One year ago, when it was announced that Sarah Burton was leaving Alexander McQueen after 26 years (13 as creative director), that she would be replaced by a young guy named Seán McGirr, and that that meant that all of the designers at Kering, the second largest fashion group in the world, would be men, the news caused a rare moment of breast-beating and introspection in the fashion world. Why were all the big jobs going to men? Why did there seem to be so few women designers?
Well, on Monday it turned out that Ms. Burton, and her special kind of poetic power-through-tailoring, would be staging a return, when LVMH named her creative director of Givenchy. That happened to be the same day Tory Burch held a show in New York that solidified her position as one of the tent-pole labels of the week. It was the same day Rachel Scott unveiled a Diotima show that confirmed her as one of the most exciting young designers in the city.
All three events functioned as a reminder that not only are there women designers — there are great ones. Perhaps it’s time to focus on them. You see interesting things when you do. Ms. Burch being a prime example.
For the last few years she has been pushing herself out of the comfort zone of Lee Radziwill-on-vacation caftans and ballet flats on which she made her name, surprising a fashion world that had largely pigeonholed her as a designer of suburban chic. Instead she has made an increasingly convincing case that she is the Claire McCardell of her generation, a legitimate heir to the woman who helped invent American sportswear.
This season was no different, the combination of her main lines and Tory Sport, which used to be designed as two separate collections, leading her to … well, a combination of sport and style that seemed particularly apropos in a post-Olympics, post-WFH world.
Tory Burch
Yuki Iwamura/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images For Tory Burch
Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images For Tory Burch
Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images For Tory Burch
Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images For Tory Burch
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Source: Elections - nytimes.com