Twisted Lady. Altuzarra SS24

Second season in a row, Joseph Altuzarra delivers one of the best collections of New York Fashion Week. His winter offering was a refined look-back at his signature, urban elegance; for spring-summer 2024, the designer nods to Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby and Miuccia Prada’s style, an aesthetically-ecstatic combination of references. The film’s haunting undercurrents felt close to the surface of Altuzarra season, with tulle veils and matching 1960s babydoll dresses and the she’s-come-undone details, like the crushed textures of everything from slipdresses to A-line coats, gauzy organza slips peeking out from underneath the hems of pencil skirts, and the DIY-ish embroideries on other skirts and dresses. Miuccia’s spirit could be perceived all over the bourgeois lady-likeness, which is never obvious; there’s always a sexual tension behind it. To tempt the clients who want to play around with uptown sexiness, Altuzarra had satin coats in red, butter yellow, and ivory that were A-line and somewhat oversized, “almost as if you took a doll coat from the ’60s and blew it up a little bit,” and a strapless polka dot trapeze dress straight out of 1950s couture. There was also a pair of gowns, one black with thin straps, and the other a white tank style, that looked neither twisted, nor bourgeois; they were simply striking.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Sweet Melancholia. Sandy Liang SS24

Sandy Liang is known in New York for her sweet spot for cinematic nostalgia. For spring-summer 2024, the designer looked at her cult-favorite film for inspiration: Sophia Coppola’s directorial debut The Virgin Suicides. The film actually doubles as the name of her collection, an assemblage of hyper-feminine garments that the Lisbon sisters themselves may have worn if not for their tragic fates. Showcased at the garden of the Cooper Hewitt Museum with music from Parker Radcliffe, the ultra-feminine collection featured taffeta dresses, pleated skirts and bows, both in hair and on clothing. It was naturally in tune with Liang’s blend of balletcore and pageantcore with some 1970s twists that appeared n the form of peter pan collars, cropped capri pants and pant suit jackets worn as tops. Models also wore necklaces and earrings constructed out of freshwater pearls and seashells dipped in metal. Playful and whimsical, tinged with melancholia: that’s how you can describe Sandy Liang’s womenswear. Meanwhile, I can’t wait for my copy of Coppola’s latest Archive” book to arrive.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Primal Instinct. Area AW23

While other designers in New York get nostalgic about the 1990s, 70s, or 20s, Piotrek Panszczyk looked back a couple of thousand years, BC, for his latest Area ready-to-wear and couture collection. He’d been “thinking about prehistoric times and how pelts and bones were kind of the first things humans had to build an identity around. It started with this idea of the primal instinct that through the centuries morphed into desire, and then eventually a kind of excess and the life cycle of luxury.” The unsettling ambience of the fashion show, plus the inventive, at points bizarre “bone-y” silhouettes, eventually delivered one of the strongest and intriguing collections coming from the label in the last seasons. The idea was cleverly developed: there were “fur pelt” coats made from fur-printed denim in a variety of colors that delivered runway drama, fur-print, low-slung jeans, and a mini dress with bulbous little godets that spoke to Panszczyk’s commitment to offering real-world alternatives to fantasy. The collection’s highlight: models in big-shouldered jackets or slinky jersey pieces punctuated by beastly rips, the gold-embellished bones of their attackers still elegantly attached to their clothes.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Ferocious. Khaite SS24

At Khaite, yet again you could barely see the clothes, but could definitely get the vibes of a coherent vision of a contemporary New York woman. The lighting theatrics on the very darkened runway emphasized the sharp silhouettes Catherine Holstein has in offer for spring. She called them “ferocious“. “I think every woman in New York has to handle herself with a real fearlessness,” said Holstein, indicating that that’s what she had to do while operating as her label’s top creative and, until recently, CEO. “And that’s always something that I bring forth in the brand.” At this brand you won’t find novelty, but rather elevated wardrobe staples that never get out of style: exaggerated masculine coats, big-shouldered blazers, sensual silks, investment bags. The semisheer body-con knits were an understated answer to all the straightforward sexiness we see on the other runways. Holstein might be the contemporary Donna Karan of New York Fashion Week.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Sexy Utility. Dion Lee SS24

What I appreciate about Dion Lee‘s work is his consistency – a word that so many other New York Fashion Week designers should learn. His spring-summer 2024 is sexy and bold, and with wit. “This season was primarily about evolving the utility and construction language I’ve been playing with until now,” the designer said. What’s compelling about Lee as a designer is his ability to both fixate and expand on a specific theme while managing to keep his clothes distinctly true to his style. The Australian creative mentioned he started playing with power cords as a way to drape for his autumn offering, which carried over into this collection in the shape of shirring details by way of bungee cords. Particularly fun was a pair of trousers that had its back label replaced with an outlet; the model walked down the runway plugged in, carrying his coiled orange cord as a shoulder bag. Elsewhere, Lee laminated denim and introduced foiled leather for a sleek hint of texture. The latter was used in bubble-hem skirts and dresses, which added a welcome variation of shape. Also cool were his lace lingerie-like explorations; they felt freshest where they fell weightless around the body rather than constrict it.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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