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Fashion Week: 2013 edition

Remember last year when I went to Wellington Fashion Week and wrote those really long, detailed posts about the shows?  Well, it’s WFW again but this time I’m taking a slightly different approach.  Firstly: let’s talk about goodie bags.

Once again, I was surprisingly cool and waited until I had left the shows to dig through the bags.  Sidebar: I hope that when I eventually leave this mortal coil, someone writes that in my obituary. “Megan was surprisingly cool”.

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As you can see, goodie bags involve a large number of vouchers.  Some of these are actually handy, while some will require me to get a shellac pedicure in order to get a free shellac manicure.  Probably not going to use that one.

The Kathryn Wilson goodie bag (top left) was by far my favorite, chock-full of lovely skincare treats and a voucher for lovely Dyrberg Kern goodies – I’ve been considering a purchase from them so I am looking forward to using that up!

To kick off our WFW coverage properly, I’m doing (another) giveaway.  Simply leave a comment below with your favourite NZ designer and you’ll go in to win a selection of goodie bag goodies (and a surprise treat!).  The winner will be drawn on Monday 8 April, so get in quick!

Keep your eyes peeled over the weekend for brief show summaries and images of my favourite outfits and pieces from the shows this year.

The Group Shows: Part Two

Night two, and some subtle changes were afoot. In particular, the models had picked up the pace and so the show finished within the hour and had more energy. I suspect this may have been as a result of order discount viagra

news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10800258″ target=”_blank”>this NZ Herald article. I scribbled frantically! Frantically I say! I loved the hair in this show – half the girls wore their hair in two braids with volume above the braid, while the other half wore their hair in fingerwaves with greyed out areas.

The show kicked off with Robyn Mathieson

Robyn, who is originally from the deep New Zealand south, brings to her designs a clever, colourful simplicity. She has a strong eye for creative and innovative fabrics which form the basis of her signature style. Floral, abstract or geometric, her astute choices celebrate fine quality and outstanding style. Her love of retro homewares, loud prints and bright colours are always hinted at within her seasonal collections.

This was a bright and summery collection featuring teals and neons, with the occasional dingy colour and black off-setting the candy brights. Soft tshirt shapes and relaxed blazers dominated, resulting in looks that could be thrown on effortlessly. I enjoyed the trapeze dresses and the way they moved, as well as the colour blocking and occasional chevron print. The stylists had once again put the models in socks, which truthfully is beginning to get a bit mystifying since this is a summer collection. Socks in summer?

Neverblack

The intention behind neverblack is to deliver high-quality and cutting edge fashion for men and women at a price that won’t break the bank…Neverblack’s up and coming AW12 collection, An/Insignificant/Being, was inspired by Maurice Sendak’s classic children’s tale “Where The Wild Things Are” and the decadence and decay of 70a documentary “Grey Gardens”, An/Insignificant/Being fuses natural fibers with extravagance to bring the juxtaposing stories of fantasy and reality to life.

To me, the reference to Grey Gardens was

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reflected firstly in the colour palette of soft neutrals and sage green. The women’s clothes were girly, accessorised with loosely knotted ropes at the waistline. Once again, the girls wore socks. The designers had included velvet, but kept the weight light and moveable. The womenswear was demure, while the menswear was slick but workingman – the rolled trousers tucked into smart but practical boots spoke of boys from the factories out in their cars and picking up girls at the milkbar. The menswear showed a nice use of layering and detail, including trim on the pockets and a shirt with pintucking in white just down one side.

philippa & alice

The label draws upon the

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tension between the innocence and naivety of youth and the sometimes painful but necessary rites of passage to adulthood to explore the spectrum of the feminine aesthetic and identity. Bringing together the two very different but complementary aesthetics of the designers to create a unique look consisting of very structured tailored pieces and softer more feminine elements.

philippa & alice showed their 2012/13 collection, which included more printed pants. Seriously, get those printed pants. We also saw more shirts buttoned up to the throat, but with collars in a contrasting fabric. The colours were soft and animal prints (and screenprinted animals) were repeated. There was more print-mixing but at times it was more clashing than complimentary. There were a number of dresses and tops that were cutaway and laced up, which unsurprisingly looked good on the models but I suspect will be tough to wear. The collection used an interesting Aztec print on skirts, dresses and tops as well as a lot of floral against black.

Silence Was

Silence Was… A simple everyday apparel brand , launched in July 2011 with a simple mission to make the perfect “silent and romantic” shirts and dresses. Silence Was… aims to offer an updated concept of bespoke tailoring to modern day classic with the pieces you would love to wear until they are fallen apart through time…

More shirts buttoned to the neck, so I guess while we’re all buying printed pants we should probably also buy a few shirts to button right up. However this collection was initially more wintery, with heavy textured fabrics and colours like plum, charcoal, navy and cream. While some of the clothes were obviously textured, there was more subtle use of contrasting textures in various items resulting in a collection that bore a second look. As more items showed, there was seemingly a transition to lighter summery pieces, with my pragmatic side dismissing various light, flirty skirts as far too insubstantial for the Wellington winds. The tailoring was careful and refined, with well-executed cutaway details and in particular, a blue silk dress that featured a number of barely-there straps.

Kelsey Genna

Founded in 2011, Kelsey Genna is a handmade label based in New Zealand. The label is proudly hand crafted locally with all pieces being made to measure in limited quantities. The collection is sold exclusively through the online boutique and occasional pop up stores. Kelsey, 20 years old, recently graduated with a degree in Fashion Design.

This collection was saccharine girlishness in full flight. Puffed sleeves, pale pink, ruffles and gingham were offset by a Francophile soundtrack and small posies of flowers. I thought the dresses were perfect for a 21st or a day at the races, although the use of the flowers did occasionally suggest bridesmaid duties instead. There was a particularly divine red dress with a full skirt that I coveted, as well as the candy coloured platform sandals worn by the models.

Storm

New Zealand label STORM is known for its moody palette and distinctive edge. For the new season, STORM’s signature look and feel is reflected in ice-cool shades of black, winter grey and midnight blue.

These classic neutrals are warmed up with autumnal berry hues, splashes of metallic and a dash of animal. Once again, STORM brings you unique, custom-designed prints that you won’t see anywhere else.”

Storm used tough touches like studded belts and liquid leggings on a palette of black and red, as well as the occasional touch of lurex. The coats and jackets were well-tailored, and the styling was good, but individually the items were relatively conservative. As with other collections shown at WFW, some of the Storm looks used various layers of different textures in one colour scheme to create interest. There was a huge amount of black underpinning printed tunics. I enjoyed a belted chocolate jacket with a fur trim. The winter vibe was reflected in anoraks and chunky, slouchy knits.

Starfish

At Starfish we believe that you should look and feel beautiful in any situation. That is why we combine relaxed fits and classical silhouettes with a splash of extravagance – to create a versatile look best described as ‘easy glamour’.

We also believe that a love for fashion can go hand-in-hand with caring for the environment. Our designs have an enduring timelessness, which ensures you’ll love your Starfish garment for many seasons. They are also 100% made in New Zealand using natural and eco-friendly fabrics that feel wonderful next to your skin.”

Starfish created a cool combination of sherbet pink and rusty brown, and also used rope belts (although they were more refined). There was fringing and a beautiful feather print, as well as great braided necklaces in a kind of jersey. I’m thinking DIY? The clothes were smart but comfortable – and yup, more patterned pants. I also noted breezy peplums and draping around the hips, as well as high necklines (although not as high as the throat). The sporty trend seemed to be reflected in a pair of 3/4 pants with a drawstring waistline. Colour-blocking with navy and jade gave me huge Air New Zealand flashbacks. As with Robyn Mathieson, there were unconstructed blazers and hoodies.

 

It’s been a full-on week and there’s a few more posts to come, including an update on the Young Designer Awards, some dishing on the closing night party, and a round-up of what I’ve learnt over the past few days…

Are you a fan of winter or summer collections? And would you rather wear braids or fingerwaves this year?

The Group Shows: Part One

Guys, I have 20 pages of scrawled notes from the first group show but I am going to try hard to keep this reasonable – especially since I didn’t have a camera so pictures will have to wait…

EDIT: if you’d like to check out photos you can

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find some right here and here.

First and foremost: I greatly enjoyed getting to sit in the very front row.  I was cool though guys, I even put my goody bag aside without even peeking into it. In fact, I shoved my fur vest into it, such was my nonchalance.  There was enough people-watching to last a lifetime, and yes, the shoes were pretty amaze.

This group show encompassed Trelise Cooper Wellington, Moochi, Taylor, Lucy McIntosh, Mardle, Nouveau, Ashley Fogel, and Hermione Flynn.

It was interesting seeing several designers all at once, particularly because it highlighted trends and common themes throughout the collections.  If you don’t own a pair of printed pants, now is the time to buy a pair because judging by this show printed pants are going to be everywhere.  Other common trends that were reflected in these shows included:

  • the high-low hemline: this is the mullet skirt but in all variations, including coats.  This was also combined throughout with handkerchief hemlines, which just clamours of the 90s for me.  I cannot get on board with this personally, but I do think that if you pick the right thing and style it up this can give an outfit a bit of edge.
  • layering: seriously, every single designer layered bar one.  There was also a lot of draping; clothes that clung but weren’t tight.
  • neon: I expected to see pops of neon and these showed up in Moochi and Mardle.  Mardle used an acid green which I particularly liked.  These colours were used mainly in trims and accessories but Moochi did have a neon blouse.
  • sportswear: this was big in the recent global collections and there was an element of sportswear in the Moochi collection. I really enjoyed a pair of black pants with a wide waistband with a drawstring.  They would be a fun pair to wear to work as they are still appropriate.
  • prints. Or rather, PRINTS.  While there were tonnes of black, cream, grey and taupe pieces (it is New Zealand after all) there were also prints galore in bright summer colours.  Trelise Cooper dominated the prints – they were highly detailed, whimsical, and played together beautifully.  Print-mixing, as you might expect, also made an appearance.
  • socks with heels.  The stylists used both slouched ankle height socks, and knee-high socks.  I love this look, but haven’t been able to work out how to integrate it into the daytime.  However, maryjanes with high socks and a demure skirt = excellent date outfit.

(in the order they showed…)

Hermione Flynn

Inspired by the relevance of clothing in a social context, Hermione Flynn creates her collections from social oddities – a gentleman on the bus wearing a waistcoat and tie over his rain jacket… an obese woman dressed in head to toe sportswear… a gay man designing his wedding “dress”…“.

My overwhelming impression from this collection was: the colours of the winter sea, and the feeling as your clothes billow in the breeze.  The opening outfit featured sleeves that came down over the hands and hung loose for several inches; the rollneck on the dress was pulled up over the lower half of the model’s face.  I loved a pair of billowing 3/4 pants in a light chiffon that moved sensually as the models strutted.  This collection juxtaposed draping against occasional severe items, like structured cropped tshirts layered over the jersey items.

Ashley Fogel

Beautiful tailoring, luxurious fabrics and feminine designs characterise the Ashley Fogel collections. As a label that consistently delivers high quality ready-to-wear garments to many women and loyal customers, Ashley Fogel has cemented its own special place in the New Zealand Fashion Scene.”

The first model stepped out in printed pants with a leather jacket and a quiff, and I knew I was going to like this.  In a hair note: the girls had incredible unusual French braids running down the back of the head (without a tail) – if I can find a pic, I ‘ll add it later.  This collection felt like it was in two parts to me: the first was masculine, almost rockabilly and super cool.  The second part was more French Riviera, with bright skirts, shirts knotted at the waist or done up sloppily, with a kind of careless holiday vibe.  However, throughout this collection the stylists had used huge amounts of sparkling jewels from Dyrberg Kern which gave the looks a more luxe vibe.  My favourite item was a pair of hyper-floral pants which looked like an updated cigarette pant.

Lucy McIntosh

The Lucy McIntosh Fashion label underlies the basic Sculptural, and tailored need of a woman’s body. All collections are inspired by a form of architecture or construction, Lucy takes the sharp masculine forms of a structure and creates feminine fluid lines. Focused on the organisation of space around the human body, Lucy McIntosh builds a wearable environment for her customers.

The core of this collection is a play on a men’s shirt. 

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An initially monochrome palette was relieved by splashes of cornflower blue, ink blue and an almost mustard yellow.  The clothes were severe, with no accessories and every collar buttoned up to the neck.  It really felt like this collection consisted of variations on themes.  Most particularly, the shirts and jackets were made up of self-contained layers, almost as if a cropped shirt had been put on over an otherwise identical but longer shirt.  The atmosphere was dreamy and low-energy.  My favourite item was a divine black collarless coat with a tobacco-coloured lining.

Nouveau

Nouveau combines unique illustrated prints with fashionable women’s street wear and apparel. Nouveau is designed and made in Wellington, New Zealand.

This collection was very reminiscent of lounge wear, with oversize tshirts in soft jersey (including one that could definitely double as a nightgown – albeit a very stylish one).  The necklines were high, almost to the throat, or a boatneck.  In a few items that high neckline was relieved with a keyhole just above the sternum.  I enjoyed a pair of full, blousy black shorts that sat just above the hip and which I think would look great with a structured shirt, a pair of high denier tights and some high boots.  The last dress was a combination of blue shiny crinkled fabric and red satin, with a shoestring and a really seriously pointy hemline.  Words can’t describe, but it gave me a strong sense of nostalgia.

Moochi

The name moochi was created to describe the clothes you want to wear, it is all about a style, not an age. Whether racing around town, meeting friends at night or chilling at your local on a saturday morning, it is all about looking and feeling amazing, mooching in style.”

Love those black drawstring pants!  There was a sequin shift dress with long sleeves that I thought was absolutely amazing and would be great for a bridal shower or rehearsal dinner, as well as a pearly silver dress which featured an uneven dropped waist (sounds weird, was amazing) and moved like water.  I loved that some of the looks verged on “ghetto fabulous” with tight, shiny fabrics and accessories like a leather baseball cap.  Even the more sophisticated looks had an element of bling.  The clothes were fun, and young.  Moochi also showed a pair of neon yellow and grey plaid pants with a jacket featuring leather and (probably) faux fur, which looked sensational.

Mardle

It started in 2008 in pursuit of the perfect tee-shirt. Fuss-free and practical, but feminine and flattering, that tee remains the heart of all that is Mardle. But while its beginnings may have been humble, designer Shiana Weir has her sights set on bigger things. Her designs are classic – the perfect backbone of your working wardrobe, and yet they have enough intrigue that you’ll look forward to wearing them. Ultimately, Mardle is understated elegance, proudly made in New Zealand.”

I loved this from the first outfit.  They used texture, digital prints, and sharply-coloured accessories to create a fresh and innovative look.  I particularly noticed the use of longer belts knotted across the torso, and the colour of those belts as an anchoring point in looks with extremely brave print-mixing.  Skirts and dresses featured a low-profile bubble hem and the silhouette was ladylike.  There were splashes of watermelon pink (including a beautifully tailored maxiskirt) and acid green.  The print reminded me of Van Gogh’s Starry Night.  My favourite look was a full maxiskirt in the print with a gorgeous red, textured top.  Although that sounds like a lot of look, it worked perfectly.

Taylor

taylor boutique fosters individual creativity and experimentation while ensuring wearability in an exclusive fashion surrounding. We’re small and unique with constantly changing styles. Our fabrics are sourced and imported from the best mills in the world and are always the main focus of our styling – with many fabrics allowing only three or four garments to be made in each fabric.

Immediate contrast to Mardle with a post-apocalyptic, Winter of Fire vibe immediately obvious.  This was definitely the most “art as fashion” that we saw all evening, although there were more wearable items as well.  The first model wore all cream, with a fitted cap (reminiscent of Jean Batten’s aviator hat, actually) and a long cape.  Her clothes were layered and reached to the floor, and featured a shorn fur as well as other textures.  As she swept past, you thought of primitive queens or goddesses.  The makeup deviated from that in the other shows, by including broad swipes of a white, chalky substance.  The models wore fingerless leather elbow gloves in a matte, pebbled leather.  Many of the outfits featured large woollen cowlnecks.  There were some slightly discordant moments, including a sheer, plaid overskirt that seemed school-girlish.  The palette was almost entirely black and cream, with just a very few items in blood red. My favourite item was a cream dress in a chunky knit, with a contrasting jersey insert down the length of each arm.

Trelise Cooper Wellington

The sassy spirited saloon girls have emerged this winter bringing Cooper the 1800’s Americano Prairie Couture. Smoke signals transpire from the Wild West into the oceans beyond revealing ships sailing into the misty pink horizon. Brambles and berries intertwine to devise delectable berry pie, raffia wrapped especially for the rodeo.

Frolicking Foxes and whacky magical birds are relishing this winter’s vintage bouquet whilst fantasizing over Trelises’ return to colour this winter. Diamond dressed bunnies at the animal tea party spot the swan fluttering its feathers frivolously from afar. The little crowned kitten creeps through the forest of forget-me-knots in the spring country garden; in search of wonderland!

As mentioned above, Trelise Cooper just blew it away with their prints.  They were complex, detailed and fantastical – I spotted a kitten peeking out from under a jacket at one point.  It was obvious that this brand has access to some of the best in fabrics and workmanship (even if the style isn’t your cup of tea).   Some of the items did veer a little far toward “child” for my taste, such as a smocked dress, but the cowboy hats with a disproportionately deep crown were fantastic.  The saloon girl outfits had a faded colour scheme, including butter yellow and Wedgwood blue which worked beautifully with the slightly old-fashioned vibe.  I particularly liked the use of ribbons at the neck of blouses, fastened at the throat.  The collection included dresses that were heavily sequinned, and again we saw the use of knee high socks.  However, in this collection the socks had furry pompoms on them, or came up in a point behind the knee.  Everything was just more carefully constructed and rich in detail.  For example, one dress covered in a swan print also had a slight wing flowing from behind the shoulder; there was also a coat with tails, cut

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as though it was peeling open.

 

It’s off to bedfordshire for me now, but before I go: tell me about a trend you hated but came to love.  And which of the designers above sounds most like your cup of tea?

WFW, or, Megan gets rull excited about stuff

Guys, you can’t see me right now (I hope) but I am THIS excited *swings arms around wildly* because Wellington Fashion Week is kicking off on Wednesday.

As Jo has previously posted, PPP is going to Fashion Week, and frankly I can’t wait to get my

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accreditation (woooo, fancy) and start drinking in the fashion-y goodness. I’ll be blogging with updates on the shows, retail slots, competitions, events and trade slots that I attend. Sadly there’s the small matter of my fulltime job, so I won’t be able to attend every single thing, but

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I will be taxiing all over

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the city in a frantic attempt to see as much as I can.

If you want to drink up the glamour and see some kick-butt NZ fashion in real life, you can check out the events at: http://www.wfweek.co.nz/events and buy tickets online. If you’re on a wee budget at present, no worries, a number of events are FREE. This is the inaugural Wellington Fashion Week and I think it would be superb to have it become an annual feature.

Leave me a comment below and let me know which designers you think I should be sure to check out from the list on the WFW website.

Fashion Week is coming to Wellington

For the first time, a Fashion Week is being held in Wellington, from 18-22 April.

Wellington Fashion Week explores the unique creations of the fashion
industry and the many concepts that make Wellington’s fashion its own. Join us as we explore and experience the latest in fashion and as we take time to give our designers the accolades they cheap viagra deserve.

Tickets are available for some of the shows, and you can buy them online. Megan and I will be going to some of the events, along with Martha over at the Wellingtonista, and will report back to you. It appears that WFW will be as inclusive of plus size people who like clothes as every other fashion week ever, so I am looking forward to the makeup and the hair.