When University of Virginia School of Nursing student Davon Okoro recalls his first foray into fashion, he smells bleach.
As a 16-year-old, he’d cut T-shirts in half and stitch the mismatches together at a vertical seam, experiment making distress marks and holes, and test the effects of applying bleach with a paintbrush or spray bottle to further alter his fabric canvasses.
And while he “messed up a bunch of clothes” in the process (to the amusement of his mom, Joyce Okoro, also a nurse), the fashion laboratory that was his family’s Queens, New York apartment, fed the style that would come to define his Guérison Globale (French for “global healing”) brand.
But it wasn’t until college that Okoro took his fashion forward in earnest. When a friend complimented him on his outfit – the centerpiece of which was a half-and-half T-shirt speckled with bleach spots – something clicked for Okoro.