Erin Wasson

Erin Wasson, Designer
By SARAH HAIGHT

Source: WWD

Next up on the roster of catwalkers turning to other careers: Erin Wasson.

The model-stylist-skating enthusiast has added clothing designer to her résumé, hammering out a three-year deal to design Erin Wasson for Rvca, the spring 2009 collection of which has been snapped up by Opening Ceremony.

It was, fittingly, at the beach that Wasson first came onto the radar of Rvca founder and pooh-bah of all things Orange County — that would be surfing, skating and tagging — Pat “PM” Tenore. Two years ago, Tenore’s teenage son was participating in a shoot for Australian Vogue at Bondi Beach, where Wasson was the hired model and the main attraction. “He came home and said, ‘Dad, I met the raddest girl!’” says Tenore, who founded the surf- and skate-inspired clothing company out of his Costa Mesa, Calif., garage nearly seven years ago. “I had met her at Rvca parties, so I called her up to see what she was working on, and she had all these amazing ideas. She has a very strong view on what she likes, and she’s a natural at design.”

Amid fashion circles, beyond gracing campaigns from H&M to Balenciaga, Wasson, 26, is perhaps best known for her collaboration with Alexander Wang, whose last two shows she styled and for whom she has served as a sort of in-house muse (Wasson met Wang when he moved into an apartment two floors below hers in Manhattan’s East Village). “Tomboy chic” is what Wasson deems their shared aesthetic — scrawny tanks, lots of denim. “We have the same thought about what a girl should look like,” she says. “Strong girls who are really confident.” Wasson’s jewelry line, Low Luv, was also featured in Wang’s fall 2008 show, though she recently came under fire in the blogosphere for the line’s similarities to designer Bliss Lau’s body chains. “I have the utmost respect for Bliss Lau,” says Wasson. “I admire and appreciate what she has done for the jewelry industry.”

Though they remain good friends, Wasson and Wang are no longer professionally tied, which has freed her to craft a collection that pretty much mirrors her daily uniform and will most likely speak to exactly the kind of woman Wasson is: active and unafraid to show a little skin. For spring, there are Pima cotton tank tops and denim cutoffs, a wool miniskirt and a silk button-down emblazoned with tiny thunderbolts, even a jaunty blazer with an unexpected zipper running up the back.

“I think the problem with surf and skate companies is that the girls’ stuff tends to be a lot of pinks and blues, and [they] just assume that that’s what girls want to wear,” says Wasson. “So I’d buy from the men’s section in the skate shops.”

To be sure, there are no girlish pinks or baby blues in Wasson’s line; the blacks, grays, and whites are hues you’d find upon opening Wasson’s own closet doors (she recalls that as a child growing up in Irving, Tex., her mother “fought to get me into a dress”). A flowered shift is the only piece that could be considered truly feminine (Wasson says she’d toughen it up with combat boots or Vans), though there’s no shortage of sex appeal. The tanks, which retail for $55, are cut low, and the frayed denim shorts, $230, skim the upper thigh.

No doubt the photo-shoot set will find Wasson’s wares perfect additions to a wardrobe suited for nights at the Beatrice Inn, but that was the last thing on the model’s mind when she and Tenore joined forces. “I’m going to get my rocks off seeing girls in California skating around wearing my clothes more than I think I will seeing it in the fashion world,” admits Wasson. All of this is not to say, however, that her posing days are anywhere over. “Oh, no, honey,” she says with a laugh. “You don’t bite the hand that feeds you.”

The pics are pieces from her collection.
 

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Black magic, dark magic. Cast your runes
i-D September 2008

Ph by: Dan Martenson
Styling: Alastair McKimm
Model: Erin Wasson

source | scanned by J'ador-Dior
 
So dark in the i-D spread, I love it. Doing what she does best.
 
I loooove her appartment, I LOVE her in her appartment and i ADORE her i-D shoot!!! Sooo lovely
 
OMG :shock: i know so many girls who are going to go crazy over her clothing line! That is, if it lives up to its potential as "tomboy chic." I could definitely see this being big in southern california. I hope it doesn't turn out to be a jovovich hawk situation where the clothes look great on her but not on the average joe (or jane). Sometimes if a model has too much her own style and just rocks it out well, the masses can't quite do it justice.
 
Erin Wasson

The model/muse dispenses style smarts and details about her new LowLuv and RVCA designs. By Erin Donnelly, Portraits by Todd Selby and Dan Martensen



Typically, when we hear the phrase "model side project," our minds instantly leap to reality TV show hosting gigs, guest vocals with the emo band du jour, and movies costarring Billy Baldwin. Thankfully, Erin Wasson is anything but typical. Though born and bred in Texas, this L.A.-based Lone Star has come to embody a certain rough-around-the-edges West Coast cool punctuated by deconstructed denim cut-offs, ski caps, and loose basic tees and tanks.

This enviably effortless look has famously led to a gig styling the past two runway collections for Alexander Wang, her own body armor-inspired LowLuv jewelry line, and a new multi-season clothing design deal with RVCA (the first collection, spring '09, will debut in stores come January). Somehow the dirty-blonde beauty finds time to squeeze in high-profile modeling assignments for the likes of Maybelline and every fashion mag under the sun.


This coming Fashion Week, Wasson will once again be joining Wang backstage, but not as a stylist; instead she'll be accenting his designs with pieces from LowLuv's latest collection. Naturally, we pressed her for more details…


First things first. What five fashion musts are you currently obsessed with?
1. "I found an [incredible] black and white striped Norma Kamali jumpsuit from the '90s. It kind of looks like an old jailbird jumpsuit, but it's cut really amazing."
2. "I'm really obsessed with a pair of these tie-dyed silk Y & Kei pants that I bought and altered the **** out of and turned into bellbottoms."
3. "An oversized black silk pirate shirt with fringe that I found at a thrift store."
4. "If I didn't have a pair of cut-off denim shorts, I wouldn't know what to do with myself. I wear denim shorts every day, it seems like."
5. "I have a little black, really simple Margiela dress that's my go-to. It's all open in the back and it comes down really, really low. It's just black cotton and I love it."



What's on your wish list?
"A pair of brown python pants from Alexander Wang's collection, and a floral-print vest and a black sort of mohair leather jacket from Ann Demeulemeester. There are so many pieces from her collection that I'm so into. The moccasin Balmain boots are the shoes that I definitely want to rock. And basics from Number (N)ine. I never go for trendy; every season I try to go with basics that I know I can incorporate into my collection and that I can still wear after the season."

How would you sum up your personal style?
"Frumpy sexiness. If I'm buying a T-shirt, I buy it oversized. I like oversized jeans, I like oversized denim shorts, I like oversized jackets. I like having an undone, loose feel to everything. You know, there's so much of a tomboy in me where I still enjoy wearing guy's clothes. More often than not I'll go to a store and I'll be in the men's section buying men's pants, or a men's vest, or a men's button-down shirt or something. It's hard for me in women's departments because the stuff is a little bit too feminine, or a little bit too frilly, or a little bit too girly."


Your style feels very pared-down and edgy considering that you come from Dallas [Wasson grew up in Irving, a Dallas suburb], where everything tends to be over the top. Did that designer decadence influence you at all?
"I was more inspired by all the street kids in Deep Ellum back in the day. I shopped at all the thrift stores up and down Elm Street that used to be there. I was more into wearing Doc Martens than shopping at fancy designer boutiques. Now, every time I go to Dallas there's a place I go to called Dolly Python that my friend Gretchen owns. Gratitude off of Oak Cliff is also really amazing."

What fashion trend would you like to see curl up and die?
"Leggings, dude. If I see one more girl showing off her bad ankles, I'm going to vomit. It's just not cute."

Let's talk about your LowLuv jewelry line. What made you turn to designing?
"It's always been my hobby and passion. Even as a young kid I'd go to MJ Designs [a now-defunct Dallas crafts store that was once part of Michael's] and buy things, and I was always making things. But I think it was Alex [Wang] that really put the fire under my *** last season. He was like, 'You know, Erin, I think you should just design your own collection for the season' because the season before that I had just used stuff from my own personal collection and put it on the girls for the runway show. The body chains came about just from talking to Alex about the collection. He said he'd done a lot of dresses with cutouts on the side, and I thought it would be interesting. So, it was kind of the idea of having jewelry on, but it was really mysterious, and you didn't really know what was going on and there were these chains popping out in weird places, and you didn't know where it started and where it ended, but there was still something present there. And now I've taken the body chain and turned it into a luxurious brand, and I've started doing pave diamonds on parts of the body chain. That's the great thing about jewelry—it's sort of an evolution.


LowLuv features a lot of slinky metal body chains and body armor-inspired pieces—sort of Joan of Arc meets tribal warrior. What inspired that?
"I've always been inspired by tribal jewelry and big African pieces. I really don't like precious, dainty necklaces. Jewelry makes such a statement, so I think that if you're going to wear it you might as well go big with it. I really love that juxtaposition of being a really feminine woman and wearing really tough heavy metals and rings that could be weapons. Over the years I've collected so much vintage jewelry and I think in the back of my mind subconsciously I always thought, okay, I'm collecting and hoarding all of this stuff, sort of as my personal inspiration kit."


Are there any new twists we can expect from the new collection?
"It's still body jewelry, but it's definitely a little more abstract this season, and a little bit tougher. Alex is doing a lot of things with open backs, so that helps me out. This season there's a lot of chains draping on the back, and there's ornamentations that will be sitting on the shoulders, and things like that."


What about your other new baby, your forthcoming line for RVCA? The buzz is that it'll be a carefree mix of New York and L.A...
"The collection is a mix of basic tank tops, basic dresses, denim shorts with detailing, etc. I just wanted to create a line that was accessible to all girls. The most expensive piece in the collection is $275 retail. I got a lot of inspiration from vintage shopping and interpreted the pieces in ways that I thought were very wearable and could be incorporated into your clothing very easily. If you go into Satine and you purchase a Balenciaga skirt, then you can pick up a tank top of mine for $50 and it would still work well with any outfit. Terry Richardson is shooting the look book for me."

Besides Alexander Wang, obviously, who are some of your favorite designers?
"I really like Burfitt and the way that she tailors clothing; she has a unique twist on things. And there's a really great girl named Agatha who sells at Maxfield. She's always been known for really amazing handmade leather pieces and I just love what she does. Because everything's handmade, there's a sense of specialness to every one of her pieces, and it has a real rocker edge to it, which I like. Other than that, designers like Rick Owens and Ann Demeulemeester are sort of the go-to when you need the perfect little jacket or the perfect little tank top."

What are some of your favorite shops?
"Out in L.A., I always seem to find a great something or other—whether it's in the vintage section or from their own Scout line—is Scout on Third Street. I think what they do is incredible. Another one of my favorite stores would probably have to be Bess in New York It's this guy who's kind of an old hippie and he opened up a store, and he takes a lot of pieces and he's known to just stud everything. He'll stud moccasins, he'll stud denim shorts, he'll stud jackets. Oh, and V.O.D. Every time I go to Dallas Jackie's got a mix between really cool small designer brands, and she's got a really good woman that does vintage for her as well. I got some really amazing early '90s Moschino pieces that I'm totally in love with."


You must travel a ton. Any most-loved destinations?
"In my life, it's always really exciting to be on an airplane going back to L.A. because I know I'm going home to my dogs, and my boyfriend…you know, the idea that I can just go home is always such a luxury. I also spend a lot of time in Hawaii, and that's definitely where I see myself at some point in my life."


We hear you're an art aficionado…which artists do you love most?
"Erick Swenson, Jeff Elrod, and Lori Petty, who's also a friend of mine. People know her as an actress; they don't know how incredible her ****ing artwork is. She's so rad."


Back to clothes. Is there anyone who's influenced your style?
"The musician Lucinda Williams. She's beautiful, she has an amazing voice, and she's got this sort of hard-core country-ness to her. And then you see her style, and she's got this total rocker/biker-chick style. It's so authentic and it's so cool, because back in the day it was not contrived. You know, it sounds so ridiculous, but I just don't get my inspiration from people who are out there. It's always the kids on the street. So I'm always looking for more unconventional people to give me inspiration, style-wise. At the end of the day, I don't want to look like everyone else."

Last question: What theme song best describes your look?
"Donovan's 'Mellow Yellow.' With fashion, I tend to go toward a very low-key, undone, unfussy idea. It's about keeping it all chill."


SOURCE: REFINERY 29
 
Refinery 29

I am sure some of these pics have been posted, but hopefully not all, the last picture is of her in her RVCA designs.
 

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I'm def. gonna buy smth from her line!
$55 for the tank (which seems perfect, imo) is a great price!!
oh how lovely! i love all the pieces in the pictures.. it's prefect! :wub:

thanks for posting! :flower:
 
Erin Wasson Has a Clothing Line Now

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Erin WassonPhoto: Getty Images

Erin Wasson's career has been rather turbulent lately. Last week rumors flooded the blogosphere that her jewelry design was awfully similar to Bliss Lau's. And yesterday WWD mentioned Wasson was no longer serving as Alexander Wang's stylist-muse. But today more positive things are on her horizon: She just inked a three-year deal to design a line for RVCA, and Opening Ceremony has already bought the spring 2009 collection. Now that she's finished her stint working with Wang (but they're still friends!), she actually has time for these things, you see. Wasson's first collection for the surf-and skate-inspired label includes denim cutoffs, a wool miniskirt, a silk button-down with thunderbolts, and a blazer with a zipper up the back. If it sounds very Alex Wang to you (maybe minus the thunderbolts), that's because Wasson says, "We have the same thought about what a girl should look like." And as for the Bliss Lau scandal? “I have the utmost respect for Bliss Lau,” Wasson told WWD. “I admire and appreciate what she has done for the jewelry industry.” And as for giving up her modeling career? "Oh, no, honey. You don’t bite the hand that feeds you," she said. The mark of a smart businesswoman: having something to fall back on.

nymag.com
 
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09 august 2008

After having played the roles of stylist and muse for Alexander Wang and designing a jewellery line, supermodel Erin Wasson has now landed a deal as clothes designer. She has signed a three-year deal with skate and surf brand RVCA to produce her own line, Erin Wasson for RVCA. As a skating and surfing enthusiast, the line will reflect her style of “tomboy chic”.

supermodels.nl
 
I'm lusting over the pinkish ankle boots in #2308 for ages. does anybody have an idea about what brand is it?.
 
i'm definately interested in her clothing line! based on her personal style it will look fantastic!
 
based on her personal style it will look fantastic!

^_^ Agreed. Erin has very simple style with an urban edge that comes from the fedoras and vests she always wears.

She's going far since her Maybelline days.
 

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