Girls will be boys

Fashionable women would do well to raid their boyfriends’ closets come fall, judging from the looks shown on Sunday at New York Fashion Week.

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Published: Tue 16 Feb 2010, 8:00 PM

Last updated: Mon 6 Apr 2015, 12:26 PM

Menswear influences were everywhere during the week of previews, from the trendsetting runway of Alexander Wang to the typically ultra-feminine Victoria Beckham, who included trenches in her fall collection, shown to a handful of reporters in a flower-filled uptown townhouse.

DKNY showed boyfriend jackets and Rag & Bone had a collection rooted in tailored suits. Oddly enough, the look melded seamlessly with schoolgirl styles also popular in the fourth day of fall runway previews.

VICTORIA BECKHAM

From the personal greeting she gave to her two dozen guests to the thoughtful answers to questions about her designs, Victoria Beckham staged an intimate preview that was all class and polish.

The series of 26 dresses maintained her signature sleek, slim shape while adding new elements such as draping and textured fabrics. One of the gowns — a tan silk jersey with a touch of embroidery on one shoulder — is a contender for Beckham to wear to the upcoming Oscars.

Her favourite dress, though, was a strapless minidress in a beige print that was hand-tucked to mimic the airiness of a cloud.

“I wanted to push myself and work with structure and drapery,” Beckham said. She wore dress No. 12, a gray wool tunic that, she said, “you can just throw on.”

For inspiration, she studied the style of 1940s-era comic-strip detective characters and Hollywood femmes fatales. You could see the Dick Tracy-influence in the trench-style pieces, and in the newsprint smudges in the blurred pixel print on the finale asymmetric column gown.

PRABAL GURUNG

Prabal Gurung’s cat walk show was one of the hottest tickets of the event, with a front row that included Zoe Saldana, designer Cynthia Rowley and celebrity stylist Rachel Zoe.

He turned out a polished, cohesive collection, only the third under his own name, confirming the status of his label as one to watch. There were many graphic elements to the clothes with an emphasis on contrast colors — one outfit paired a camel-and-black jacket with capelike sleeves with a camel-and-black seamed pant.

The star pieces were a black-and-white, motocross-style dress with crystals, pearls and pailettes that was certainly red-carpet worthy, and a delicate strapless dress in camel and white tulle with laser-cut gazar, organza petals, ostrich feathers and crystals.

It was, however, the chic everyday wear that was most impressive. He created unfussy dresses and coats, including a camel cashmere sheath with white, asymmetrical insets, and a fur-and-crocodile layered jacket.

BAND OF OUTSIDERS

A favourite phrase of fashion insiders is “classics with a twist.” It seemed the mantra of Band of Outsiders.

Designer Scott Sternberg is best known for menswear, winning the Council of Fashion Designers of America prize in that category last year. He continues to shrink preppy trousers and jackets, and, in a winter-vacation moment, added some parkas, flannel workshirts and wool sweatpants.

Those Americana looks, displayed among skis, vintage luggage trunks and even an old Jaguar at the gallery space of Milk Studios, are Band of Outsiders’ bread and butter.

What was more unexpected were the dressier looks for women, including a lovely black-and-gold silk V-neck top, a pencil skirt with zipper details, a tie-front skirt — worn with an enviable shearling coat — and a black wool pantsuit.


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