The Honorable Sophia Hesketh had a rather rarefied introduction to
the fashion business (...)
When she was 18, family friend and Tatler editor
Isabella Blow enlisted her to model in a shoot with Daphne Guinness in
Kuwait. At one point Hesketh found herself in a see-through John
Galliano caftan on a sheep farm, with the farm’s very devout
Muslim owner 
Soon thereafter, she traded modeling for styling, assisting
freelance fashion editor Charlotte Stockdale and Japanese Vogue’s
associate fashion director George Cortina. And while her daily uniform
of Rika leather shorts, Alexander Wang and Acne T-shirts, and Jil Sander
brogues skews minimal—she also owns “millions” of
short black dresses—Hesketh has embraced prints of late, like this
floral Céline shift (left).
Such cheery ensembles are more in keeping with her countryside
childhood: Hesketh grew up in the 17th-century Easton Neston mansion in
Northamptonshire, England, to which Thatcher once paid a visit.
“I just knew she gave
me a nice Easter egg,” she says. With her tony upbringing and the
recent styling gigs she’s landed, Hesketh could easily have a
to-the-manor-born attitude—but she’s keeping her feet
planted on the ground. “It’s nice to know I can still do
stuff with George,” she says. “In case I never make any
money.”
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