Tag Archives: Jenna Knouse

Sheltered from the Storm

FASHION

This coveted residency is why a Philly designer may be mainstream fashion’s next household name.
By Jenna Knouse

 

Incubator. Say it five times fast. Want a challenge? Define it. Just kidding. Don’t. That’s why Google exists. Fortunately (or unfortunately), I picture words. Tractor? A John Deere. Neighbor? The old man with the fuzzy cow. Incubator? A chick hatchery. Pardon, my country roots are showing.

Philadelphia Fashion Incubator New Class

The new class, from left: Janell Wysock, Christie Sommers, Jessica Joy London, Latasha Hall, Amy Voloshin and Sara Keel.

But, that’s just my mental image. Incubators don’t have to be peep hatcheries. The Philadelphia Fashion Incubator reboots this month, and it’s hatching a different type of chick. This year’s class, its sixth, is comprised entirely of women.

Pause. Rewind. What’s the Philadelphia Fashion Incubator, again? It’s an annual 12-month residency for six designers committed to growing their labels in the Philadelphia area. The program nurtures business awareness through networking, seminars and access to resources.

Fast-forward. Resume. The incoming class features Latasha Hall (Lillie Designs by Latasha), Sara Keel (Penrose Design Studio), Jessica Joy London (Eluthera), Christie Sommers (West Oak Design), Amy Voloshin (A. Voloshin) and Janell Wysock (Janell Wysock Textiles). For all their optimism and ambition, they’ll be promptly pushed out of the nest with a weeklong boot camp.

“I hear them talking about their brands and think, I remember saying the same stuff, saying I’m going to do this and that,” laughs Conrad Booker (conradbooker), a graduate of the incubator’s last session. “These industry professionals come in, and they kick you in the face.” Figuratively, of course. And it’s all for the greater good.

“Being at the incubator, I changed in ways I wouldn’t have without the program,” says Nigel Richards (611 Lifestyle), another grad from the last session. “Whether I would have quit or gone a different direction, I don’t know. But, I’m grateful for the path the program’s put me on.”

The incubator’s designers-in-residence benefit from exclusive access to resources and decision-makers that can mean all the difference in making it and not.

An opportunity to change direction, that’s what the Philadelphia Fashion Incubator provides. It turns side jobs into careers, chicks into hens. How, exactly? Well, the curriculum is fluid, says executive director Elissa Bloom. It’s tailored to cater to the strengths and weaknesses of the current class. The designers themselves decide on their goals, and the incubator catalyzes the process to achieving them.

Where keeping it local is a prerequisite for the designers-in-residence, it’s becoming a more devout interest with each new class. Early on, it was meant to seed an arid scene. But now it’s evolved to become part of a larger consciousness.

“It is exciting to see our designers’-in-residence commitment to manufacture in Philadelphia and keep it all local. From the production of their collections to using local photographers and printers for marketing, they are the future, and making an impact on revitalizing the region’s once-thriving fashion sector,” Bloom says. “It is inspiring to see many of them focused on sustainability and zero-waste design and how creating social impact companies are a core part of their business models and brand DNA.”

Eveningwear and wedding dress designer Latasha Hall’s roots go hand-in-hand with her ambition. “My aunt’s best friend taught me how to sew my first outfit in fourth grade,” she says. “Since then, I couldn’t stay away from the machine.”

Still, in this industry, passion, and talent, for that matter, will only carry you so far. To advance beyond that ceiling requires access to an inside track that eludes even the most promising designers. The incubator won’t place you there, but it’ll load up your arsenal so that you stand a better chance of discovering it—or it discovering you—on your own.

Which is why the incubator has come to represent a sort of safe haven for its designers, who have already sacrificed much in pursuit of innovation. Sara Keel left her 11-year gig in corporate fashion to turn her hobby into something real. And Amy Voloshin started using her formidable print company as a springboard to craft her own designs.

Christie Sommers believes in zero-waste. She uses straight-stitch sewing, a Japanese technique, to minimize it. While knitwear designer Janell Wysock employs yarn bits in her up-cycled pieces. Jessica Joy London isn’t far removed from their spirit. She paints silks with organic patterns to encourage connection with nature.

Together, they make for a vivid vision of the future that, at this rate, appears likely to include a local designer among the household labels.

Photography by Matthew J. Rhein

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Mind the Gap

FASHION

Inclined as we are to fixate on spring, there are a few awkward weeks to get through first.

 

Transitions are awkward. Remember middle school? I looked like a poodle with an ‘80s blowout and ducked into bathrooms to avoid boyfriends. (Truthfully, my dating habits haven’t changed since.)

Skip to adulthood, and seasonal gaps—you know, the time between seasons when it looks like we dressed without contacts, mirrors and weather apps—are the new middle school. But, they don’t have to be.

Pre-fall and resort fashion exist to make seasonal gaps less gappy. They’re the bridge between and a sneak peak of the major seasons. (Cough. Spring/Summer and Fall/Winter. Cough, cough). My point? Your Turks and Caicos garb shouldn’t go bye-bye after you return to reality. Here’s how to combine resort with spring to smoothly transition from one season to the next. —Jenna Knouse

 

Photos courtesy Moda Operandi (trousers, sweater and mules) and Farfetch (Backpack, jacket and sunglasses)

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J Brand Classic Denim Jacket, Spring/Summer ‘17

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5 Homegrown Labels Poised to Have a Breakout Year

FASHION

We may be forever fixated on NYC and LA, but some of the freshest clothes and accessories around are coming out of our own backyard.

By Jenna Knouse

Kendall Jenner? Nope. Gigi Hadid? Nah. New York City’s the only name making fashionistas fangirl. Run by pink-haired style bloggers, celeb culture and megabrand HQs, the Big Apple is American fashion’s Big Cheese. But, cheese is better on a soft pretzel, and soft pretzels are best in Philadelphia.

So look to your backyard—past the sandbox and Steven Starr restaurants—you’ll spot fashion talent bringing cool to a lukewarm industry. Sure, big brands meet a need: They’re the whitespace, the canvas. But, small brands fill a void: They’re the paint, the personality. Forget the sweater everyone’s wearing. Shop homegrown one-of-a-kinds instead. To get you started, here are five labels that are pushing to become nationwide names before the year’s out.

Concrete Polish Jewels
Angela Monaco overhauled granny’s heirlooms. The result? Concrete Polish Jewels. Working out of Northern Liberties, Monaco fuses metal to mineral in timeless but edgy design. And, she’s good at it—her brick-and-mortar, Ritual Ritual, won Best Jewelry for Philadelphia Magazine’s Best of Philly 2016. Why? Concrete Polish is wow, and so are its other offbeat brands. Peers helping peers. Can I get an amen?

 

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Lobo Mau
Mod is the mood, and Nicole Haddad brings it. Born from a South Philly studio, Lobo Mau is bold and sophisticated, a combo reflecting its Portuguese translation: Big. Bad. Wolf. Nothing’s bigger or badder (in a good way) than a well-dressed woman. Especially if she’s comfy. Win. Oh, and Haddad’s all about collab—fine artist Ryan Parker creates her prints. Share that brotherly love.

 

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Rebeca Imperiano
Structural, moody, lustrous. Rebeca Imperiano’s eponymous label’s the lovechild of architecture and fashion. Fitting because the designer holds a bachelor’s in architecture and a master’s in fashion. (Shout-out to my alma mater, Drexel University, for the second degree). Out of school only three short years, Imperiano’s aesthetic is impressively mature. Sleekness your weakness? Watch James Bond, buy Rebeca Imperiano.

 

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West Oak Design
Christie Sommers makes fashion by making an eco-friendly statement. Dress scraps become a shirt, and shirt scraps, a clutch. Her process wastes zilch, and her products are top-notch. Think air-dried, hand-dyed fabrics and easy shapes. Handcrafted locally in Wyndmoor, West Oak Design is earthy, crunchy cool. Look good, feel good and save Mother Nature in the process.

 

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jenna k.
After graduating in June, I founded jenna k. I’d write a blurb, but I’m too biased to not gush. Check me out online instead or follow me on Instagram.

 

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Photos courtesy (from the top): jenna k., Concrete Polish Jewels, Lobo Mau, Rebecca Imperiano, West Oak Design, jenna k.

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Fur: Winter’s New Cool Girl

TREND REPORT

In finally shaking loose from the cold, hard grip of the blue-hair crowd, this winter’s fur is releasing decades of stifled aggression.

By Jenna Knouse

Editor’s Note: This is the first installment from our new contributing fashion editor, Jenna Knouse. Jenna is a graduate of Drexel’s Antointette Westphal College of Media Arts & Design, where she earned a bachelor’s in fashion design. “As an eighth grader obsessed with ‘What Not to Wear,’ nothing topped the satisfaction of discovering a new trend,” she says. “In my 22-year-old mind, the same thinking prevails.” Aside from writing for us, Jenna’s in the process of creating her own fashion line. Look for her next in our winter issue, where she’ll be curating a collection of accessories to brighten up the year’s monotone phase.

3.1 Phillip Lim sculpted velvet mini skirt

The runway is fashion calculus—not easy to grasp and often absurd. Fashion design’s been my life for the last few years, and the runway still trips me up. Pun intended.

Just because Gucci shows head-to-toe fur doesn’t mean you should wear a mink stole over a chinchilla onesie. You can, but it’s not encouraged.

So if you and Trish won’t wear it, why do designers show it? Because runway favors the avant-garde, and avant-garde doesn’t mean over-the-top artsy. The French term translates to advanced guard, and the advanced guard was combat’s frontline. In other words, the avant-garde runway pushes culture forward while sacrificing itself. So next time McQueen shows a snakeskin leotard, dodge the bullet and just buy the clutch.

But snakeskin isn’t in this winter, so forget the clutch and skim the trends. Think texture … tactile and visual: graphic furs, velvet, plaids and stripes, metallic. Smash ‘em onto a maxi coat or pair with lacquered denim. Welcome to Winter 2017.

Pam & Gela Cardi with Shreds

Faux or real, fur is wow. No one throws on mink to blend in at Whole Foods, especially this season. Fur got a makeover, and she’s the new cool girl. Need proof? Check out Fendi’s aqua blue sheepskin (pictured, top) or Proenza Schouler’s rabbit patchwork. Head to Skirt, in Bryn Mawr, and pick up a j*military by jocelyn cargo with jewel-tone streaked fur.

Not your fur-te? Put down the coat and buy velvet. It’s date-night approved, holiday-ready and sold at Knit Wit, in Bryn Mawr. Buy the 3.1 Phillip Lim mini or opt for the joggers. Both come in sapphire and will trigger green envy. Want more? See Stuart Weitzman’s Calare velvet booties. Make sure to pair them with plaids and stripes.

Carven tartan bouclette oversize coat

Plaids and stripes are to fashion as burgers are to food—classic. And this winter, crossing the lines is the equivalent of adding bacon. Stripes are big and plaids are bold, so wear the two together. Splurge for van Noten’s neutral plaid pantsuit and top it off with drama; try the Carven tartan coat, now available at Latrice, in Bryn Mawr.

Couple your textures, and mix boutiques and brands. Contemporary fashion has no rules. So shrug into Pam & Gela’s metallic cardigan (Skirt), throw on your Carven tartan coat and grab a Whiting & Davis cross-body bucket bag (Knit Wit).

Your winter wardrobe tells a story. Why not aim for all the nuance of a Zadie Smith novel?

 

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