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New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter ’10: Thom Browne and Rad Hourani

February 16th, 2010

We criss-crossed around town on Monday to take in two highly-anticipated shows for New York Fashion Week. While both collections delivered on visual impact, they were polar opposites in terms of styling, composition and audience.

The Thom Browne show for fall/winter 2010 was a carefully choreographed presentation that had guests seated in different sections of the Park Avenue Armory, which had been designed to resemble an old parlor or Victorian-era home. Antique wooden tables sat in the middle of each room, topped with burning candles and frosted cakes displayed on silver platters. The models strolled casually into the “rooms” and walked around the tables, some pausing to take a piece of cake or to re-arrange the table setting. Add in a weighty classical piece serving as the soundtrack, and a permanently dazed expression on the models’ faces, the show felt at times like watching smug ghosts wandering through the halls of a haunted house.

As for the clothes, Browne showed his signature ankle-barring trousers and shrunken-fit suits, but also introduced a slightly roomier aesthetic with long, chunky-knit cardigans, loosely draped vests and even some man-dresses (well, more like extra-long tunics or shirts, perhaps). The colors were typically muted, though Browne ventured outside his usual grey and added touches of navy, brown and red as well. As for the details, there was only one worth mentioning: raccoon tails that dangled off many of the jackets and even bunched into a long train on the finale outfit. It looked about as confusing as you’d imagine, though it seemed like Browne was ready to go out of the box this season, and he was determined to make a statement.

Canadian designer Rad Hourani, meantime, confused some fashion watchers with an all-black, goth-inspired collection that was eerily similar to what he showed last year. But Hourani admitted that he wasn’t starting from scratch, but rather continuing to explore and develop the raw, androgynous motif that has quickly become his signature.

The silhouette is symmetrical and lean, with straight skinny pants (some in patent leather and neoprene) and boxy, layered jackets. Some extensive zipper detailing and a few exaggerated collars and coattails might have been distracting if not for the designer’s deft touch — and the all-black palette. Instead of looking like castoffs from a Matrix sequel, the pieces were intricate and interesting and, surprisingly, something we could actually picture people wearing. And at the end of the day, regardless of whether you’re using raccoon tails or shiny zippers, if there’s an audience and customer for your pieces, you can pretty much get away with whatever you want to do.

Corduroy in Montreal…

October 1st, 2009

Wanted to tell you about two beautiful shops we stopped by during our recent visit to Montreal:

1. Librissime is a gorgeous book shop located on Rue Saint-Paul near the outskirts of Old Montreal. Walk through the store’s striking double doors and you’ll enter into a dream library, with wall to ceiling mahogany shelves stocked with old tomes, photo anthologies and religious and historical literature in more than a dozen languages and just as many editions.

With a focus on rare and special-edition books (and accessories), Librissime is where the avid collector can find personally-signed editions by Chanel or Valentino, Massaï bookends, vintage crates and even a $4000 saddle-stitched white leather bookcase made by Coach. For the average reader, there’s also a fine selection of pocket books and comics, though we found ourselves enthralled by the neatly-arrange rows of Assouline art and photography books, featuring such iconic names as Serge Lutens, Helmut Newton and Peter Lindbergh. If you can’t check out the store in Montreal, don’t worry. The owners are preparing to open a second location in the Meatpacking District in New York this fall. Details at www.librissime.com.

2. Boutique Reborn is quickly becoming a top destination for trend-setters and fashion-minded folk in and around Montreal, with its carefully-curated selection of Canadian designers and hard-to-find international labels.

The clothing, like the store, is sleek and simple, yet unquestionably stylish. Savvy shoppers will appreciate the appearance of local designers, like Complex Geometries’ line of architectural tees and tanks, as well as old favorites like Acne and the house line from Opening Ceremony. We loved combing through their selection of Alexander Wang tees and dresses for women and their rack devoted to Rad Hourani’s new offerings for men (Hourani has been quoted as saying that storeowner Brigitte Chartrand is his “muse”). Indeed, Chartrand is one of those impossibly stylish women, whose eye for fashion is matched only by her pride in the tiny store. In many ways, it’s as if Chartrand has opened up her personal closet to visitors, inviting them in to browse and pick out favorite pieces from her collections. We know we’ll be shopping in Chartrand’s “closet” over and over again. Details about all the designers they carry and online shopping at reborn.ws.

- TC

New York Fashion Week Spring/Summer ’10: Rad Hourani

September 21st, 2009

New York Fashion Week ended on Thursday but we’ve still got a couple shows left to recap. And when the shows are as bold and exciting as Rad Hourani’s show at Milk Studios the other day, well, you can’t help but want to read — and write — all about it.

The Montreal-based Hourani has become of the buzziest designers in recent weeks, thanks to hisTommy Ton-shot lookbook and his new collection for spring/summer, which featured plenty of hard-hitting, androgynous looks in an almost completely black and white palette. Equal parts space-age and medieval age, the garments also drew inspiration from metal rock, goth and even ballet, resulting in a collection that Hourani called “asexual” and “aseasonal.”

Models clomped down the runway in embellished motorcycle jackets, draped blouses and backpack-like capes, paired with shredded leggings, slashed shorts and — for both women AND men — some uncomfortable looking four-inch squared-toe heels (We remarked early on that the male models seemed to be walking gingerly and then had an “Ah Ha..” moment minutes later when we looked down at their shoes). Collars were almost non-existent on many of the garments, while the flaps on the jackets and pullovers were cut large and loose. Zippers and metal chains made hefty accents, to balance the otherwise sheer and flowy fabrics. While it takes a special individual to be able to pull off the complete Hourani look, we hear buyers are already lining up to place their orders on some of the more wearable pieces from the collection.

Check out a clip of Rad Hourani’s runway show, shot with our FLIP cameras, below:

- TC

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