Anniversary. Rosie Assoulin Resort 2024

With resort 2024 collection, Rosie Assoulin celebrates the 10 year anniversary of her brand. Time flies! I remember seeing the New York-based designer’s first collections and being absolutely seduced by her playful approach to eveningwear (we officially said goodbye to body-con styles and the notion of a “cocktail dress”), her colourist sensitivity, and the charming quirk that defines her signature style and fresh take on femininity. Observing Rosie’s work today, you have the same impression as 10 years ago: she’s a designer that marches to the beat of her own drum, who keeps her brand relevant, yet attractively off-the-mainstream-grid. The New York-ness that oozes from Assoulin’s fashion also plays a crucial role in her aesthetic. There’s just something very Park Avenue about her statuesque, origami-like gowns with harp bustiers, and then you’ve got a pin-striped suit that’s so laid-back it would work perfect for both, the office and a run to your favorite bodega. Resort 2024 isn’t a literal walk down the memory lane, but it has all the Rosie signifiers – some that had its debut exactly a decade ago. The very-oversized look, featuring a white top with a trail on the back, styled with matching white flares, is comfortingly familiar. The watercolour pattern come in always-chic picnic gingham and Frenchie stripes. A print of orchid pops in a couple of places, and the floral theme is translated into draped brooches that do the Carrie Bradshaw work on the masculine blazers and coats. Can’t forget to mention the summer-perfect, water print: its makes me think of Alex Katz, David Hockney and Tom Wesselmann, a couple of colour-obsessed, pop-art artists Rosie loves and in whose oeuvre finds constant inspiration. Assoulin, one of the most independent designers in NYC, in whose studio such talents as Christopher John Rogers have made their first steps and evolved, creates clothes for a loyal fan base of women, who appreciate uncompromising joy and boldness in their wardrobes. Here’s to another 10 years of Rosie’s brilliant creativity and fabulous fashion universe!

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Dream of Creation. Christopher John Rogers SS24

Christopher John Rogers has emerged from the pandemic at the top of New York’s young generation of designers. In his rainbow stripes and grids of colorful polka dots, he’s found strong, identifiable signatures, which is an important element of brand building that not all emerging talents understand or are capable of. The uptown, put-together polish of his clothes is another distinguishing factor. Many of his peers practice a scrappier, dirtier, more underground kind of fashion. His garments feel at ease on the red carpet. “I love being with a model and draping, or doing research, or really thinking about fit, about fabric, about texture, but I feel like only 10 to 15% of what I do is making clothes,” Rogers explained. “In some ways this collection was informed by wanting to go back to that essential feeling.” The sleeveless top and ball skirt of the first look suggested a new direction – as @londongirlinyc put it, very Carrie Bradshaw style, pre-And-Just-Like-That. To start, they were all-white, and then there was the off-kilter, undone aspect of their construction, but they were red herrings. Rogers quickly found his way back to the bright color and unbridled exuberance that are his hallmarks. The graphic stripes he’s known for were joined by similarly bold florals in the vein of Warhol’s daisies; a pair of evening dresses in black-and-white polka dots of varying sizes and overlays, both of which are definitely red carpet-bound; and going-out tops constructed like oversize birthday present bows. Rogers does a good business with knits. This season, he played with chunky yarns and thick, cozy layers, or fine gauges, though in both cases, he styled them to expose a flash of décoletté or midriff. On the opposite end of the texture spectrum were an elegant fitted button-down and matching long skirt and a pantsuit in a shiny material he likened to Glad garbage bags. “It’s this really amazing fabric that’s actually coated taffeta,” he said. To finish, there was a group of black looks, including a panniered ball skirt and a draped top with the romance of the opening outfit. Success begets success, and as Rogers’s business grows he’ll face ever more pressures and responsibilities that keep him from the design studio. The industry can be uniquely hard on promising newcomers, putting them in a box at the same time we demand they grow and evolve. But if that draped top and ball skirt can tell us anything, it’s that Rogers is as committed to the dream of creation as ever.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Fucking Fabulous. Tom Ford AW23

We won’t get another Tom Ford by Tom Ford collection; he sold the company to Estée Lauder in a deal valued at $2.8 billion late last year. His newly-named successor, Peter Hawkings – who worked with Ford for over 25 years – will probably keep the brand in its familiar, glamorously elegant aesthetic, heavily scented with the intoxicating Fucking Fabulous fragrance. Tom opted out of a ceremonious, showy goodbye, choosing for his sign-off an Archive collection of his greatest hits instead. Clicking through them triggers many red carpet memories. There is Gwyneth Paltrow’s sensational white column gown and attached cape from the 2012 Oscars, and there is Zendaya’s hot pink molded breastplate and fluid skirt circa first-season Euphoria. The stretch sequin and mesh dress Rihanna wore on a 2016 issue of Vogue is also included. For his spring 2022 return to the runway post-pandemic, Ford considered the impact of social media on fashion. “Photogenic clothes today by their very nature mean that they are not at all timid,” he riffed at the time. That was never not true chez Tom Ford. As the worlds of fashion and Hollywood grow ever more intertwined, it seems too bad that the American designer who navigated both worlds with such control and assurance is stepping away. But if an era is ending, at least there’s the prospect of watching Ford’s cinematic vision unfold on the big screen sometime in the future.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Ethereal. Danielle Frankel AW23

The world of Danielle Frankel‘s bridal-wear redefines that whole fashion category, making it feel truly a dream. A wedding dress coming from Frankel’s atelier is a chef’s kiss. Just take a look at her latest offering. The opening look of the New York-based designer’s autumn-winter 2023 collection is a sleeveless dress featuring a silk wool twill bodice with an architectural mock neck, and corset-like details that wrap around the waist to meet a hand-cut lace-decorated linen organza skirt with an exaggerated tulip shape that falls to the ankle. It is light as air, and accessorized with an oversized straw hat decorated with hundreds of tiny flowers. The look is simultaneously evocative of another time while being grounded in the now. “I like to look back a lot more than what’s going on currently,” the designer said. “I was looking at a lot of the New Look; Dior, Balenciaga, and that era where you had these really dramatic silhouettes – but we’re making a contemporary version of that.” She nailed it – it’s rare to see such brilliant takes on the fashion history classics today. Frankel’s designs radiate with refinement, but also with an eternally youthful spirit: many of the looks consisted of mini-dresses worn over ankle-grazing skirts (perhaps to ensure these pieces get to be worn long after their walk down the aisle). A shiny silk wool spaghetti-strap mini dress with Chantilly lace appliqué at the hem and a matching maxi skirt worn with a silk cashmere mock neck sweater, its sleeves scrunched up to make way for dramatic opera-length gloves, recalled that favorite ’90s combo of a baby tee worn underneath a vintage satin slip dress, only more elegant. There was also a bit of the ’90s in a spaghetti strap column dress covered in Chantilly lace and ivory organza strips whose hand-frayed edges gave the impression of a very delicate fur. These looks are bridal because they are white, and delicate, and formal; but they could just as well be part of an everyday-wardrobe if they were made in other colors or fabrics. A boxy matte silk wool men’s tuxedo was another modern addition. Elsewhere, pieces made from genuine baroque pearls embroidered unto transparent sequins were simultaneously opulent and minimalist. So, who’s planning a wedding this year?!

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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The Mirror Palais Girl

Mirror Palais is a sultry-slash-sustainable pre-order brand founded in 2019 by Marcelo Gaia. After working for almost a decade as a stylist, Gaia decided to create his own label – with the mission to celebrate the confident women who inspire him. His sumptuous collections feel like a nod to vintage silhouettes – think John Galliano’s 1990s bias-cut silk dreses – updated to fit the needs of the modern woman. The brand made an astounding impression on the industry with its New York Fashion Week show back in September, playing with several themes such as concealment and revelation. Born to immigrant parents from Brazil, Gaia’s years of youth consisted of humble beginnings, and a strict household. Among many brands, Mirror Palais is especially praised for its true celebration of Spanish culture as opposed to the appropriation of it. Gaia designs pieces with inspiration such as the Latino tradition of wearing white for good luck, the Huipil for its ruffles and silhouette, and the use of lace typically seen in a Mantilla. Overall, Mirror Palais is an amazing celebration of the female form and Spanish culture, designing timeless and unique pieces. Every Mirror Palais garment is designed and made in New York with the intention of bringing fair wages and craftsmanship to the forefront of the fashion conversation. So, when you buy Mirror Palais, you’re supporting a modicum of the garment district ecosystem. Here’s the brand’s latest diaphanous bridal collection…

Collage by Edward Kanarecki. Images via Mirror Palais’ website.
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