Anais Gallagher plotting to ‘raid’ dad Noel Gallagher’s fashion ‘archive’

Noel Gallagher’s daughter Anais Gallagher is convinced her dad has a secret stash of fashion gems from Oasis’ 1990s hey day and she’s determined to “find it and raid it”.

Noel Gallagher’s daughter Anais is convinced her dad has a secret stash of fashion gems and she’s determined to “find it and raid it”.

The Oasis rocker has previously admitted he’s not sentimental about clothes and regularly empties out his wardrobe but Anais, 25, believes there must be an “archive” full of looks from her dad’s 1990s hey day and she’s hoping to eventually track it down.

She told The Sunday Times newspaper: “My dad isn’t sentimental when it comes to fashion and he’s someone who definitely keeps it new, so he doesn’t have a lot of stuff. I’m sure there’s an archive somewhere – I need to find it and raid it.”

Anais added that she wears a lot of clothes borrowed from her mother – Noe’s ex-wife Meg Mathews – and she even has the white suit Meg wore on the couple’s wedding day in 1997.

She said: “I’ve got the white suit that my mum wore to marry my dad hanging in my wardrobe that I have never taken off the hanger. It’s very fragile white silk and I have no idea who designed it, but I’ll have that for ever.”

Noel previously admitted he often gives away his designer clothes to his local charity shop.

The 58-year-old guitarist is known for wearing Stone Island jackets, Adidas trainers and CP Company garments and he often has a big clear-out when his wardrobe gets too.

Noel knows he could sell them as collectibles worn by him, but he prefers to put the clothes back into the world so someone else can wear them without ever knowing who the famous previous owner was.

In an interview on the LIFEJACKET YouTube channel, Noel said: “I’m not a hoarder at all. I’ll wait until my wardrobe is heaving and I’ll keep most things and then I’ll wake up one day and go, ‘Right, it’s all going.’ And I’ll just give it all to a charity shop.

“I don’t really get sentimental about it. I give them to charity shops because someone else should wear them.

“I don’t want to put them on a website and say there mine and I don’t want to leave them to my kids because they’ll swap them for a choc ice when I’m gone.

“My daughter [Anais] wears some of my gear and my eldest son Donovan will wear it, so I’ll kind of pass it on to them. But I like putting it back out there.

“Someone else can walk into Barnardo’s [charity shop] and go: ‘What? £90 for that.’ Just check the pockets, if there’s a plectrum then it belongs to me!”

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