
My sister’s interest in science shone out straight away when we were young, but
I was a bit lost. We were very different.
At 19, I had the best year of my life: I did a foundation course in the arts
at Kingston University. We did a bit of everything. The course enabled you to
explore your own creativity.
I could have gone in a number of directions, but the fashion Head Daphne Brooker
picked me out to join the Ba course. I ended up in Rome, designing for Valentino
and another designer. Then I joined forces with Caroline Coates to set up a fashion
business. We ran it for 12 years and we now run the
Helen Storey Foundation together.
My sister is
Professor Kate Storey, a neurobiologist and Associate Dean of Research in the College of Life Sciences,
University of Dundee. She’s been my entry point to science. In 1994 she told me
about a
Wellcome Trust science/art initiative. We joined forces, applied for funding and ran a project
called
Primitive Streak. I left the business to do this full time: the project toured in seven countries
and was seen by three million people.
I’ve always been fascinated by science, in particular in how things come to be
and how they disappear. Several things got me thinking about packaging. How sensitive
could packaging materials be? Could they detect volume change? If you had a bottle,
for instance, could it shrink as you gradually got rid of its contents?

Then I heard
Professor Tony Ryan speak on Radio 4 and knew he was someone I wanted to work with. We set up and
ran ‘
Wonderland’ together. We created a dress that disappeared. We showed this in different
UK cities. And we’ve ended up inventing a bottle that you put under the hot tap
when its empty which turns it into a soil-like gel while the cap becomes like
a pepper pot lid with seeds.
You get flowers!
The professorship of science and fashion was set up for me a year ago, and it
enables me to carry on exploring science, fashion and sustainability. I’m working
with Tony Ryan again, and others, and we have backing from
NESTA to look at
Catalytic Clothing. We are developing a detergent you add to the clothes wash. Explosed to light
(UV rays), your clothes purify the air around you. It will work best when lots
of people use it.
We also set up
Free Radicals, a group of 22 academics who want to tackle world problems. Each of our universities
has committed to saving 30 percent of the water they use, and they’ll donate half
the money they save to
One Water , which is a project that builds roundabouts in third world countries. When children
and adults play on the roundabouts, they power a pump that supplies cleans water.

Through science and art, I want to involve people in technology-to-come.