The Grammys red carpet goes (mostly) quiet.
“If she doesn’t need it, she doesn’t have it,” is how Brandon Maxwell explained his streamlined vision for fall, which manifested itself in ath-luxe silhouettes for superheroines.
At this star-packed show based on futurism, the best pieces were the most down-to-earth.
For fall, indie spirits Mike Eckhaus and Zoe Latta brought a new polish to their offbeat aesthetic, showing a collection that was just arty enough without being weird.
The enfant terrible of today collaborated with artist Aleksandra Mir to hand-draw “fake news” headlines on an elevated range of clothing.
“When you are going through something in your life, you ask yourself what can I eliminate to make things easier? That’s how I approached this season: If she doesn’t need it, she doesn’t have it,” he says ahead of his fall 2019 show.
Brock’s fall collection had plenty of the brand’s trademark romantic flourishes, but it was also its most accessible to date.
No one will soon forget this experience, a new benchmark for the activist designer’s collaborative power to create something that transcends fashion in medium and message to become its own kind of performance art.
The heritage Hawaiian shirt maker has a new creative director, ceo and headquarters.
Tadashi Shoji’s “Crazy Rich Asians”-inspired eveningwear had lush velvet trains, tiers of tulle and loads of sequins.
Rachel Comey is one designer who believes you can have a runway show whenever and wherever you want — or not.
On Feb. 6, Carter will open IMG’s New York Fashion Week in conjunction with Harlem’s Fashion Row, with a display of 45 costumes spanning her career. “I haven’t really gotten fashion opportunities,” she says.
Bringing the runway to the store rack.
DBA represents 140 influencers spanning the fashion, beauty and lifestyle space, including Aimee Song (Song of Style), Emily Schuman (Cupcakes and Cashmere) and Julia Engel (Gal Meets Glam).
The book includes dating advice from couples who have proven that style knows no age.