Fur is must-have item on the runways
Michael Kors even offers up a mink minidress in Fashion Week show
![]() Kathy Willens / AP This fox coat, dyed electric blue, was a statement piece during the presentation of Michael Kors' fall 2007 collection at Fashion Week in New York on Wednesday. |
NEW YORK - It used to be that fur was an almost unattainable luxury, reserved for the wealthiest women who would then cherish their mink coats for many, many years.
But on the runways of New York Fashion Week, fur has turned into a must-have item for fall, even if it’s just a subtle trim on a collar or cuff, or, as seen at Marc Bouwer, really good-looking fake fur.
Michael Kors, at his Wednesday runway show, went so far as to make a mink minidress.
“If the past two falls have been about jewel-encrusted clothing, this fall will be all about fur-enhanced clothing,” said trend analyst Tom Julian of ad agency McCann-Erickson. “From outerwear to knitwear, from red-carpet gowns to skirts, fur is becoming the trim that women will have to have as part of their wardrobe — real or faux.”
Fashion previews for next season continue through Friday.
Anna Sui
There’s always a familiarity to Anna Sui’s designs; you know they’ll be bouncy and playful. In this case, reliability is a good thing.
Fashion is so often about the newest, hottest thing, but being able to count on Sui to produce clothes that are both fun and fashionable is actually refreshing.
Her latest take on hippie chic — 30 years later — included loose minidresses in kitschy prints, such as one that looked like a newspaper and another one covered in safety pins; a few even had tassels at the hem. Only Sui could get away with that.
She did use the popular palette for fall — brown, black, gray, purple and metallics.
She opened with a cool pewter parka with bubblelike smocking, and the next few models wore ski-themed outfits, even black ski pants with stirrups. (Sui’s pal Marc Jacobs also had stirrups on some of his pants this week, but his were subtle. These were not.)
Models also wore black fur hats that appeared to mimic the hairstyle of rocker Joan Jett, who sat in the front row.
Vivienne Tam
Vivienne Tam paid homage to legendary designer Paul Poiret — one of the first Europeans to take an interest in Asian fashion — in her fall collection.
She mixed his passion for detail and his affinity for chemise and column dresses with her signature use of ribbon embroideries and cutouts.
“If you could be inspired by a trip to India, you could be inspired by another designer,” observed Valerie Steele, director of the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan. “It makes more sense, actually.”
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This was, in fact, a show of almost all dresses. A black jersey dress with different shades of purple macrame was very striking, and a plum sheath dress with a navy crochet overlay in a lattice pattern was stunning.
Tam also took a stab at the skull motif that has become so popular: She used skeleton heads instead of dragons in a traditional Chinese print.
Michael Kors
Michael Kors makes clothes that people want to wear. On another bitterly cold winter day, models wrapped themselves in a wraparound cardigan made of caramel-colored cashmere and a super-soft turtleneck sweaterdress topped with a broadtail jacket.
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“Delicious dichotomy,” is how the designer described it in a statement.
“This was for a glamorous urban warrior,” stylist Mary Alice Stephenson said after the show. “It was stunningly beautiful, one of his best. It was sexy, chic, wearable, glamorous, elegant and edgy.”
A lot of that edge came from his accent colors — a bright orange, new to the runway this season, and electric blue. A fox coat dyed that blue certainly was a statement piece.
And when Kors did metallic, certainly a trend for fall, he did it full force, including a gold fringe dance dress and gold cheetah-pattern brocade dress.
Kors, one of the judges on TV’s “Project Runway,” offered few red-carpet looks, focusing more on daytime outfits, but there was a champagne-colored chiffon jersey gown with a twisted halter top that was outstanding.
Proenza Schouler
Designers Lazaro Hernandez and Jack McCollough touched on many of the season’s trends — fur, chunky knits, patchwork, metallics, slim shapes and corsets — but they put their own edgy spin on them.
Fur coats had casual knit sleeves as did a great olive-colored felt jacket that was worn with black trousers with full legs. A felt varsity jacket, complete with an insignia, had croc-skin sleeves. Many of the coats, however, had short sleeves, which lends itself to the layered look that Proenza Schouler’s young hipster fans love to wear.
There were two options for cocktail dresses, either Art Deco-inspired ones with beading or a a strapless corset style with a pleated sash that curved down the bodice. One of the best dresses, though, was a more casual one — it was a bottle green knit dress with cable stitching on the top half and ribbing on the bottom.
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