Easily New York Fashion Week’s best staged show so far has been Khaite, with a powerful and theatrical collection whose two leit motifs were Dorothy and David.
Presented inside the giant Uptown Armory, guests arrived to discover a huge circular runway with a 25-meter radius. Painted yellow to suggest the Yellow Brick Road, Khaite’s designer Cate Holstein explained. Though the far bigger inspiration was the late David Lynch, leading to a catwalk crammed with femme fatales on a mission.
Attired in a dark and dramatic wardrobe for the urban jungle, Khaite’s women are a hyper self-confident crew this season. Marching in a collection whose every single look had a twist or bash or dimple; their very polished imperfections the heart of the matter.
The key element was the scrunched-up leather jacket, as if the designer had squeezed each look into shape with her own hands.
Calfskin or rawhide jackets came in a multiplicity of modes and forms – worker or donkey, motorbike, bomber or flight. She even sculpted a truck driver’s leather blouson into an outstanding mini cocktail dress in one great visual sleight of hand. If they ever remake Lynch’s classic “Wild At Heart,” this is the collection the cast must wear.
Every single leather idea looked great. Each a reminder that the most contemporary New Yorker designer today is Cate Holstein. She is also no slouch when it comes to contemporary draping with billowing cocktails in slate silk or leopard print pony skin coat-dresses.
And just when it seemed a tad too commercial, Cate wowed with several avant-garde robes in massive cable wool coils.
Backed up by a roaring soundtrack that mashed up “I Put a Spell On You” by Marilyn Manson and “Luna” by the Smashing Pumpkins, this was a smash hit show.
With new stores opening in Texas, California and Madison Avenue, this stellar show was a timely reminder why Khaite is the hottest label in American fashion today.
It’s technically not February NYFW if a bit of snow doesn’t fall. As shows wound down on Saturday night, NYC was greeted by a fast-moving snowfall that promised to fall into Sunday, making for an enjoyable show commute. It may also be an ideal time to jump on one trend already emerging from the week: fur (though it tends to be faux or by-product pelts.) Prabal Gurung was one designer who led this style—he, along with Ashlyn and Michael de Paulo, was among those who showed up on the weekend.
Faux fur and sleek designs set the tone for Prabal Gurung’s winter-inspired styles. – Courtesy of Ashlyn
Last September, Prabal Gurung showed his collection underneath a grand archway outside City Hall in an effort driven by hope for a female President and skewing on the designers’ Eastern tendencies. (Prabal Gurung was born in Singapore to Nepalese parents, raised by a single mother in Kathmandu, and was schooled in New Delhi.)
A lot has changed since that show, including the designer’s seasonal aesthetic, which felt heavier on traditional Western sportswear for the day (while his evening styles explored embellishment and fantasy of perhaps leaning towards his Eastern side).
Held at the Surrogate Court building at 31 Chambers Street, the landmarked Beaux-Arts building is still active as a probate and estate proceedings facility, adding to Gurung’s opulent vision.
Backstage, the designer spoke to FashionNetwork.com about his impetus for the collection. “This particular moment of looking at what is familiar to me started with my upcoming memoir that comes out in May,” he said, adding, “In this crazy chaotic time, what we are looking for is intimacy and comfort either through a friend or a one-night fancy.”
To that end, the designer offered cashmere as a comfort, with knits being a strong message. A chunky cable knit sweater extended as a scarf and was draped across the back of louche cargo-pocket trousers and a shirt or became a plaid turtleneck paired with polka dot style tied around the waist. Fine-gauge cashmere was paired with leather and worn under shearling coats or tightly layered over pleated silk with a gold metallic polka dot dress reminiscent of traditional Indian styles. Embellished polo neck sweaters also stood out.
Textured outerwear and layering in Gurung’s FW25 collection. – Courtesy of Ashlyn
The designer expresses faux fur as an oversized ‘fox’ or in a mint green above-knee Mongolian fur coat. Gurung’s perspective of NYC comes from the 5 a.m. vantage point where he sees the office professional and party girl collide. This season, his frocks featured sheer panels to reveal a midsection, cutouts to create exposed hips, and many exotic feather details.
Well before the final walk, an interesting catwalk choreography took over, whether intentional or not, that resulted in models repeating their turn down the runway. There were also a lot of different ideas and one-off looks in the collection. Thus, the flow and message of the show were complex to take in at times, as it was a bit disorienting. That Gurung, who has always been outspoken politically speaking, chose to mimic what many Americans have been experiencing intensely for the last three weeks on the runway also displayed the depth the designer explores in his collections.
For designer Ashlynn Park, the shape is everything for her sculptural and esoteric designs. For her Fall/Winter 2025 Ashlyn collection, Park looked to the exotic persimmon fruit and its luscious curves. According to show notes, the designer’s transformation from flower to fruit over cold winters is an analogy for reality in Park’s view that “hard-fought beauty holds the deepest meaning.”
Persimmon-inspired overcoat from Ashlynn Park’s FW25 collection – Courtesy of Ashlyn
She also drew upon her Korean culture to infuse her collection with elements of Bojagi, a symbolic cloth wrapping discipline that helped Park devise a ‘puzzle’ textile technique. It involves a square that is cut and reassembled in three-dimensional forms, which, according to Park, recontextualises familiar elements in something new. If it sounds a bit cerebral, you are on the mark. Practically speaking, the result wasn’t that tough to grasp.
A central shape was a peplum ‘blouse’ primarily made of Merino wool to make it appear more jacket-like with rounded sleeves. The peplum was central throughout, whether on fitted waist styles or looser silhouettes. Pants and skirts recalled the orange fruit in their fitted waists, bulging hips and legs, then restrained by tapered hemlines. The shape was especially intriguing, as was the reimagined trench coat, halter-style cable knit sweater tops, and bright Persimmon-coloured overcoat with a simple leather cord belt.
Park launched in the pandemic—aided by a managing partner whose CV includes Comme des Garçons and Prada—with an installation at the Cristina Grajales gallery and used the gallerist’s new Tribeca space, adorned with home fine art pieces curated by the designer to add to the art connoisseur aesthetic.
Elegant wool coat from Ashlynn Park’s FW25 line – Courtesy of Ashlyn
Eveningwear designer Michael DePaulo launched his collection in 2012 but has enjoyed running his business dressing ladies either for a fundraising ball or the red carpet in California for the past few years. He returned to NYFW with his “Mystical Garden” collection for a presentation in one of the Rockefeller Center event spaces, a newly popularized destination for the famous New York City commercial, retail, and entertainment plaza.
DePaulo told FashionNetwork.com that he envisioned a woman at a gala who would wander into the dark night to explore the garden and grounds. Shimmering crystals on a blue tulle A-line recalled the night sky while decorative yellow flowers on a black short playsuit style recalled the garden.
The mysterious and mystical came into play with black fabrics and floral motifs that were intriguing in a black lace catsuit, a strapless taffeta dress with a gathered and rounded tier hemline, and a sheer floral black dress over a nude-toned classic Fifties-style silhouette each proved enticing.
Japanese cosmetics giant Shiseido said on Monday its full-year profit fell 73% amid sluggish sales in China.
Reuters
Shiseido said operating profit was JPY7.58 billion ($49.9 million) in the 12 months to the end of December, compared with JPY28.13 billion the prior year.
A retailer of high-end personal goods, Shiseido is seen as a barometer for consumer confidence in China, a market the company and its peers have come to rely on for sales growth.
“China’s cosmetics market suffered a prolonged downturn, weighed down by a decline in consumer spending and rising household savings amid worsening economic sentiment,” the Japanese company said in a statement.
Shiseido’s China sales were down 4.6% year-on-year on a like-for-like basis, excluding the impacts of foreign exchange and business transfers, the company said. It forecast a further sales decline in 2025.
Poor results in China also dragged down interim earnings reported last week by cosmetics competitors L’Oreal and Estee Lauder.
China’s once surging economy has been hobbled by a property crisis, mounting local government debt and rising youth unemployment. Compounding woes for global luxury goods makers has been a shift among Chinese consumers toward domestic brands.
Shares in Chinese beauty brand Mao Geping rose 85% when they debuted on the Hong Kong stock market on December 10, and have climbed further since.
In November, Shiseido launched a two-year action plan to restore profitability and focus on its core brands.
Shiseido’s shares have sunk 42% over the past 12 months, compared with a 5.1% gain in the benchmark Nikkei average during the same period.
Outlet malls continue to be among the most successful UK shopping centres (malls in general being destinations that are enjoying a particularly buoyant moment) and the latest name to sign up is Kate Spade New York.
This spring it will open a 2,408 sq ft store at Outlet Shopping at The O2, the suburban shopping destination in Greenwich, South London, that’s next door to the O2 entertainment hub.
It will be located on the outlet’s upper level and importantly marks the brand’s London outlet debut.
The store’s design is inspired by elements of both uptown and downtown New York with the company saying the “nod to its heritage, and the merging of the two distinct neighbourhoods, celebrates the sophistication and creativity that are signature to Kate Spade, while capturing the essence of New York”.
It will add to the already extensive womenswear and women’s accessories offer at the O2 and will feature both seasonal and gifting collections across handbags, small leather goods, accessories, jewellery, footwear, ready-to-wear and more.
As mentioned, shopping centres in general have been proving strong in recent periods and outlet centres have been a leading light.
The O2 itself enjoyed a record-breaking 2024, with the destination welcoming over 10 million visitors and seeing a strong sales performance. Over 31,000 sq ft of new retail was added last year with sales up 6% vs 2023.