
Hidden signs in your home that scream you're 'common': Socialite Nicky Haslam reveals artwork that says your tastes are lower-class - and takes a pop at Kate Moss
The furniture designer, 85, began releasing his tea towels, titled 'The Latest Things Nicky Haslam Finds Common', in 2018 usually just in time for Christmas, but he has put one on the market early this year in collaboration with Saatchi Yates, a London-based art gallery.
He has titled his £50 tea towel 'Art Things Nicky Haslam Finds Common' and the list contains 36 places and people who are lower class and concepts, words and phrases that he believes are used by 'commoners'.
This year, Haslam, who is based in the Cotswolds, has aimed his infamous tea towel at art snobs and says that silent auctions, selling art and 'artsplaining' are low-brow.
He also took aim at supermodel Kate Moss, who is on the list of averageness, despite modelling some of the world's most famous art in the form of fashion, strutting down the catwalk clad in Gucci, Versace, Calvin Klein and Vivienne Westwood. She even designed her own sell-out collections with Topshop and Zara.
The 51-year-old grew up in Croydon with her parents, barmaid Linda and Peter, then an airline employee, and admitted that it 'wasn't easy' growing up in south east London.
And despite being one of the original 'It' girls of the 90s, she has certainly been reminded of her status in the industry professionals.
In 2007, US store Barney's then-creative director Simon Doonan called Moss 'a working-class s**g from a crap town, like me.'
Also on Haslam's list was the colour white, The Mona Lisa, arguably Leonardo da Vinci's most famous painting which now sits proudly in the Louvre Museum in Paris.
Millions of tourists descend on the French capital to catch a glimpse of the slightly smiling brunette woman, an international symbol of art. But for Haslam, the painting is basic and ringarde.
Also on the list of 'common things' is Banksy, a pseudonymous England-based street artist and political activist.
The anonymous artist has been painting on public streets and signs since the early noughties and is responsible for some of the most famous pieces of art in the world.
Balloon Girl is one of his most recognisable displays and it is of a monochrome young girl appearing to let go of red heart shaped balloon carried away by the wind.
However, during a live auction in at Sotheby's in London in 2018, the painting - which was selling for millions of pounds - was put through an automatic shredder as soon as the gavel hit the block and was later known as 'Love is in the Bin' and became almost instantly more valuable.
Banksy also went on a painting spree in the summer of 2024, creating a whopping nine new murals spanning across London, which could have contributed to Haslam believing that he has become somewhat 'common' and overhyped.
While putting together his list of 'common' things for 2025, Haslam spared no one and nothing in the realm of art; targeting hanging photographs, the Sistine Chapel, oversized garden art and even the colour white.
The only designer brand on the list was French fashion house Saint Laurent which is currently being managed by Belgian-Italian creative, Anthony Vaccarello.
He has held this position since 2016 and the brand is owned by the French holding company Kering, which is also responsible for other renowned brands such as Gucci, Bottega Veneta, Balenciaga and Alexander McQueen.
Saint Laurent has been good enough for the likes of Nicole Kidman, Jane Fonda, Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga to wear at red carpet events, but it appears it is too 'low class' for Haslam.
Full list of 'art things Nicky Haslam finds common'
Selling art
Artsplaining
Sistine Chapel
Christie's
Downlit art
'Art is subjective'
Silent auctions
Children by Renoir
Symbolism
Hanging photographs
'Can't see what you see in that'
David Hockney can't paint for toffee but can draw like a god
Francis Bacon is the campest artist since Gustav Moreau
Waldemar Januszczak's real name
Giverny
The Mona Lisa
Oil paintings of big game
Oversized garden art
Studio visits
Philistine
Genres
Frieze
White
Trauma
Interpreted
Banksy
Validation
'Have you got anything to fit this space?'
Meaningful
'I'm afraid it's reserved'
Kate Moss
Tapestry wall hangings
Have you noticed there is no 'school' of Lucien Freud
Saint Laurent
Buying art at weekends
The Biennale
Tapestry wall hangings, Christie's art gallery, the word trauma, and the phrase 'art is subjective' also made the notorious tea towel of 2025.
Haslam said the exclusive one-off tea towel collaboration was to celebrate Saatchi Yates's 'incredible exhibition' called Once Upon a Time in London.
Last November, he released his 2024 tea towel just in time for Christmas and declared that his controversial list should be varied enough to upset everyone in some capacity as he took aim at dairy free alternatives, destination weddings and yellow bags (in which the products will be sold by Selfridges).
Although he appeared to take a veiled aim at Prince William through one of the 'common' things on his list, Haslam praised Meghan Markle for giving Prince Harry a 'nice life' as the pair mingle with A-listers in Montecito - away from what Haslam says are Harry's 'ghastly' family.
He declared the Duchess too, was 'ghastly' but added she has 'got guts'; referring to the Duke and Duchess's move to California in 2020 when they stepped down as working royals.
'Who'd want to live in a damn cottage in Frogmore and open boring things and have to be part of that ghastly family, all of whom hate each other? Much more fun to be with movie stars and tycoons in California and flying about. Much nicer life, and she's given it to Harry,' he said.
Despite his apparently sharp barbs towards the royals, Haslam is friends with Queen Camilla and was once a decorator for King Charles. He was even associated with Wallis Simpson during the Swinging Sixties.
While putting together his list of 'common' things for 2024, Haslam spared no one and nothing; taking aim at people who get married abroad, people who have fire pits in their garden, people who drink almond milk and people who hold gender reveal parties.
He even put Vogue's editor-in-chief Anna Wintour on the list for her daily routine, which she has shared on a number of occasions and involves her going to the gym and getting her hair done.
Among those considered lower class by Haslam are people who rescue dogs; suggesting an adopted pooch is now akin to a 'Birkin bag'.
He revealed his method for devising the tea towel each year is by jotting down 'common' things throughout the year that have irritated him.

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The episode features interviews with two veterans of the conflict, both aged 100 - Naval Officer Bill Redston, who narrowly escaped death in both Normandy and Burma (now Myanmar), and Private Joseph Hammond, who travelled from Ghana to join the Fourteenth Army and was involved in some of the most ferocious fighting of the conflict. The episode also features a poignant interview with 96-year-old Michiko Hattori, who survived the atomic bomb detonated over Hiroshima by the USA on 6 August 1945. Members of the public share moving stories and cherished items that provide a personal insight into what is often referred to as the 'Forgotten War', including several objects made by Prisoners of War, such as a food bowl carved out of a coconut, a fly swat made from old boot leather and an intricate chess set crafted by a soldier who was forced to work on the notorious 'Death Railway' between Burma and Thailand. Fiona Bruce meets the children of veterans who fought on opposing sides at the Battle of Kohima in 1944, which proved a turning point in the war. Bill Harriman hears the gruelling story of a member of the Chindits – a special operations unit for the Allies who went deep behind Japanese lines – and Siobhan Tyrrell is moved to see a pair of baby shoes, one of which the infant's father carried with him as a good luck charm through the jungles of South East Asia. VJ Day across BBC News BBC Breakfast and BBC News at One BBC Breakfast and the BBC News at One will be honouring the men and women who fought and served in East Asia. We'll hear the stories of those who are still alive, and we'll be live at the National Memorial Arboretum where the main service will take place. BBC News at Six and Ten On Friday 15 August, BBC News at Six and Ten will be presented from the National Memorial Arboretum as the day is marked in the UK and around the world. In the run-up to the day itself, they'll be running a series of interviews with veterans, and those who took part in the VJ Day celebrations. BBC News website The BBC News website will cover special events at the Arboretum with a dedicated live page updated throughout the day. VJ Day 80: We Were There - Wednesday 13 August, 9pm on BBC Two As the nation marks the 80th anniversary of VJ Day, the BBC has gathered first-hand accounts from our last veterans – many now more than 100 years old. Rachel Burden traces their stories from the invasion of British Malaya to the horror of Hiroshima and Japan's surrender in August 1945. Former prisoners of war forced to work on the notorious Burma Railroad speak about their brutal treatment and the punishing conditions they endured. Rachel speaks to one woman who was a 10-year-old child prisoner in Singapore as well as servicemen who had fought in Europe but were then deployed to India and the Far East for the final months of the Second World War. The "We Were There" project by BBC News has captured the testimony of war veterans throughout the 80th anniversaries of the Second World War since 2019 to form an archive of their voices for future generations. VJ Day on Radio and BBC Sounds BBC Radio 2 The Jeremy Vine Show will be marking VJ Day on BBC Radio 2 on the Friday 15 August, reflecting on the end of the war and bitter fighting in the Far East that culminated in atomic bombs being dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He speaks to the broadcaster Kavita Puri and hears the voices of veterans who fought for Britain against Japan in what has been described as the forgotten conflict. BBC Radio 4 BBC Radio 4 will unearth personal voices from the Second World War's Asian front, including never-before-heard archival recordings and new testimony from the war's last remaining veterans in The History Podcast: The Second Map, presented by award-winning journalist Kavita Puri (Three Million). Archive on 4 will shed light on the astonishing forgotten story of the journalist who defied the US military to publish the first eyewitness report from the ruins of Hiroshima after the atomic bomb - and the campaign to conceal the truth about the horrifying effects of radioactive fallout that followed. Coinciding with the 80th anniversary of VJ Day on Friday 15 August, Any Questions will be broadcast from REME Museum (Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers Museum). Meanwhile two-part audio drama Hersey's Hiroshima brings to life journalist John Hersey's searing account of the bombing of Hiroshima and its aftermath, drawing on interviews with survivors, and for Book at Bedtime, Tim McInnerny reads Nobel Prize-winner Kazuo Ishiguro's classic 1986 novel, set in post-WWII Japan. The History Podcast: The Second Map (from Friday 15 August) – Award-winning journalist Kavita Puri presents a three-part series uncovering Britain's role in the war against Japan, featuring never-before-heard testimonies from veterans, civilians, and their descendants. Archive on 4: Exposing Hiroshima (Saturday 2 August) – The extraordinary story of reporter Wilfred Burchett, who defied U.S. censorship to reveal the devastating effects of the atomic bomb. Drama on 4: Hersey's Hiroshima (Sunday 10 August) – A two-part audio drama bringing to life John Hersey's landmark account of the Hiroshima bombing, voiced by a distinguished cast. Book at Bedtime (from Monday 4 August) – Tim McInnerny reads Kazuo Ishiguro's An Artist of the Floating World, set in post-war Japan. Any Questions? (Friday 15 August) – Special broadcast from the REME Museum to mark the anniversary. BBC Radio 5 Live Over on BBC Radio 5 Live, the network will mark the occasion with special coverage of the commemorative event being held at the National Memorial Arboretum, as well as taking part in the national two minute silence. Matt Chorley will broadcast a special show live from the Cabinet War Rooms - the former secret, underground British headquarters in the basement of a purpose-built government building, known today as Churchill War Rooms. Broadcasting on Wednesday 13 August, almost exactly 80 years after its doors were closed following Japan's surrender at the end of WW2, Matt and a host of special guests will have incredible behind the scenes access to the site which includes Churchill's bedroom, kitchen & the BBC's broadcast room. VJ Day on BBC Sounds The History Podcast: The Second Map A new three-part podcast to mark the 80th anniversary of VJ Day unearths the forgotten voices from the Second World War's Eastern front, including never-before-heard archival footage and new testimony from the war's last remaining veterans. Listen to all episodes on BBC Sounds from Friday 15 August and live on BBC Radio 4 starting on Monday 18 of August. Created and presented by Kavita Puri, the multi award-winning journalist behind Three Million and Partition Voices, the brand new series hears remarkable testimonies from British, Indian, and Japanese soldiers who were there, as well as former prisoners of war, and civilian internees. It also includes new accounts from descendants across Britain, uncovering their family members' long-buried stories of heroism, imprisonment, and survival - from the jungles of Burma to an epic battle on a tennis court that helped shape the fate of the British Empire. We may know about Pearl Harbor and how the war against Japan ended with the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But in popular memory, what happened in between is less well-known. Even at the time, the 14th army - which fought at the pivotal battles of the Burma campaign, and made up of almost a million men, was known as the 'forgotten army'. Yet it was a war that many thousands of Britons fought in, as well as hundreds of thousands of British colonial subjects. Kavita Puri, presenter of The Second Map, says, 'The war against Nazi Germany has come to dominate the collective memory of World War II, but we forget the war against Japan. Many people have heard of Pearl Harbor, and some will have heard of the US retaliation at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but this wasn't just an American war. There are thousands of homes in Britain where a family member was part of this story. Take Yavar Abas, who is 104 years old – just one of the incredible veterans I had the privilege of hearing from for this podcast. It's been eighty years since VJ Day, and we don't have long left to honour those who fought on the Eastern front, and to make sure their voices are not forgotten. Thank you to everyone who shared their stories of heroism, resilience and heartbreak.' Daniel Clarke, Factual Commissioning Editor at Radio 4, says, ''As we approach the 80th anniversary of VJ Day, it is a privilege to present this new series from multi award-winning journalist Kavita Puri, which includes never-before-heard accounts from Britain's war against Japan, from those who were there. Thank you to Kavita and the team for another eye-opening podcast, telling important stories which are extraordinary, and which deserve to be heard. For those who enjoyed the award-winning Three Million, this new series is not to be missed.' Listen to the trailer for The History Podcast: The Second Map on BBC Sounds VJ Day across Children's and Education Newsround Newsround will feature explainers on VJ Day, the war in the East, as well as the national commemorations taking place. Coverage will also include Newsround presenters speaking to UK children about their relatives who fought in the British Army of India on the Burma Front. BBC Archive To commemorate the 80th anniversary of VJ Day, BBC Archive have curated content from across TV, Radio, Written and Photo collections to feature in special programming. Highlights include contemporary audio announcements, news, and personal testimonies, which can be heard as part of The Second Map, a Radio 4 VJ Day documentary from Kavita Puri and Ellie House, as well as in two new episodes of Witness History, a World Service production. A film from the BBC Northern Ireland Archive, containing first hand footage of the Burma Campaign, has been digitised and made available as well as a trove of never-before-seen images from the Written Archive, which capture the final days of fighting in the Pacific Theatre and the first few months of life post-war in Hong Kong, China, and Japan. TD Follow for more