Television Lorenzo Caprile tells in Las tres puertas the reason why he almost left fashion: "He is very perverse"

Lorenzo Caprile was one of the celebrities who visited Las tres puertas on Wednesday, March 29

Television Lorenzo Caprile tells in Las tres puertas the reason why he almost left fashion: "He is very perverse"

Lorenzo Caprile was one of the celebrities who visited Las tres puertas on Wednesday, March 29. The designer spoke in the La 2 space about the negative side of his profession and explained that he has thought of leaving it on more than one occasion.

María Casado asked him at the beginning of the interview: "Where does your passion for fashion come from?" He replied: "That's what I ask myself every day. Where does my passion for rags come from? I assure you that if I could go back, I wouldn't be in this."

The judge of the Masters of Sewing shared: "I have had many vocation crises, but hey, here I am." Later he said that the world of fashion is not as expected: "It is a very tricky industry, which also plays with very delicate human materials, which are your humanity, your little complexes, your desire to pretend or not to pretend... It's a very wicked world."

The dressmaker pointed out that he has had his feet on the ground and stressed: "I have my own workshop, I don't have partners, I'm not a billionaire... but my freedom is priceless. In that sense, the very expensive and high tolls they are paying other colleagues I save them". He also stressed that what he really likes is "the essence of the trade."

The presenter recalled that Caprile does not do parades, to which he added: "Either you have the ability to put on a 'show' like the ones you can see in Paris or it is better not to, because sometimes you are ashamed of others."

Lorenzo Caprile stated in Las tres puertas that he does not usually buy new clothes. He took a look at the clothes he was wearing and pointed out that almost all of them were borrowed or second-hand. The guest looked back to talk about his beginnings in the world of fashion, when he was only "13 or 14 years old."

"I started as an intern in a large textile group in Como, in Italy, which was the capital of silk in those years. Now, unfortunately, no. The capital of everything now is China... I've been in the industry for 40 years now I know her so well and all her tricks and all her traps that for me to spend money on a brand new garment, it has to be something very, very, very special," he declared.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project