| Design Suites LA Fashion Week March 2005 | ||||||||
| LA Fashion Shows Fashion Fashion Industry News Fashion Weeks Design Studio Fashion Designers | ||||||||
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What did we see
off-runway that tickled our editorial fancy? Well, firstly the altruistic
generosity of Trilogy Spa (you give us a massage, we Next we previewed the new footwear collection from Chinese Laundry with design assistant Paul DiLena. Our favorites include high cork wedges with python details (always love high-low fashion statements), runway-inspired leopard peeptoes and clever usage of must-have menwear tweed and boucle. Choose your own at www.chineselaundry.com. A true standout is the
avant garde collection by Linda Loudermilk who debuted during Fashion Week
LA last season with her high-tech eco-friendly couture. Aiming to
revolutionize the clothing industry by fusing recycled fabrics, advanced
technology and cutting-edge styling that turns the crunchy granola
environmentalist clich When poking your head into a hotel suite is not enough, sometimes you need to be lassoed and dragged in to see a new collection. That's what happened as we encountered the unstoppable Lori Seliger from Bootzwalla, pioneering her fuzzy faux-fur legwarmers to NHT (next hot thang) devotees in Los Angeles. We took a peek and were admittedly intruiged by her provocative marketing materials, dynamic vignetted displays and the quality of her cozy fabrications. Get your own at www.bootzwalla.com. Then, feeling the need
for further self-indulgence we detoured to sister laboratories Klorane and
Furterer from Paris, to score valuable insider tips about the world of
natural ingredients and skincare predating the invention of harsh
chemicals. There, we rediscovered the European favourites of our mothers
Denim newcomer Jelessy
plied us with presskits, yummy lipbalm and muchos photos of the super-skinny
and super-famous wearing their ultrahip threads. Revolutionizing the
jeanswear industry with a brazen assortment of 40 shades and a veritable
Willie Wonka wank-off of 26 candy colors, designer Steven Shaul couldn't
pace himself to just stop there. Now he's inked a deal with The Kabbalah
Centre to carry a licensed collection of vintage-style tops with images from
the Jewish tradition. Now that's a divine merger of spirituality and
commerce
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Review by
Apparel Search |
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| Review written by Debra Stevenson & Photographs by Carlos Alberto | ||||||||
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