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WA All Abilities footy volunteers honoured
WA All Abilities footy volunteers honoured

Perth Now

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Perth Now

WA All Abilities footy volunteers honoured

The unsung heroes behind the WA All Abilities Football Association have been recognised with a prestigious volunteer award for their tireless work championing inclusive footy. The association, based out of Tuart Hill, received the WA Inclusive Volunteering Award at the recent 2025 WA Volunteer of the Year Awards. It was one of seven winners chosen from more than 230 nominations. Your local paper, whenever you want it. The WA All Abilities Football Association was created to promote and grow disability football across the State. It provides opportunities for people of all abilities to participate in Aussie rules, whether it's wheelchair football, Starkick junior footy, blind AFL, or through its integrated competitions. From coaching training sessions and managing match days to mentoring players with disabilities, a committed volunteer team comprising family, friends, and passionate community members has worked tirelessly to make footy accessible to all, regardless of ability or background. Sportsmanship was on full display in the Integrated football competition as North Beach took on Fremantle CBC. Credit: Kiara Blake WA All Abilities Football Association executive officer Hayden Marchetto said the volunteers were the true champions behind the success of disability footy across WA. 'Our volunteers are everything; they're the ones doing the hard work to make inclusion real at the grassroots level,' Mr Marchetto said. 'The award gives volunteers a moment to pause and realise they're part of something bigger that really matters. 'Knowing inclusion is being recognised and valued at a State level means the world to us all.' From Warnbro and Kelmscott in Perth's south to North Beach and the newly established Wanneroo team in Perth's north, more than a dozen football clubs have a dedicated all-abilities team. Kristen Stevenson from the Minderoo Foundation presents the Inclusive Volunteering Award to Hayden Marchetto. Credit: Supplied Not only have players in competitions run by the association gained the opportunity to play footy and be part of an inclusive community, but they have also enjoyed the rare experience of competing at Optus Stadium before an AFL match and travelling interstate for national events such as the Toyota AFL Open, where WA's inclusion team secured third place overall in last year's inaugural event. Mr Marchetto hopes more clubs recognise the value of all-abilities sports and believes inclusive teams should be embraced wherever possible. 'We believe every club should have a place for inclusion. If a club has 10 teams, at least one should be for people with disabilities; the club is better off with it,' he said. 'Sport should be for everyone — all cultures, all backgrounds, all abilities. If we get that right, society is better for it. 'Footy happens to be our vehicle, but any sport can create this kind of impact.' The Wanneroo Amateur Football Club Integrated Team joined the competition this year. Credit: Perth Football League / Facebook Mr Marchetto believes the interactions players experience by being part of a wider community and club are immeasurable — not just for them but for their families as well. 'When you've got 200 or 300 people from the one club connecting, forming natural supports, it might just be a passing conversation, but for someone with an intellectual disability that's powerful. They're not just in the club, they're part of it,' he said. 'Then there's the mental health benefit for parents, especially fathers — seeing their child included in a community sporting club, just like their friends' kids, can really make a difference. 'And all this wouldn't be possible without the dedication of our volunteers, who give their time and energy to support the programs.' Sport can benefit both players and their families. Credit: Kiara Blake Speaking at the 2025 WA Volunteer of the Year Awards, Volunteering WA CEO Tina Williams said giving back brings people together. 'Volunteering WA is proud to celebrate the 2025 WA Volunteer of the Year Award recipients, who exemplify the highest standards of service and altruism, proving that every individual has the power to create meaningful change,' she said. 'This year's winners are ambassadors for connecting communities and show us that with passion, dedication and selflessness, any one of us has the potential to make a real difference in the lives of others.'

A ‘Perfect Fit' in Love and Fashion
A ‘Perfect Fit' in Love and Fashion

New York Times

time21-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

A ‘Perfect Fit' in Love and Fashion

Before there was JordanLuca, the fashion line, there was Jordan Gene Bowen and Luca Marchetto, the couple whose first hookup 15 years ago inspired peals of laughter at their Jan. 18 wedding celebration. Both were 25 in December 2010, when they locked eyes at the now-closed gay bar the Joiners Arms in London's East End. Mr. Marchetto, who had recently moved to London from his native Italy, was on a date with a man Mr. Bowen had gone out with weeks earlier. Mr. Bowen, whose date with the man had been a nonstarter, couldn't get over Mr. Marchetto's outfit. 'He was wrapped in a cashmere blanket with a backward baseball hat and sneakers,' Mr. Bowen said. 'I thought, 'Wow.'' Instead of ignoring their mutual attraction — Mr. Marchetto was taken with Mr. Bowen's style, too, especially his vintage Westwood McClaren pants — they secretly exchanged phone numbers in the bathroom. Minutes later, Mr. Marchetto told his date he wasn't feeling well and needed to go home. He then climbed into a cab and hurried to the Liverpool Street bus station, where he and Mr. Bowen had agreed to rendezvous. 'We met around 3 in the morning and kissed for ages,' Mr. Bowen said. Mr. Marchetto remembers getting home at 7 a.m. in a fog of lust, beaming over his incredible good luck. 'Jordan had told me during the kissing that he was a milliner,' Mr. Marchetto said. When his roommates started stirring that morning, he told them the good news — that he had met a 'a very hot millionaire' from Notting Hill. 'My English was really bad at the time,' he said. 'I didn't know what a milliner was.' (He soon learned his new crush made hats.) Mr. Marchetto and Mr. Bowen, now both 40, started their fashion line, known for boundary-pushing men's wear like a 2023 T-shirt mapping London's cruising spots, in 2018 from their kitchen table. Both had developed an interest in clothing and accessories years earlier, but from different points of view. Mr. Marchetto grew up in Bolzano, Italy, with his parents, Daniela and Claudio Marchetto, and a younger brother. 'I'm a proper mountain boy from a beautiful Italian mountain village,' he said. He described his parents as hippies. 'I have a lot of pictures with my mom wearing daisies.' Peace and love factored less outwardly in Mr. Bowen's upbringing. Born in Farnborough, England, he moved at age 5 to South London with his mother, Lisa Bowen. His father, who died in 2023, was largely absent, he said. He has no siblings. 'The scenes you associate with the London subculture in the '80s and '90s — mohawks and string vests, hips out — my parents were in that kind of crowd,' he said. 'They were punks. And that's kind of where I come from, and it's inherent to what I do now.' At 18, Mr. Marchetto enrolled at an Italian veterinary school. A year later, after visiting Milan with a friend who brought him to the designer Vivienne Westwood's shop, he rethought what he wanted to do with his life. Binge more Vows columns here and read all our wedding, relationship and divorce coverage here. 'As soon as I walked in, everything changed,' he said. 'From that moment on, I knew I wanted to leave medicine and study fashion.' In 2006, he graduated from Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti in Milan with a bachelor's degree in fashion design. Mr. Bowen's fashion education was largely hands-on. His aunt, Kim Bowen, a stylist who was part of London's 1970s New Romantic subculture, known for its flamboyant fashion, lived and worked in Los Angeles in the 1990s. She exposed him to a glamorous lifestyle before he had entered high school. 'She was dressing George Michael, Pink, En Vogue,' Mr. Bowen said. 'I remember distinctly being on set with Janet Jackson, who was lovely to me when I was a child.' At 15, he secured an apprenticeship with the milliner Stephen Jones, a friend of Ms. Bowen's from what he called 'a kind of university of New Romantics.' The apprenticeship, in London, was meant to last a week. Instead he spent eight years making hats for Mr. Jones. Mr. Marchetto's visit to the Vivienne Westwood shop provided more than just inspiration. After he finished college, he designed accessories for Jil Sander for a year in Milan before moving to London to become Ms. Westwood's personal design assistant. In 2009, at the start of what would become a five-year run at Ms. Westwood's company, he earned a certificate in men's wear fashion design from the University of the Arts London. Despite the promise of their first night together at the bus station, Mr. Bowen and Mr. Marchetto's romantic relationship hit a speed bump early on. The revelation that Mr. Bowen lived in a council flat in Notting Hill and was a milliner, not a millionaire, didn't matter to Mr. Marchetto. But 'we were very awkward and very young, and I couldn't figure out how to move the relationship forward,' said Mr. Bowen, who was also navigating a newfound sobriety: He had been in a 12-step program for just a year to recover from drug and alcohol addictions. In June 2011, Mr. Bowen broke up with Mr. Marchetto. But he kept making excuses to see him in East London. 'I'd leave something at his place, then say I needed to come back and get it,' he said. By 2012, he knew he had made a mistake. On Jan. 18, 2012, he sent Mr. Marchetto, who was traveling underground on the tube and had no cell service, a text. 'What I said was really cheesy,' Mr. Bowen said. 'It was, 'You still make my heart race.'' Mr. Marchetto didn't respond to the text for 'ages,' he said. 'It was excruciating.' What Mr. Bowen considered ages, though, was just an hour. And the reply that eventually landed made his heart sing. 'Luca said, 'Same around here,'' Mr. Bowen said. 'We've basically been together since then.' In 2014, Mr. Marchetto moved into Mr. Bowen's Notting Hill flat. A year later, they started working together as consultants for friends who were starting clothing brands. By 2018, they were designing their own T-shirts and coming up with ideas for patterns and prints they envisioned models wearing on fashion runways. JordanLuca was established in 2019. Mr. Bowen remembers a conversation about naming the company. 'It was, 'How stupid would it be to call a business JordanLuca,' because it was so obvious, so easy,' he said. But the name stuck, even though few in the industry would get to know it during the pandemic. 'Things were so strange at that time, with Brexit, with Covid,' Mr. Bowen said. 'We couldn't really get things going. But it did give us an opportunity to do something kind of radical, brave and big.' By January 2022, when their twice-yearly fashion shows premiered at Milan Fashion Week, they were winning praise for their transgressive designs and tailoring from magazines including GQ and Vogue Italia. But toward the end of that year, radical, brave and big started feeling less sustainable. By the middle of 2024, when they were brainstorming what to present at their next show in Milan, the couple decided JordanLuca's focus needed a change. After a summer vacation in Italy, they returned to Notting Hill thinking about a world in crisis. 'There's crisis in the wars we're living through, in the political policies,' Mr. Bowen said. The brand, they felt, should express its commitment to survival and to authenticity. On Sept. 5, Mr. Marchetto and Mr. Bowen had settled in for a quiet evening at home when Mr. Bowen emerged from the kitchen and proposed. 'I was watching Netflix and Jordan had been chopping an onion, making dinner,' Mr. Marchetto said. 'He suddenly came in front of me and said, 'Why don't we get married at the show?'' 'We had been in this kind of limbo of, how can we convey this new message of authenticity?' Mr. Bowen said. A wedding at a fashion show seemed 'completely mad,' Mr. Marchetto said. 'But I looked at him and said, 'It's genius.' Nothing is more authentic than our love. Why not make this declaration.' Because marrying in Italy presented legal hurdles, the couple was legally wed Jan. 2 by Sergio Simion, a registrar at Chelsea Old Town Hall in London with four witnesses, including Lisa Bowen, by their sides. Then, on Jan. 18, at the end of the JordanLuca fall/winter 2025 fashion show at Via Tortona 27 in Milan, they hosted a wedding ceremony. Instead of taking a bow as their models sashayed off the runway, they faced each other onstage, at a makeshift altar. Just a handful of the 450 attendees in the room had arrived knowing they would be wedding guests when the show's house music faded into an edgy version of Mendelssohn's 'Wedding March.' Mr. Marchetto was escorted down the runway by his parents, clad in a black cashmere jacket woven with silver threads, a fabric the pair had created. Mr. Bowen, who wore a white jacket with red lapels made of silk and leather, walked with his mother. Arabella Wilde, a friend and the celebrant who met them onstage, explained the surprise. 'We all know Jordan and Luca like to challenge the normal,' she said, adding that combining a wedding with their show is 'spectacularly them' and that 'love, like fashion, is all about finding that perfect fit.' In handwritten vows, followed by an exchange of rings, Mr. Marchetto told Mr. Bowen that their love transcends the kind that runs the risk of short-circuiting. 'After 15 years together, we have empathy for each other,' he said. 'Our love accommodates mistakes.' Mr. Bowen told Mr. Marchetto that their love strives 'to nourish, not devour.' Mr. Marchetto, who teared up during his vows, had been reading the room during the ceremony. 'For me, it was very real, very big, so of course I cried,' he said. He didn't expect the audience to share his depth of feeling. 'Fashion editors are usually very tough people,' he said. 'But they were crying, too.' When Jan. 18, 2025 Where Via Tortona 27, Milan A Real Treat After the couple recessed down the runway, assistants wheeled in a seven-tier wedding cake. On top were custom-designed miniatures of the grooms. 'We made them in the way we look every day,' Mr. Marchetto said. His figurine was outfitted in shorts and a backward baseball cap, with a hoodie tied around its waist; Mr. Bowen's wore a white collared shirt and sneakers. Support and Solidarity Mr. Bowen still attends 12-step groups. And Mr. Marchetto has been sober 'by proxy' for more than a decade, Mr. Bowen said. 'We create everything completely sober.' The Altar The grooms designed the altar, featuring a mix of velvet and sequins, in front of which runway models and parents posed. 'We based it on old references from movies,' Mr. Bowen said. After the wedding, attended by what Mr. Bowen called 'lots of very serious fashionista types,' the couple received well wishes from other designers and industry people. 'We were humbled and taken aback by the response,' he said.

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