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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.

Anna Wintour in Queens (for Fashion’s Night Out)

August 17th, 2009

We never thought we’d see the day when Vogue editrix Anna Wintour would set foot in a mall, let alone a mall in Queens. But for one night only, you and hundreds (okay dozens) of other Vogue fans and curious fashionistas alike will have a chance to not only meet Wintour, but get her autograph (and nods of outfit disapproval) as she hosts a signing with designer Michael Kors at the Queens Center Mall Macy’s. It’s all part of “Fashion’s Night Out” — a global event designed to promote fashion and retail in major cities across the world. In New York, more than 700 shops and boutiques will be keeping its doors open late on September 10th, with special appearances, giveaways and events designed just for the occasion.

Barneys flagship store on Madison Avenue and 61st Street will be transformed into a street fair of sorts, with appearances by Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen (promoting their new collection for “The Row”), as well as Marcus Wainwright and David Neville from Rag & Bone, Thom Browne, Narcisco Rodriguez and others. Stella McCartney and Armani are serving up cocktails and special discounts, there’s live music at Bloomingdale’s, karaoke at Kiehl’s and Opening Ceremony is hosting a “garage sale,” with Rodarte, Alexander Wang, Proenza Schouler and Band of Outsiders selling goods made exclusively for the event, out of the back of custom cars. It’s the one time you can safely buy a signature Alex Wang handbag from the back of a dark van in Chinatown without feeling cheap and seriously illegal.

The entire list of participating designers and stores can be found HERE. In the meantime, we’ve already started planning our itinerary for the night. We’re thinking of starting out with a drink or two at Maison Martin Margiela and OAK, before heading over to Opening Ceremony for some shopping, a stop at Prada’s visual art exhibition and then winding down with a party at Pat Field’s. What are YOU most looking forward to? And who thinks fashion should have more than just one night out?

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