1.
You can find inspiration in everything. If you can't, then you're not looking properly.
Paul Smith
2.
What I adore is mixing the unexpected, things you don't imagine should go together
Paul Smith
3.
Don't dress for fashion, dress for yourself
Paul Smith
4.
Stop making sense. Logic is predictable. Think differently.
Paul Smith
5.
Many people look but they do not see.
Paul Smith
6.
Fashion is about today and tomorrow.
Nobody cares how good you used to be
Paul Smith
7.
People, even children, aren't really afraid of change. They're afraid of not being prepared for change.
Paul Smith
8.
Great stories happen all around you every day. At the time they’re happening, you don’t think of them as stories. You probably don’t think about them at all. You experience them. You enjoy them. You learn from them. You’re inspired by them. They only become stories if someone is wise enough to share them. That’s when a story is born.
Paul Smith
9.
When life closes a door, God opens a window.
Paul Smith
10.
I think I was really naïve. I had no context to think about what I wanted to do. Each step was a next stage of exploration.
Paul Smith
11.
Experience is the best teacher. A compelling story is a close second.
Paul Smith
12.
I'm very curious and being childlike
is vital in our industry
Paul Smith
13.
Maybe that's what I've based my career on: getting up earlier than everyone else so I get an extra couple of hours.
Paul Smith
14.
The Japanese are hard to understand, but once you do the world is your oyster.
Paul Smith
15.
When knowledge is scant or conflicting, folklore takes over.
Paul Smith
16.
Christianity began in Palestine as an experience, it moved to Greece and became a philosophy, it moved to Italy and became an institution, it moved to Europe and became a culture, and it moved to America and became a business! We've left the experience long behind.
Paul Smith
17.
I was always kind of naïve, and really needed to be given some direction.
Paul Smith
18.
I've always been a keen cyclist, I'm very close to the world of cycling. Not just cycling really - also walking, adventures, being a curious person, traveling to new countries.
Paul Smith
19.
I got the letter about becoming a Sir in 2000, the same year that Pauline asked me if we could finally get married. My assistant, Colette, called up and it turned out both the wedding and the Buck House ceremony were happening on the same day. I was knighted at 11 and married at four. She became an instant Lady.
Paul Smith
20.
I was always making things. I made model airplanes and did a number of hands-on activities. I liked creating in some form or another, not realizing what it was all about.
Paul Smith
21.
I think it was interesting that when you're in those formative years you respond to things that interest you and don't always know where they lead. But they accumulate and add up to something that enriches your later life or leads you to some new experience.
Paul Smith
22.
There's always an important person who helps support your interests and encourages you.
Paul Smith
23.
My parents never prevented me from doing anything, but they didn't have the knowledge of the arts that Mrs. Ranger had.
Paul Smith
24.
Jack Sturtzer, one of my cousins, had gone to art school and suggested that I might be interested in a private school called the Art Institute of Buffalo, and in fact that is what happened. So upon graduation in 1948, I then went to stay with my cousins on Seventeenth Street and enrolled in the program at the Art Institute on Elmwood Avenue.
Paul Smith
25.
Charles Burchfield would look at what you were working on and not say anything for several minutes. Then he would very sensitively respond - "Well, have you thought about?" or "Might you consider?" I respected that so much because I thought he was so sensitive to my work, and didn't want to offend me, but in the right way to encourage me.
Paul Smith
26.
In a social studies class I did a paper on the history of Attica, which ended up being a little book that I created.
Paul Smith
27.
At one point I had dreams of being in the school band, but I didn't play an instrument that qualified me, and that was a problem. I always had fantasies to be part of that, but I did take my piano lessons quite seriously.
Paul Smith
28.
I was always busy doing something, being an only child.
Paul Smith
29.
At home, the radio was a big source and the classic radio programs we would listen to like Amos and Andy and whatever other ones there were.
Paul Smith
30.
It was mainly a growing farm, although we did have chickens and a few animals, but I did help to some degree with that. I have to say that it was not my favorite association.I did what I was asked to do.
Paul Smith
31.
The environment itself was culturally a vacuum, in that there was simply nothing that would inspire me in the arts. But my parents were always very supportive of anything that I explored or wanted to do.
Paul Smith
32.
He [my father] didn't have a basement workshop as such, but I know that he did build things, construct things, repair things. My mother, likewise, was sewing and doing activities that often take place in a household.
Paul Smith
33.
Being born in '31 was during the Depression and in my earlier youth World War II took place - so it was not the best of times, and yet I don't recall ever having experiences that were a burden.
Paul Smith
34.
The first important [step] one was going to school. There was an advantage as there was a one-room schoolhouse that was within walking distance of my home. I went there being very shy, but I fit in quickly, and I was nurtured by a very dedicated and caring teacher, Magdalen George, who we referred to as Miss George. She was my teacher for a full seven years.
Paul Smith
35.
I learned from books that I picked up. That was something that just came out of nowhere but continued to be an attraction. So there was a continuum of my interest in the arts and involvement in creating that was strong enough that it later blossomed into much more.
Paul Smith
36.
Upon graduation, in the yearbook I was voted "Most likely to succeed." which I know was credited to my artistic achievements.
Paul Smith
37.
I know that I was conscious of all the aspects of the war, having had cousins who were in the army, who would send me notes and memorabilia. I began to collect things that they would send me.
Paul Smith
38.
In terms of any sacrifices at the time [of World War II], I was somewhat protected living on a small farm where there was food, different perhaps from living in a city environment. I know such things as gas rationing did exist, but it wasn't anything that interfered with my daily activity.
Paul Smith
39.
There was a certain amount of discipline, I think; my parents wanted to be sure that I was not just sitting around doing nothing.
Paul Smith
40.
The pastors and ministry leaders came away energized to have voter registration drives at their churches and motivated to encourage their congregations to "vote their values."
Paul Smith
41.
There were neighbors that I played with and did all the things that children do. I did mow the lawn. I did help with various things that needed to be done to occupy my time.
Paul Smith
42.
We've got a nation of people who have one eye looking out for the next speed camera, another looking for a speed limit sign and another looking at the speedometer - which is a bit of a shame, when you only have two eyes.
Paul Smith
43.
I was engaged in all the required courses of math and geometry, but the area that I blossomed in was the art program.
Paul Smith
44.
It was only when I got to high school and was in the art program that my artistic talent was recognized. The art program was directed by a wonderful and a very important person in my life - Charlotte Ranger, who was referred to as Mrs. Ranger. She had been teaching in the school for many years.
Paul Smith
45.
I became a bit of a teacher's pet, and it became known in the school by both faculty and students that I really excelled in the arts. So that recognition I credit for my growing interest in art that continued to evolve later on.
Paul Smith
46.
In thinking back, not having any experience in any other elementary school, there may have been an advantage of being with different age groups to benefit from what they were learning in a more advanced capacity. With a small group like that, there was a lot of one-to-one teaching.
Paul Smith
47.
I think there were some programs but in those days art programs were kind of basic. You would do drawing and simple collage type work. But at home I was beginning to get interested in doing my own thing as well. I'm not sure what inspired this, but I became very interested in decorating things.
Paul Smith
48.
I was painting furniture, learning to stencil, and explore all kinds of traditional techniques of decoration. I learned from books that I picked up.
Paul Smith
49.
At school there were some programs in music. I did take piano lessons, and we had a piano at home. I got very interested in that.
Paul Smith
50.
Going back to the elementary school days, I was always drawing. I entered a Victory poster competition and won the top award that recognized my artistic instincts.
Paul Smith