Proenza Schouler delivered a very proper collection; a reasonable proposition of a contemporary wardrobe. For autumn-winter 2024, Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez finessed outerwear essentials, took tailoring cues from 90s New York’s finest Helmut Lang (in a definitely more convincing way than Peter Do), and stripped away anything superfluous. “The noise,” McCollough said. “It made us want to focus inward, focus on something a little intimate.” The tailoring was clean and sharp, but not severe. The parkas looked cool. The temptation to cocoon in cozy shearling vests and coats, of which there were many here, is highly relatable, and the Proenza Schouler designers can’t go wrong leaning into that instinct – we all want to feel good in these increasingly weary times.
A couple of my favorite Proenza Schouler pieces to add to your wardrobe right now…
Willy Chavarría‘s fashion show was so far the strongest moment of this New York Fashion Week. It started with a film, titled Safe from Harm, played on a screen behind a long table covered in a white lace tablecloth and filled with altar and votive candles like an offering. Directed by Chavarría, the film told a story of support and safety. As a diverse array of characters moved from space to space in an old house, working out, cooking, dressing up, letting emotions out, and comforting one another, it was a family affair. As the film came to a close, models emerged on the runway, seemingly stepping straight off the screen. This was a much-needed moment of action amidst all the overly minimalist, dead-serious shows in New York. For autumn-winter 2024, Chavarría expanded his sartorial vocabulary, borrowing from the particular glamour of the 1980s British upper crust, especially through his use of luxe plaid and houndstooth wools which he contrasted with leather jackets and biker details. The way the designer executed his signature jacket with an extra-wide shoulder worn with a houndstooth pussy bow blouse is just sublime. Highlights of the collection: black and white lace veils worn under caps and styled with either a black, over-sized coat or an all-white tracksuit. Chavarría subverts the codes of Catholic imagination like no other contemporary designer. As the models reached the end of the runway, they arranged themselves behind the aforementioned table, like an updated version of The Last Supper, with Chavarría himself taking the final position in the middle after the finale bow. After the applause died down and the models exited the runway, there was a sudden silence, and everyone remained in their seats, as if expecting an encore. Then, a second round of rapturous applause erupted. The reign of Willy Chavarría is really just getting started.
Need some Willy Chavarría action in your wardrobe?
It’s visible that Peter Do had great intentions and is doing his best to revive Helmut Lang. But with his sophomore collection for the brand, the New York-based designer falls into the trap all his predecessors stepped into: digging into the archives too much. Helmut Lang, the person, never looked back, nor did his fashion. He was always looking forward to new solutions for building a wardrobe fit for modern-day women and men. So why do contemporary designers taking helm of the brand think its the best idea to operate solely on references to Lang’s past work? Except for the fact that this Do collection is heavily inspired with Lang’s spring-summer 2003 “Chinatown bag” print and bubble wrap jackets, I see no novelty here. Also, do we really need another New York brand doing proper outerwear and proper tailoring? This market is already way too over-saturated by brands like Proenza Schouler, Khaite, Marina Moscone, and ironically, Peter Do, the brand.
Collage by Edward Kanarecki. Don’t forget to follow Design & Culture by Ed on Instagram!
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CDLM keeps on being a fascinating enigma. You can’t quite categorize or entirely put your finger on this New York-based brand, but with every season it gets just better… and even more elusive. Chris Peters‘ process behind the autumn-winter 2024 collection is rooted in his newly found love for meditation practice. “I never really understood what meditation did, but it’s given me such a sense of who I am and being really present in the moment,” he said. “On top of that, it made me feel more a part of the universe than I ever have; I feel more complete in the way that I live and the way that I act and the way I make things. A lot of the clothing is sort of an extension of this process that’s given me the confidence and clarity to execute ideas that would’ve been a little overwhelming or kind of scary previously.” Taking his words literally, there was indeed a sense of interconnectedness evident in this collection. A vintage fur stole that used to belong to Peters’s grandmother was attached to a bunch of vintage cotton t-shirts to create a snood of sorts that could work as both a top and an accessory. Elsewhere, a simple jersey tank had an undulating cutout across the rib cage and was shown over a vintage embroidered gown that was draped over the shoulder, its bottom half pulled through the slit. The designer has always been fond of exploring the full physicality of his materials and the possibilities of “wearing” something, but such experiments are never at the expense of beauty or desirability. For instance, take the long jersey t-shirt dress worn with the wide waistband of a pair of white wide legged trousers. Its ease gave way to an unimpeachable elegance. Elegance, in fact, may be the best word for Peters’s latest offering. It was certainly there in the white lace dress put together with pieces of intricately beaded fabric in gradient shades of gray to white. “I would say this piece is definitely representative of this collection,” he noted, describing the process of making it, which included taking apart a beaded jacket (that also used to belong to his grandmother), and re-working and re-beading parts of it, as a meditation in itself.
Collage by Edward Kanarecki. Don’t forget to follow Design & Culture by Ed on Instagram!
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If there’s one debut collection that you’ve got to see this New York Fashion Week, then it’s Colleen Allen‘s autumn-winter 2024 line-up. A former Vogue assistant who cut her teeth at Raf Simons’s Calvin Klein and The Row, Allen can be hardly called an emerging designer with such impressive portfolio. Her first collection proves she’s got a certain design-maturity that many, many names in New York are still having a hard time in finding. Kept in a vibrant color palette of deep red and cardinal purple, Allen offers a wardrobe filled with body-wrapping knits and jerseys. The draped, flowing dress makes you think of Halston’s 1980s costumes for modern dancer and choreographer Martha Graham, particularly the ones created for the “Acts of Light” performances. The velvet-y, floor-sweeping, red opera coat makes the collection turn an even more theatrical direction, but not overly, we’re still grounded in reality. You can definitely picture the entire offering in IRL circumstances, especially the wonderfully tailored blazers, poet vests, and multi-layered tops. With confidence, Colleen Allen brings much-needed spirit to New York’s league of minimalism.
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