Who would a fashion designer be? I thought I knew something about the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune that blameless young creative types regularly suffer; but it was not until I became a judge for the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund that I realized how vast and choppy is the particular sea of troubles this country's premier fashion-design talents must navigate. Personal debt, poverty, production delays, myriad letdowns, customs snarls, even good old-fashioned weather (don't mention rain to Doo-Ri Chung, whose spring 2005 collection fell on the morning New York city was swamped by the remains of Hurricane Frances). Remember: all these unfortunates want to do is to make the world a little bit more interesting, elegant, and beautiful.
The Fashion Fund is our riposte to the forces of destruction and whimsy to which emerging designers are especially vulnerable. In 2003, Vogue and the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) had a series of meetings to figure out a way of giving a leg up to the next generation. Calvin Klein had just retired; Donna Karan had sold up to LVMH and was considering her options; Ralph Lauren was celebrating his thirty-fifth anniversary; Bill Blass had died; and Oscar de la Renta had turned 70 (which still seems unbelievable, given his continuing embodiment of vitality and youth). The trouble with the young designers—Marc Jacobs, Michael Kors, Isaac Mizrahi, each singularly gifted—was that they'd been the young designers since the Reagan/Bush era. New York, to ensure its place as a world capital of wearable fashion, needed new blood, quickly.
Talent was not the issue. This city—this country—drips with brilliant, imaginative, dedicated souls. But in order to realize their creativity, they are required to devote themselves to, and master, the worlds of finance, production, and marketing. Time and again a breathtaking show is followed by… nothing. Quite simply, the clothes cannot be produced at all, or on time, often through no real fault of the designer—unless, of course, being cash-strapped and inexperienced is blameworthy. Vogue and the CFDA came to the conclusion that the most effective intervention we could jointly make was to set up a fund that would award $200,000 and a year of mentoring by Seventh Avenue luminaries to one small business a year. That may sound like a lot of money—and it is, if you're planning on spending it at Barneys New York (which, along with Kellwood Company and Condé Nast, turned out to be a major underwriter of the fund). But as I discovered in reading the detailed applications of the final 50-plus applicants, 200K gets you only a step closer to having a stable business: a small in-house marketing team; a European showroom; a sample room; a chance to move your place of work from your bedroom to a loft space in a not-yet-up-and-coming neighborhood. The mentoring is, if anything, more valuable: Which licensing deal is a good one? How does one get cashmere and leather out of customs? How does one become big in Japan? The winner will spend time with lawyers and customs brokers and production managers and pattern-makers to help with these and other issues.
The fund was launched at a dinner at the home of Mayor Michael Bloomberg in September 2003, attended by the likes of Tommy and Donna and Calvin and Vera and Oscar, as well as Asprey's (and now Michael Kors's) owners, Lawrence Stroll and Silas Chou. Pledges of various kinds were made, and in February an advertisement appeared in Women's Wear Daily inviting designers with already established businesses to send in a one-page application; 137 responded. Peter Arnold, the head of the CFDA, his associate Lisa Smilor, and I formed the subcommittee that read all the applications and the attachments (look-books, mission statements, autobiographies) that often accompanied them. After hours of stacking and arguing (it's always the "maybe" pile that brings people out), we agreed on 50 yeses (for the next stage) and 27 possibles. All of these went in front of the full committee—Peter Arnold, Robert Duffy (of Marc Jacobs: the ultimate business partner for a designer); Julie Gilhart (of Barneys: the ultimate fashion director); Narciso Rodriguez (famously supportive of promising youngsters); Stephen Ruzow (of Kellwood: the ultimate Seventh Avenue backer); myself; Lisa Smilor; and Anna Wintour. The committee reviewed everything (even applications Nos. 78 to 137 were on hand). What we were looking for was designers who had proved themselves in the marketplace and editorially and were, on the face of it, ready for a scaling-up of their careers. Thus, a very talented jewelry designer with impeccable editorial credentials might not make the next stage because his or her business was not yet at that critical juncture of growth. In the end, 52 were invited to submit further and more detailed applications; the 25 near-misses were sent letters encouraging them to apply again.
Now began the really tough part, for candidates and judges alike. The candidates were asked to provide portfolios and business profiles of their past and their imagined futures, with and without the award. Every detail was asked for: number of employees, salaries, square footage of workspace, pricing structures, investment and debt to date, and so on. (Of course, all this was and remains confidential.) Designers are neither writers nor accountants, but it is extraordinary how eloquent and rigorous they can be when $200,000 is at stake. I was familiar with the work of every applicant, as were others; but I was moved and surprised by the narratives of determination and struggle that came before me. It is not easy to make a shoe, a dress, a necklace, a man's suit, or a pair of jeans in America. It does not matter if your initial investment is $5,000 or $1.5 million: it is hard. It amazes me, in all honesty, that anyone would persevere. But they do, and we are grateful.
On July 20 came the key meeting: making the painful cut from more than 50 to ten. The judges approached the applications from radically disparate points of view, and this led to a gripping discussion about the job of the American fashion designer: is it about making poetic, breathtaking creations? About having global commercial clout? Does it require a media-savvy personality? Were we after the next Tom Ford or the next Isabel Toledo? We were, of course, looking for those candidates who seemed to have everything—taste, vision, personal charm—and the resources to realize their potential. The final ten teams and individuals fit these criteria, and you couldn't ask for a more varied bunch: a Russian tailor who cuts impeccable suits for downtown New York rockers; a shoemaker whose curvaceous heels offer an earthier spin on sexy than Manolo; five ready-to-wear designers who have redefined luxury for a younger, hipper generation of best-dressed women; a wonderfully minimalist jewelry designer; and from, Los Angeles, a husband-and-wife team who are redefining the cool jean, and a guy and girl who silk-screen and rework vintage to novel and captivating effect.
At 5:30 on an August morning, the top ten received wake-up calls from Vogue (out-of-towners had been flown in and installed at hotels) and made their way to 4 Times Square in black cars. (If nothing else, they would be given a tantalizing glimpse of what life feels like if you're Donna or Calvin or Ralph.) At 8:00 a.m., the presentations began. Each candidate was given five models and fifteen minutes (yes, we actually had a loud and menacing timer) to dazzle and inform the gathered committee. And by golly, they did. Peter Som brought in a collection of his childhood scribblings of chic daywear (he started at age four, we learned). Michael and Nicole Colovos of Habitual handed out copies of Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet, which was the basis of their artistic vision and enduring courage. Edmundo Castillo had the models walk on the judges' table for that great close-up of the shoes. In a similar vein, Dean Harris handed out flashlights because, he claimed, no one could ever see his jewelry. Cloak's Alexandre Plokhov arrived with a cellist, whose mournful bowing accompanied the shuffling rocker boys in suits (the cellist, it turned out, is Plokhov's business manager). And Libertine's Johnson Hartig personally crooned "Come Fly with Me" while his design partner, Cindy Greene, danced. Oh, yes—and they all answered tough and searching business questions that probed weaknesses or obscurities in their applications. It was a marvelous, uplifting morning that, predictably, culminated in a candidates' lunch in the garden at Provence, in SoHo, at which not a few drinks were consumed. Win or lose, the gathered hopefuls welcomed the chance to meet their peers and talk shop. I'd forgotten how isolating life can be when you're young and struggling.
At the time of writing, we haven't met to decide the winner. That won't happen until October 14, when the announcement will be made at a fabulous dinner. In the three weeks between now and then, the committee members will visit the applicants at their studios for a closer look at their work process. (Are they good to their employees? They'd better be, if they want Stephen Ruzow's blessing.)
I still haven't made up my mind who to vote for (in the final, secret ballot). The candidates are all amazing, and all represent the future of American fashion. But I know that for all of the judges, it has been a privilege (if an agonizing one) to be allowed entry into worlds of all of these applicants. Given vigilance and support on the part of the industry, the future looks very well dressed.
—Sally Singer
Libertine
Just think: If it weren't for FedEx, Libertine might never have survived. Design partners Johnson Hartig (he's in L.A.) and Cindy Greene (she's in NYC) have always been notoriously tight-lipped about the creative process that transforms their vintage finds into one-of-a-kind designs overlaid with intriguing screen-printed motifs: Let's just say that they pass their pieces back and forth until the designers are satisfied they're ready to be sent out into the world. "We look at every individual piece," says Greene, "and decide what story we want it to tell." The duo met at a party in December 2000; Hartig was an actor doing commercials, and Greene was working at DKNY. The following July, Greene sent him a shirt with a raccoon's head stenciled on the collar and a gorilla on the back. The shirt came to the attention of the L.A. store Maxfield, and before long Libertine was born. A cult following quickly grew around it. "People tell me, 'I have fifteen of your blazers!'" says Hartig. But does either of them find it difficult to give up their favorite pieces? "I have a pile of things at my studio that say JOHNSON'S OWN," says Hartig. "If I tire of them, I can always rewash them and pass them on to be sold. You see: I will sell you the shirt off my own back."
—Mark Holgate
Habitual
"Coming to California has made us so much more relaxed," says Habitual's Michael Colovos, who with his business partner and wife, Nicole, swapped New York's East Village for Los Angeles's Venice in late 2002. The reason for their relocation was simple: Manhattan doesn't cut it if you're eager to expand your denim label; all of the production facilities and wash houses are to be found in California. Their current base means that Habitual can tinker with their designs to their heart's content, intricately seaming a scaled-down jean jacket that really hugs the body, or contrasting denim and its reverse side on a tiered sundress, two ideas that will appear in their new spring collection. The year-round Californian warm weather has also had an effect. The sun has set on Habitual's military/utility obsession, and what has dawned instead is a lighter, prettier look. "Our spring collection is definitely much more feminine," says Nicole Colovos. If the two of them are so keen on change, it's because they don't want to ever be thought of as one of those brands (you know who they are) that churn out hundreds of thousands of pairs of jeans. "We've always been about elevating the concept of what denim can be," says Michael Colovos. "Habitual should be able to sit beside all the other designers in your closet."
—Mark Holgate
Cloak
At first glance, the Cloak persona, as directed by Alexandre Plokhov, is magnificently menacing. All that slickly executed noir severity … sharp suits with even sharper shoulders … soviet-era military coats … hard-as-nails leathers that would make a Hell's Angel rev up and ride off because they seem so tough. Yet it pays to look beyond that because Plokhov is doing more than simply offering his version of an aesthetic that has been championed in Paris by Raf Simons, Hedi Slimane, et al. For at the heart of Cloak is a true understanding of the first rule of tailoring: Everything you do is designed to make a man, every man, look better. Russian-born Plokhov decided to leave Moscow, where he was studying to become an interpreter, when he realized he was more interested in translating his taste for fashion into a career. He apprenticed with an Italian tailor in Chicago before a spell in the alterations department of Versace there ("Gianni's dresses were beautifully made") and cutting patterns for Marc Jacobs. It has all worked to his advantage. Plokhov is now obsessive about fit and finish. "Second only to a couture dress," he says, "a man's suit is the most difficult thing to make. All of Cloak's suits are made by a tailoring company in Long Island City that has been going for years." He knows that Cloak isn't for everyone: "I never want anyone to say what I do is nice; I'd rather they loved it or hated it." But he has no intention of leaving New York anytime soon for the more avant-garde fashion climate of Paris. "Here, no one cares where you're from, and everyone gives you a chance. Besides, I don't speak French."
—Mark Holgate
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