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THE BEST OF FASION WEEK - NEW YORK
New
York Fashion Week
NEW YORK - American designers are having their moment in the
spotlight at New York Fashion Week and, in the process, they're building a
bigger base of fans.
Steven Kolb, executive director of the Council of
Fashion Designers of America, said Thursday that he's heard from buyers at the
chicest European stores that they're increasingly looking to the U.S. for new
talent. Derek Lam, for example, is one of the best-selling lines at London's
Harvey Nichols, according to Kolb.
"Today's designers are talented and
they're marketers. That's part of the excitement about American fashion - it's
part of the enthusiasm. And the established designers really want to nurture the
young designer. That's very American," he said.
"American fashion is alive
and well," agreed Style.com's Executive Fashion Director Candy Pratts Price,
noting that so far this month her Web site has had some 9 million visitors. "New
York is looking strong this season. There's long, there's short, there's clothes
to grab and go. They reflect the modern way of dressing."
Fashion Week was
set to wrap up Friday with shows by Ralph Lauren and Donna Karan, among other
designers.
J. Mendel : For all those women - OK, for the
handful of superstylish, ultrawealthy women - who were wondering how to
incorporate fur in their wardrobes, Gilles Mendel offered several luxurious and
lovely answers.
A sand-colored goat jacket - worn with a suede belt,
white-cotton button-front shirt and cotton-canvas pencil skirt - was the picture
of polish, as were a group of white daytime outfits made from broadtail and
patent leather.
Another outstanding fur piece was a light purple goat coat.
It was the soft, beautiful color that made it so special.
This collection
also featured the rare denim garment, though it was almost unrecognizable in a
crisp paneled skirt.
The gowns glided down the runway in front of Kyra
Sedgwick, who has worn Mendel on the red carpet. The best was a silvery gray one
with vertical swaths of organza. Many of the other gowns featured geometric
origami details.
Cynthia Rowley : "Candy is dandy but wicker is
slicker," Rowley said in her notes. How does that translate to the runway?
Pretty literally.
Rowley's opening dresses all had wicker embellishments,
then moved to a series of dresses made of a print that looked like a caned
kitchen chair. Surprisingly, it made for a charming sundress.Next out were the
candy-coated looks, including colorful embroidery on a floral-pattern tunic worn
with equally colorful leggings.Wacky humor is part of Rowley's persona, and she
emphasized it with a dress covered with fingerprints the designer called the
"he-couldn't-keep-his-hands-off-her-all-night" dress.
Prior
shows:
- Anna Sui : Sui took her audience to a bizarre
"Alice in Wonderland" tea party that was crashed by some punk pirates.Sounds
about right for Sui, who relishes in her role as fashion's rebellious rocker
chick, and her clothes reflected that. Many of the outfits were still wearable,
even the unlikely pairing of a pretty black embroidered organza dress with a
ripped mesh top.
- Michael Kors : So many
little girls dream of being a dancer. After Kors' show, many big girls will
dream of wearing dancer-inspired clothing.To a soundtrack laced with music from
the Broadway show "A Chorus Line," models went down the runway in full, fluid
jersey skirts - the best ones, called "rehearsal skirts," were asymmetrical with
a high slit on one side - and soft cashmere sweaters.
- Matthew
Williamson : Anyone waiting for a blast of bright colors got it at
Williamson's show, held inside a newly renovated building at a Hudson River
pier.An entire group of outfits seemed to be inspired by button candy - sweet
little circles in all the shades of the rainbow.
Vera Wang : Poise. Grace. Elegance. Those are the
words for Wang's spring collection and the designer herself, who went on with
her show Thursday despite the death of her father earlier in the day.
She
placed a piece of paper on each seat with a simple note that her presentation
was dedicated to the memory of C.C. Wang. When she took her bow at the end of
the show, it was clear she had been crying.
Immersing herself in fashion is
probably a comfort for Wang. It's where she practices - and excels - at her
craft.
Wang said she was "exploring the emotionally charged space of the
geisha's wardrobe and the ballerina's rehearsal layers" in her light, delicate
collection.
A lame negligee gown with oversized embellished pockets, worn
over a nude tulle T-shirt, was like liquid gold, while a whisper-light blush
crinkled chiffon dress with an open back was - in a word - stunning.
Outfits
that looked like the simple, inviting styles a ballerina might wear after a
rehearsal actually had many intricate details woven into each one. One of the
best examples: a black kimono blouse with a sheer organza back, a navy wrap tutu
skirt with black floral embroidery and sheer black drawstring warm-up
pants.
Calvin Klein : Designer Francisco Costa had a trick
up his sleeve to make this season's loose and breezy dresses just a bit sexier.
He put skintight sheaths under voluminous sheer overlays so you could just see
enough of the models' trim figures.
Costa also took spring's buzzword -
"airy" - quite seriously, creating several dresses out of mesh and some of
perforated leather.
As always with a Calvin Klein collection, the lines of
the clothes were clean and the colors were cool.
A light sage green dress
with horizontal accordion pleats on the bodice was as wild as it got. Otherwise,
the palette was almost entirely white, except for a few outfits in black and
yellow. Instead, the focus was on texture, including several looks in a stiff
crocodile-pattern fabric.
Badgley Mischka : Even when
they use a restrained hand, Mark Badgley and James Mischka turn out elegant and
glamorous gowns.
For spring, they didn't use as many of the beads, crystals
and other embellishments that have become their signature, but the dresses were
unmistakably theirs, much to the delight of the jet-setters in the front row who
gave the designers a standing ovation.
An eggshell-colored tulle gown with
jewels around a plunging V-neck and the waist was soft and sophisticated, and a
delicate art deco-style silver tulle vest paired with a long tiered chiffon
skirt could only be described as pretty.
Sharon Stone, their new spokeswoman,
would look sleek and sexy in the gold-and-ivory drop-waist gown with silver
trim.
Recently, though, the designers have tried to court younger customers,
too, and for them, they offered a short ivory organza dress with subtle
horizontal rows of beads and a cocktail dress made of black-and-white chiffon
and taffeta cut into vertical zigzag lines.
- Carmen Marc Valvo : Valvo is known for eveningwear, and
there were indeed many lovely cocktail dresses and gowns at his show, but it was
the swimwear that really stood out.His "full-bodied bikini" looked more like a
dainty, black-lace, long-sleeve bodysuit - but it also looked great.
-
Peter Som : With this collection, Som courted
sophisticated and refined women who also want to wear the looser shapes of the
season.
- Ports 1961 : Ports 1961, a brand that originated
in Canada, made its first appearance at New York Fashion Week with a collection
rooted in 1940s Argentina.
Somehow on the catwalk, though, it all made
sense.
Bill Blass : Designer Michael Vollbracht struggled
to attract a full house as stylists, editors and buyers kept their distance
after the company took a few missteps during the transition after Blass' death
in 2002.
What a difference a year makes: Vollbracht presented an innovative
and modern fall collection, and the company put Janet Jackson in many of the
pieces over the past few months.
The relationship with Jackson continued
Tuesday as the pop singer sat in the front row for Vollbracht's spring show,
along with Sigourney Weaver and most of the industry's big-name
insiders.
Vollbracht presented another strong line, falling somewhere between
ladylike and sophisticated - perfect for the socialites who have filled their
closets with Bill Blass designs over the years - yet also modern and
sexy.
The show opened with a beige jersey skirt suit that had movement but
also the trappings of tradition. Generally, Vollbracht's skirts were short and
the jackets were long.
Jersey dresses and gowns also were strong, especially
a brown Grecian-style dress with a shirred waist. It was worn with silver flat
sandals, part of Blass' new shoe collection. The shoe that people will remember,
though, was a patent leather sandal with a metallic heel.
Betsey Johnson
:
Betsey Johnson sent a parade of ruffled, tiered and baby-doll dresses down the
runway, hitting notes sounded by other designers - to a rock 'n' roll
beat.
Marchesa: Marchesa is a relatively new player on the runways after
cutting its fashion teeth on Hollywood's red carpets. (Felicity Huffman won her
Golden Globe Award earlier this year in a gown by duo Georgina Chapman and Kerin
Craig.)
Derek Lam : This was the little collection that
could. The clothes weren't overdone or overstyled, or thrust down the runway
with glitz and glamour. Instead, Lam presented a lovely line full of subtle,
well-executed details.
Behnaz Sarafpour : So what if
the first model on the runway - wearing a black-and-white spotted sheath dress -
looked a little like a Dalmatian puppy? Dalmatians are cute, right? That's sort
of how the rest of the show went.
The clothes, which were almost all black or
white except for a few metallics, were cute and perky and channeled a bit of the
'60s vibe that has been felt at Fashion Week.
Monique Lhuillier : Los Angeles-based Monique Lhuillier
had the gold, linen, sand colors and bubble hems that have emerged as trends for
spring, but she made everything a little trimmer and a little more tailored. The
result: wearable, sophisticated clothes.
- Marc Jacobs
:
Jacobs previewed his desert-colored collection around an oasis he created in a
Manhattan armory that was filled to capacity Monday.
Many of the models had
on baggy genie pants. They worked when worn with an off-the-shoulder silk jersey
T-shirt and thick sash but came off as cartoonish with a smock coat.
- Luca
Luca: The high points of Luca Orlandi's collection were the feminine dresses he
is known for. An emboidered tulle and eyelet dress in white dotted with red was
soft and delicate. A long, black organza dress had an outer layer of gold bursts
and an under layer of dots and was something special.