Last, but very not least, Tuesday witnessed the final action in the six-day New York Fashion Week. And the best so far, with powerful displays by three key American designers – Thom Browne, Michael Kors and Norma Kamali.
Thom Browne: Ornithology
“The key to American fashion is mixing the classic with the conceptual,” insisted Browne, who mashed up Japanese culture, New England style, his fetish little gray suit, and bird watching, in a bold and frequently beautiful show.
Presented in the Griffin Theater on the top floor of The Shed, a giant show space in Hudson Yards, the scene was set by hundreds of artfully folded origami paper birds, a flock swarming around a classic work desk on which a single white budgie perched in a white cage.
Scores of robins, crows, magpies or hawks flew across the collection, delicately embroidered over a great collection of classic country-house fabrics. All the worsted tweeds, windowpane checks and Prince of Wales checks – often used in patchworks – were developed especially for the collection by British and Irish mills. Classic materials also enhanced with graphic lines of strass, crystals medallions.
Browne’s love of Japan was apparent throughout: narrow floor-hugging skirts with kimono-shaped jackets, albeit with buttons. The girls and guys wearing maiko hair styles with kanzashi-type ornaments. In some remarkable makeup – light feathers seemingly sprouted out of many women’s eyelashes. Other cast members had blackened eyebrows, in a visual pun on this past weekend’s Super Bowl.
Occasionally, Thom would coat coats in wax, making them looked like worn leather in Imperial Roman Purple or Rothko yellows. Though his coolest invention were bias-cut cocktails made in slanting lines of classic preppy ties, worsted wool and satin. Call it the ‘Preptail’.
Post-show, the designer revealed that he had been inspired by a recent documentary on bird watching, and his cast were shod for that hobby – in giant waders or LL Bean-style duck boots, though in Thom’s fetish cadet gray. The same hue provided the base for a ginormous wedding dress worn by Alek Wek. Acres of folds, topped by a glittering kimono style jacket – just like the one that opened the show.
Browne’s shows can at times become faintly academic displays of fashion historicism. But not this season, where Thom broke through lots of barriers, creating what is probably his most astute, elegant and unexpected collection in an already unique career.
It felt a fitting finale to the season by Browne, who also happens to be president of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, which governs the runway calendar in New York. Clearly in excellent form, Thom celebrated this final moment by presenting his front row husband, master fashion curator Andrew Bolton, with a bouquet of flowers.
Michael Kors: Degagé in Chelsea
Michael Kors has had enough with cell phones and hyperactivity, and his latest collection certainly showed that.
Cut far more forgivingly, with a good deal of slouch and lots of pockets, his new wardrobe for next fall was the most relaxed and insouciant in New York.
“The world is very crazy. Every 10 minutes we have a news alert. It’s too much. We spend too much time on our phones, and I wanted to bring people a sense of calm but still something that makes them feel confident, feels luxurious when they touch it, something special that stands the test of time,” explained Kors, in a pre-show preview in his 42nd Street headquarters.
Michael sent out blazers so wide they moved sensuously; black leather trench coats were softened and made with huge folds; many gals wore boyfriend jackets that looked two sizes too large. Skirts were ever so pleated and hung asymmetrically; trenches were hyper fluid; and jackets were forgiving as cardigans.
“America is the place where comfort became king. But the French have the best word for it, ‘degage’,” he said, pointing to a mood board that included to timeless icons like Uma Thurman and Lauren Hutton.
The setting was super concise – a clean extended runway modernism with hints of Noguchi or George Nakashima, whose furniture Michael collects. And whose determination not to waste material was the inspiration for a great new bag, made of a single piece of leather without seams. Though, Michael did also finish his Manhattan bags in faux horsehair to add plenty of dash.
Above all, the collection felt like a very deliberate counterblast to excess. And to Kanye West and his wife Bianca Censori, who wore a completely sheer dress with no underwear to the recent Grammy Awards.
“I am not going to mention names, but that was ridiculous. Sexy is about movement,” sniffed Kors.
Norma Kamali: Back with a bang
Norma Kamali is back, and how. Following a crash course in AI she took at MIT, the veteran’s latest designs have a new elan, seen in an excellent collection unveiled on Tuesday morning.
Kamali staged her first presentation in many years in the West Village, the neighborhood she calls her home. The new selection for fall 2025 revisited Norma’s classics – like the famed sleeping bag coat or her second skin leather looks. But took them somewhere new. The former appearing in some great new autumnal prints of silver birch and fallen leaves, where AI will help guarantee that copying would be prevented.
While her vegan leather ideas were the hippest in New York. Second skin shirts; figure-hugging rocker coats; thicker flared dresses; a series of chauffeur jackets or even cheongsams. Shown on stockman, many wearing fedoras, trilbys and bowlers.
Norma’s sense of futurism was also apparent in some clever jumpsuits – that recalled her famed early parachutes – and great padded gingham intergalactic traveler parkas, which like everything in the collection can be machine washed.
Business is now brisk with vendors like Revolve and MyTheresa boasting high sales.
Not bad going for an 79-year-old lady who still owns all her own brand, 56 years after founding it. Hats off to Norma.
Dr Martens has appointed high-profile fashion executive Robert Hanson and key financier Benoit Vauchy as non-executive directors, effective 26 March. An “experienced executive with a strong track record of delivering growth at consumer brands” Hanson was previously CEO of John Hardy and American Eagle Outfitters.
Prior to this he served for over a decade in senior roles at Levi Strauss & Co, including as president of the Americas division and, latterly, as global brand president for the Americas.
His strong background means he “brings a broad, multidisciplinary skillset and significant experience of the North American market combined with global expertise. His prior non-executive experience includes positions on the boards of Canopy Growth, Urban Outfitters and Constellation Brands”, Dr Martens said.
Benoit, meanwhile, is a partner at the company’s largest investor, global investment firm Permira, where he is a member of the Investment and Executive Committees. He has worked at Permira since 2006, and previously spent six years at JP Morgan in London and Frankfurt.
Dr Martens chairman Paul Mason said: “The expertise and experiences of both Robert and Benoit further strengthens our board. Robert has significant USA and wholesale experience and is a proven consumer brand CEO.
“Benoit is an experienced financial leader and his appointment to the Board demonstrates Permira’s commitment to Dr Martens.”
Expanding optical chain Specscart has opened a concept flagship store in Bury, describing it “as cool as an Apple store”. The description is apt as core to the group’s expansion plans for 2025 includes entry into the US market.
Founded by Sid Sethi, Specscart now has three stores across the Greater Manchester region and sales last year grew to more than £3 million, he told BusinessLive.
Now the company has opened a concept store in its home town of Bury that it says is also “browsable as [bookstore] Waterstones and quirky as an independent boutique”.
The Union Street store is four times the size of the existing store, featuring every pair of glasses in the 1,000-plus Specscart collection, with shoppers able to order straight from their smartphones.
The store’s £100,000 transformation also showcases the history of the Union Street building, with original features including decorative ceiling plasterwork and with a mural installed about the history of the building.
Sethi said: “Our new store looks nothing like the clinical, old-fashioned and quasi-medical opticians of yesterday. We want people coming in for a browse, a try on and a chat just like they’d do in Zara, Gym Shark or JD Sports… we want customers coming in to store and trying loads of different pairs on like they might with trainers in the Nike store.”
He added: “Shopping for glasses should be all about fun, fashion and creating the perfect look for you and not just about sight correction.”
Specscart says it is set for a year of growth, with a new website set to launch, its optical lab now operating until midnight to meet demand, and with expansion to the US planned.
5000, whose logo is written as Five Thousand, is the brainchild of designer Taylor Thompson, an Oakland, California-born gent who chose New York for his runway debut.
His hometown inspired this collection, especially the local Bay Area concept of “Bootsy,” a multifaceted term coined from Bourgeois, which can mean pretentious or uncool or alternatively bold and outrageous.
In Thompson’s hands, the result was a highly sartorial display of tailoring that combined elements of suave disco dragoon chic, banker style, and tie-dyed Carnaby Street cool.
Taylor played with the idea that “Bootsy” is a double-edged sword, with several passages where models would throw off cloaks, transforming them into plissé skirts to complement crisp suits. His best cut suggestions were elongated Nehru jackets, the great Indian revolutionary leader’s elegant gravitas fitting well with Bootsy’s concept of ownership of individuality.
As someone who once witnessed the most famous Bootsy in action, Taylor’s interpretation of the concept seemed light years away from the colorfully abandoned dress style of Bootsy Collins bass player James Brown and Parliament-Funkadelic. Yet, one sensed Collins would have approved of Thompson’s skills.
Thompson underlined his technical polish with reversed jackets, buttoned at the back, and sleeves cut off to show interior padding and horsehair. The models pirouetting gently in the late afternoon light were the best way to display the technique.
Staged on the top floor of Nine Orchard, a Lower East Side boutique hotel built inside a former bank, 5000 felt like a cool fashion statement among Manhattan’s madding crowd.
Meruert Tolegen: Buratino on Broad Street
Playful yet refined, naïve yet sophisticated, Meruert Tolegen’s latest collection manages to blend her youth in the former Soviet Union with her arty existence in today’s New York.
Meruert’s inspiration this season was a 1976 Soviet musical film, The Adventures of Buratino, the Soviet version of Pinocchio, based on a Tolstoy novel.
“The whole movie was actually theatre, and I wanted its sense of childlike mystery,” explained Meruert backstage.
Presented inside the Lehman Ballroom on Broad Street, across from the New York Stock Exchange, the location also evoked escapism as models marched by frescoes of giant ocean liners led into New York Harbor by tugboats.
Playful wanderers in the cast attired in huge cable sweaters worthy of Catherine de’ Medici, askew-pleated skirts, or off-kilter silk dresses printed with puppets.
Among the eccentricity were some great looks: a faded anthracite governess coat, asymmetric ruffled baby-doll dresses, or bold black jacquard bustier cocktail dresses—the kind of girl Buratino wants to date when he grows up.
The hairstyles were outlandish, taken from several figures with blue hair tied into wee knots. Too often, the film’s childish fantasies led to bizarre clothes, where the idea overpowered the look and the wearer. The names of certain Japanese designers began to tick over in one’s head.
That said, this was a moment of charm and some risk-taking ideas at a moment in America when a little fresh thinking would not go amiss.