Vera Wang deconstructs evening clothes at NY Fashion Week
NEW YORK (AP) - Vera Wang is a big name on red carpets, and in the bridal business. For New York Fashion Week, she wanted to do something totally different, she says.
She calls the concept 'œbreaking down evening," and by that she means literally breaking it down, as in deconstructing traditional clothes, to emerge with a new kind of evening wear.
'œIt was very important to me to be able to explore looking at evening in a whole different context, and I think this particular collection was one where I found a more youthful, whimsical way of looking at evening,'ť she said in a backstage interview after Tuesday's show.
'œIt didn't have to be gowns, and it didn't have to be constructed to the point where it implied formality,'ť she said. 'œIt could also be seen as informal, charming and witty and bawdy and easy.'ť
Wang staged her show in the historic James B. Duke House on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue, an early 20th century mansion that was on so-called Millionaire's Row (and now houses New York University's Institute of Fine Arts.) Her first ensemble down the runway: a long black silk chiffon camisole, with asymmetrical straps worn over little black shorts. The same camisole also came in a neon yellow color and in lavender and later in bright red, a splash of color rare for Wang. There were also flouncy tulle dresses and tops in colors of seafoam, yellow, sand or gray.
But it wasn't all light and airy tulle: There were imposing-looking leather harnesses with thick straps, and a couple of faux fur collars that looked like neck braces.
Although Wang's models wore tiny black shorts, the designer stressed that her racy camisoles could be worn in a less risque way - over a long skirt, perhaps.
The designer noted that she hadn't done a collection of primarily evening clothes in over 10 years. 'œThis is a very big step for me,'ť she said. 'œThis was really about me finding a new vocabulary, a new attitude, not only for massive events (like the Oscars), but also for women, their everyday lives, how they live and how they move.'ť