
Fashion designer and four-time World of Wearable Art (WOW) finalist Emma Highfield is returning to the international design competition after 15 years. Her entry this year was inspired by a gruelling health journey that took her to 鈥渂reaking point鈥.
Emma Highfield, 41, first found her love for wearable art as a teenager studying at Elam School of Fine Arts at Auckland University.
鈥淚 heard about WOW around that same time and I was like, this is so something I would love to do,鈥 she tells the Herald.
She first entered the competition and became a finalist in 2007, following suit for the next three years.
鈥淭hen I think I just kind of got sucked into my career and everything else I was doing, and then obviously motherhood - and 15 years slipped by.鈥
Now based in Tauranga with her husband and two children, Highfield says a turning point came when she celebrated her 40th birthday last year.
鈥淚 did a big speech about how in the next decade of my life, I really wanted to dedicate that to reawakening my creative pursuits,鈥 she recalls.
鈥淪o I鈥檓 really proud of myself for keeping a promise to myself to enter again, and becoming a finalist is very, very exciting after a big gap of focusing on motherhood and career versus my creative interests.鈥
While she may have taken a break from WOW, during that gap she made her mark with several other ventures, from bespoke lingerie for burlesque dancers to an online baby clothing store. Most recently, she founded intimates and loungewear brand Dear Dylan, which she runs with two friends.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 our little brand trying to carve out a bit of space in the fashion industry in New Zealand.鈥
The Avant-garde section at World of Wearable Art 2024. Photo / World of Wearable Art
However, making something for WOW is a whole other outlet for her creativity.
鈥淚 like working through trial and error, I like manipulating everyday materials to see how far I can take them and what I can create for them, so that process hasn鈥檛 changed,鈥 she says.
鈥淚t was just sitting dormant, waiting for me to come back to it. Kind of like riding a bike, I think.鈥
Fifteen years since she last entered, Highfield says it鈥檚 clear the competition has grown and evolved.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot more international exposure... the process of entering and how you submit your garment and ship it and everything has become much more streamlined in that time,鈥 Highfield says.
鈥淏ut even the shows that I was in 15-plus years ago were just so incredible, and the creative team behind them just seem to outdo themselves every year.鈥
One difference for Highfield is that creating a WOW entry, which typically takes months of work, now requires even more of a juggle as a mum-of-two.
鈥淚t was definitely a different process this time around because when I entered 15 years ago, I was married but [had] no dependents.
鈥淚 had all the time in the world. This time, it was much different in terms of, obviously I couldn鈥檛 just tap out and go to my creative space and just do a twelve-hour stint working on it.鈥
This time, she fit it in amid school pickup and her kids鈥 dinner and bedtime routines.
The Avant-garde section at WOW 2024. Photo / World of Wearable Art
鈥淥nce I had the idea and I was in the flow, it came together relatively quickly for me... the actual construction, once I can see it coming together, gets very exciting and just kind of flows.鈥
While the details of her 2025 entry are tightly under wraps for now, the inspiration behind it is deeply personal, reflecting her years-long battle with endometriosis.
鈥淚t got to breaking point when I was in my late 30s,鈥 Highfield says.
She recalls experiencing 鈥渉orrific pain鈥, 40-day periods, and days when she couldn鈥檛 face leaving the house.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just something I was living with, it was really taking over my whole life and everything became about 鈥榃hen鈥檚 my period coming, how much pain am I going to be in?鈥欌
Soon before turning 40, she underwent a hysterectomy. Although not a cure for endometriosis, it鈥檚 鈥渉elped tremendously鈥 in relieving her symptoms.
Some complications meant it wasn鈥檛 all 鈥渟mooth sailing鈥, Highfield adds.
鈥淏ut since everything has healed and we鈥檝e realised what medications and everything I was reacting to, I can honestly say it has been life-changing - definitely the best decision I鈥檝e ever made.鈥
It showed she also had adenomyosis, a condition where endometrial tissue grows inside the muscle wall of the uterus itself.
鈥淢y gynaecologist said it鈥檚 basically endo鈥檚 evil twin, which is even more severe than the endo. [It鈥檚] a horrific thing for anybody to go through and to live with for so long.
鈥淚鈥檓 so glad that has all been resolved, and that part of my life was a huge inspiration in the design of my garment, which is probably a reflection of the end of that chapter.
鈥淚 really wanted to take something that has taken over so much of my life and make it beautiful and give it a finishing point. This is a representation of what I鈥檝e been through.鈥
A self-confessed 鈥渃rier鈥, Highfield is prepared to feel a wave of emotion when she sees her costume on display.
鈥淚鈥檒l be so proud of myself when I see the garment on stage. It鈥檚 going to be overwhelming, but I鈥檓 also like, all these incredible people have done all this amazing work.
鈥淲hat a wonderful moment, and how wonderful that people can watch and experience that sort of thing and we鈥檙e able to witness it all come together - how exciting. So I probably will cry and be very emotional when I see it on stage.鈥
This year, her children, aged 11 and 7, will be among her supporters in the audience on the awards night.
鈥淥bviously they鈥檝e been through the whole process of me making it and packing it up, and they鈥檝e got very interesting opinions on it, particularly my 7-year-old boy. He鈥檚 like, 鈥楳um, that鈥檚 weird鈥 - which I love. I love the honesty,鈥 Highfield laughs.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e never been to a show like that on that scale, so it鈥檒l be interesting to see what their reaction is. I think they will be immensely proud, though.鈥
This year鈥檚 World of Wearable Art runs from September 18 to October 5 at TSB Arena in Wellington.
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