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Inka Colliander
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Nicole Miller S/S 2016 New York
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Pamella Roland S/S 2016 New York
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Novis S/S 2016 New York
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Polo Ralph Lauren S/S 2016 New York
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Alexander Wang S/S 2016 New York
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Ian Weglarz
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John Kang
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T NY Times Style Magazine Men's Fashion Fall 2015 : Michael Fassbender by Bruce Weber
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Deion Smith
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Baja East S/S 2016 New York
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Phelan S/S 2016 New York
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Monique Lhuillier S/S 2016 New York
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Visvim S/S 2016 New York
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Osklen S/S 2016 New York
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Mara Hoffman S/S 2016 New York
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Babyghost S/S 2016 New York
By Antonia Sardone
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Qiaoran Huang and Joshua Hupper, the design duo behind Babyghost, presented a hauntingly romantic spring collection. They were inspired by a Halston documentary, a poem about death from the 1940s and classic American retail chains such as Gap and J. Crew an odd combination to say the least. So how did they weave together these disparate elements? For starters, the ode to Halston was immediately apparent in the fabrics, which included jersey burnout and touches of gold on dresses and skirts. The classic American retail chains translated to oversize tees, a cropped trench and chunky cardigans. And the death poem? Lines from it were printed throughout the collection on everything from T-shirts to a maxiskirt. A bit creepy, yes, but the poem states that death is a friend giving a dark, twisted romance to the collection. |















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Banana Republic S/S 2016 New York
By Antonia Sardone and Aria Hughes
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Marissa Webb, global creative director of Banana Republic since April 2014, has carried forward the brands heritage while also infusing it with her own cool-girl aesthetic. For spring, she was inspired by a recent trip to Marrakech and the result was a dash of spice added into the mix. For her womens collection, she played with color and texture. It was feminine and fun at the same time. Webb showed plenty of great summer dresses that were girly and sweet, including a sun dress with eye-catching printed floral bands. Denim came a variety of ways from distressed jeans to a crop top with frayed trim. Webb really pushed the collection forward with a bra top and full skirt look, a mens wear-striped shirt paired with lace trousers and a jeweled top and striped pant combo. For women who look to Banana Republic for their work wardrobe, she offered a classic pinstripe blazer, a seersucker pantsuit and plenty of mens wear-inspired shirts. Much like the womens looks, the mens wear offering felt youthful, but it didnt veer too far from the brands heritage. Webb said the design team continues to play with suits. The silhouettes were slimmer, the pant hems were shorter and the styling was more relaxed. One of the strongest looks was a linen suit that was paired with a khaki trenchcoat which looked perfectly worn and white sneakers. Prints, which ranged from ditzy floral patterns to an ikat motif, were a nice update to shirts, shorts and chinos. |















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Noon by Noor S/S 2016 New York
By Mayte Allende
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At Noon by Noor, designed by Shaikha Noor Al Khalifa and Shaikha Haya Al Khalifa, the first look a black-and-white floral varsity jacket stated the theme clearly: sporty meets dressy. Highlights included a black drop-waist maxidress and an embellished navy apron dress, while cool floral-print shorts, a midi dress and a T-shirt jumpsuit gave the collection its springy vibe. On a more evening-oriented note, the gowns felt a bit dated and not in sync with the effortless attitude of the daywear. Case in point: a copper foil print strapless gown and a black embellished drop-waist version. |















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Ji Oh S/S 2016 New York
By Mayte Allende
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How to be unintentionally sexy, nontraditional and confident all at the same time? Thats what designer Ji Oh asked herself while designing her spring collection. I always look at city girls, women on the streets with great style, she said. So she imagined them in boxy oversize silhouettes, such as a superwide striped silk jumpsuit with a low back and a tunic and palazzo pants look in the same material. A denim group also alluded to those street references in two-tone blue versions of button-down shirts, zip-up jackets and super-size suiting. Not for everyone, perhaps. Only the superconfident need apply. |









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