isherwood’s protagonist.  

On his first trip back from Hollywood to England after World War II, Isherwood borrowed the suit and overcoat of an American boyfriend whom he had to leave behind. Staying with his mother during that coldest winter of the last century, when gas and coal were scarce and strictly rationed, he wore his boyfriend’s overcoat both indoors and out. A comforting embrace. 

I was so obsessed with my Signature Quilt, that I gave one to my ninety-year-old mother. Then I gave one to an elder sister. Another to my younger sister. We still wear them. The original embrace. This is the coat which serves in all weather and never fights visually or chafes physically with what you have underneath: exercise gear, a structured suit, a floaty dress. 

One day, I was walking in Notting Hill in my sage green Signature Quilt, and I spotted a young blonde woman in a flowing, loosely belted, metallic bronze and gold coat. It was the Parachute Parka—on Georgia Dant! It looked even better in real life than it had on the website. Incredibly, when I stopped her, she knew it was me. No sale goes unnoticed by Georgia. You are buying and wearing what she has been thinking about night and day for months (now years). She seemed to relish the surprise added to the garment by a new individual wearing it. She wanted to know all about my mother and my sisters and what we got up to in our Signature Quilts together and separately. 

The Marfa Stance tribe is growing. There are many different styles and many different customers. It is a distinct look but invites individuality. Marfa Stance answers the wish to belong a shared identity and yet to remain yourself. The identity is thoughtful, high-quality, efficient, green, and it is also fun, good-looking, and encourages exuberance and freedom. 

Many is the story about how long it takes to choose a purchase from Marfa Stance. Which outerwear garment, which collar, which hood and of course what size and what color. It’s a detailed and personal process, and it imposes the discipline to think carefully about what you really want from your clothing. What do you intend to do in it? What makes you comfortable? What will the weather be like wherever you are going? Once you engage at this level, you are not easily going to move off and buy fast, cheap fashion. It doesn’t feel responsible, and it doesn’t feel as interesting or as friendly. Perhaps Georgia designed all this into that very first Signature Quilt.

As for the Parachute Parka: I learned that Georgia had spent years in the corporate fashion world. Her experience there shows in the quality of the pieces, the wit and glamor of the marketing, and the care she has taken to choose and train her amazing staff who are able to counsel you as intimately and patiently as a psychotherapist once you decide on the Marfa Stance approach. Freud might have said that Georgia came up with the idea for the Parachute Parka because she was leaping at high altitude from the corporate fashion world, and floating free-form down, down, down into an unknown landscape. Well, she has made the best of her wide view and drifting ride. I hope we will see more of her way of dressing and sharing and supporting our human community. Don’t get me started on the Survival Vest—lately that’s the garment I wear the most. 

Katherine Bucknell
Newest book, Christopher Isherwood Inside Out (2024; US Paperback 2025 / UK paperback 2026)

www.KatherineBucknell.com 

Welcome to The Stance. A natural extension of the conversations, places and most importantly, the people who have long shaped the brand. This printed record celebrates our community – and takes a closer look at how the connections we've made have played a part in defining the shape and unique spirit of Marfa Stance.

Across its pages, are stories from our global collective. Long-form interviews with humans whose lives, practices and points of view reflect a shared sensibility, rather than one single aesthetic. United by the way they move through the world with curiosity, creativity, and conviction, these conversations lean into the value of slowing down.

A publication is the original anti-scroll – something permanent you can live with and return to, time after time. Forever evolving with enduring, timeless appeal, The Stance mirrors our approach to clothing. It's an invitation into the Marfa Stance world, their voices, values, and the rhythm of their universe.

[4] ON VALUES: Mike Anders

A Stance On: Values

For a man who manages the wealth of some of the world's most influential individuals, Mike Anders doesn't speak like a traditional finance expert. Laidback, warm and super charismatic, he seems remarkably uninterested in money as an end goal. His enthusiasm centres around people instead – on the notion of trust, listening, and the idea that good conversations and true connections are where life's real value lies.

Read Article

Mike Anders

A Stance On: Values

Read Article
[5] ON SISTERHOOD: Sandy Tabatznik

A Stance On: Sisterhood

There’s a warmth to Sandy Tabatznik’s voice, which makes it easy to get a real sense of her lived experience when she talks. We start the conversation by considering the notion of women supporting women, which Sandy doesn’t frame as a trend or a strategy – it’s simply a fact of life. “In our Lalela Female Empowerment programmes, we encourage our girls to look to each other for community instead of competition,” she says. “I think this is a lesson that also stands in the world of business. There is room for everyone at the table.” It’s a quiet, but radical statement that feels practical and rooted in decades of experience (and a deep belief) in shared success. “At Lalela, we’re constantly seeking to empower not only the young women in our programmes, but also our female teachers, community leaders and staff. Our leadership team at Lalela has a female majority and together, these women have created an environment of care, creativity and respect that we are deeply proud of.”

Read Article

Sandy Tabatznik

A Stance On: Sisterhood

Read Article
[6] ON COMMUNITY: Phil Winser

A Stance On: Community

“They’re like children. I don’t have a favourite!”. A diplomatic response from Public House Group co-founder, Phil Winser. As someone who originally wanted to be a farmer, his career pivot towards hospitality was “a calling”. After twenty years shaking up the food scene in New York with The Fat Radish, Phil turned his attention back to his homeland in 2020. A conversation over a pint with friend James Gummer gave the duo an idea to put some serious love back into the classic British pub. A combination of beautifully restored historic buildings, brilliant atmosphere, domestically brewed beers on tap and spectacular menus that celebrate local produce have meant their establishments consistently sit in London’s ‘best of’ lists. Olivier van Themschse joined the business in 2023 to officially launch Public House Group as a business following the success of The Pelican.

Read Article

Phil Winser

A Stance On: Community

Read Article
[7] ON JOURNEYING: David Prior

A Stance On: Journeying

Some people have an air of always being mid-journey, even when they’re sitting still. David Prior fits that bill. He is wanderlust, personified. Born in Australia, he left early, propelled by what Australians often refer to as ‘the tyranny of distance’, moving to Italy in 2006 to study Gastronomic Science in Piedmont, then to California in 2009 and finally, to New York in 2014. Clearly, geography matters to the founder of esteemed travel company Prior, although taste and cultural literacy matter more.

Read Article

David Prior

A Stance On: Journeying

Read Article
[8] ON CONNECTION: Georgie Greville

A Stance On: Connection

Reinvention has never been the aim for Georgie Greville. With a successful career threaded through the realms of music, film, beauty, culture and entrepreneurship, what sounds at first like a dream résumé has morphed into more of a life philosophy. At the core, she personifies deeply embodied creativity, but when she speaks, there’s a force of clarity that flows – announcing with candour that these skills are now being used for the good. The lure of corporate pizza has lost its appeal and Georgie’s expertise is no longer for sale. Her defiance is inspirational.

Read Article

Georgie Greville

A Stance On: Connection

Read Article
[9] ON COMPATIBILITY: Legacy + Andreas

A Stance On: Compatibility

The shared world of New York-based Legacy Russell and Andreas Laszlo Konrath is shaped by language, images and history. Curator, writer and author Legacy grew up in the East Village, with Andreas arriving from London after a long, meandering education through skate culture, art school, and the early-2000s visual economy of magazines and music. Together, they model a way of living with work, rather than inside it. Their respective practices are distinct, but in constant conversation.

Read Article

Legacy Russell Andreas L. Konrath

A Stance On: Compatibility

Read Article
[10] ON CAPTURING: Richard Haines

A Stance On: Capturing

Richard Haines has spent a lifetime looking at stuff. At clothes, people and posture. He clocks those small daily decisions we all make that reveal something bigger about ourselves. This observational prowess gives his drawings a very specific kind of documentary authority. When he talks about sitting down with a blank sheet of paper and an ink pen, there’s no mythology attached. “I have a pretty deep, primal relationship with drawing. When I’m doing it, I’m not thinking – it’s more of a meditation. If I end up with something I love I’m a bit surprised.”

Read Article

Richard Haines

A Stance On: Capturing

Read Article
[1] ON CARE: Mickalene Thomas

A Stance On: Care

American artist Mickalene Thomas has just returned from Paris. She's been busy with her latest exhibition at the city's Grand Palais. After eleven days away from home she's relieved to be back in New York – it's a contradiction we're all familiar with. Travelling is so liberating; it's great to get away, but always good to be reunited with your own bed, your own pillows, and your own space.

Read Article

Mickalene Thomas

A Stance On: Care

Read Article
[2] ON LEGACY: The Elgorts

A Stance On: Legacy

There are some families where creativity runs through the genes. For the Elgorts, this inheritance is something they practise and finesse with commitment, forever sharpening their skills. Image-making, movement, and performance might sound like a bunch of separate disciplines, but for Sophie, her father Arthur and mother Grethe, they are overlapping ways of engaging with the world.

Read Article

The Elgorts

A Stance On: Legacy

Read Article
[3] ON RESTORATION: Titouan Bernicot

A Stance On: Restoration

There are some families where creativity runs through the genes. For the Elgorts, this inheritance is something they practise and finesse with commitment, forever sharpening their skills. Image-making, movement, and performance might sound like a bunch of separate disciplines, but for Sophie, her father Arthur and mother Grethe, they are overlapping ways of engaging with the world.

Read Article

Titouan Bernicot

A Stance On: Restoration

Read Article
[Feature] ON BEING READY

On Being Ready

On Being Ready

Words by Katherine Bucknell

Read Article