Best in Sports Event & Experiential Marketing
Sports Business Journal - Sports Business Daily
Read ArticleHaute Secrets New York: Luxury Brand and Lifestyle Megamind Mike Brown
Haute Living Magazine Online
Read ArticleFashion Week: Highlights From the Bryant Park Tents, American Express and W Hotels Lounges, Isaac Mizrahi's Set
BizBash Online
Read ArticleEven Walking Away, They Still Look Good.
Cathy Horyn, New York Times. Lars Klove, Photography.
Read ArticleMizrahi: Singing for His Supper
Cathy Horyn, New York Times. Marilynn K. Yee, Photograph.
Read ArticleIsaac Mizrahi Spring 2010 | Style.com
Laird Borelli-Persson, Style.com|September 17, 2009
Isaac Mizrahi Spring Summer 2010 Runway Show 2009
View Project
What do a Hollywood soundstage, a rain machine, and a golf cart have in common? Isaac Mizrahi. Today the designer proved, yet again, that he is New York fashion's consummate showman (live or taped).
Mizrahi has always loved to expose the behind-the-scenes action with his theatrics (cue Unzipped) and with his clothes (remember the corset dresses on the cover of Vogue, March 1998?)—and for Spring he unveiled raw edges, hints of deconstruction, and jackets with unfinished lapels in his let's-put-on-a-show. Despite the rain, and the appearance of a Gene Kelly umbrella, the production was titled Astaire Case or Obstacle Course, and the menswear-ish elements were informed by fifties-era Fred, Mizrahi said. It was the eveningwear, with hints of postwar Charles James, though, that stole the show. Sequined minidresses might be suitable for dancing the night away, and a hirsute tinsel coat might be just right for a premiere, but the spotlight rested on the pieces with airiness and flou: the tulles that looked like they hadn't been sewn but just wrapped about the body, the floaty watercolor chiffons, the chic black-and-white numbers destined for Palm Beach.
Mizrahi described the collection as an evolution from his Elsa Schiaparelli-inflected Fall outing, and indeed there were subtle tributes to "that Italian artist who makes clothes" in a Lucite lobster appendage and cardboard hats. But the real link between the seasons was the designer's perennial enthusiasm: "I still believe," Mizrahi said, "that fashion has to be gorgeous and colorful and fun." That's entertainment.
Source: http://www.style.com/fashionshows/review/S2010RTW-MIZRAHI