BRIGID CATIIS AT GEN ART |
Last Tuesday night saw seventeen “alumni” fashion designers being honored by Gen Art at the classic Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood, LA. Hosted by the organization that has served as a springboard for emerging talent, the event was a kick-off to LA Fashion Week. I followed up with one of the designers, who helms an eco-friendly line made from vintage garments and fabrics. Raiisa Gerona is founder and chief designer of Brigid Catiis, a line called after her grandmother). In 2008 she was selected as one of 15 green designers for Gen Art’s "Fashionably Natural" runway show featuring Spring/Summer '09 looks. I caught up with Gerona and the conversation took an illuminating turn when considering what it’s like for a vintage/reconstructed line to attain higher levels of production and distribution and still remain true to the craft and sustainability. With demand growing, Gerona had to innovate, explaining: "[Wholesale] buyers want certain numbers of the same items, not surprise shipments [of one of a kind pieces]." Adapting to greater demand has led Gerona to build a model that mixes deconstructed garments with "dead stock" vintage fabrics that otherwise go to a landfill, or gather dust in a warehouse while new fabric gets produced in its place. This remains very labor-intensive, and finding a manufacturer who was both local and willing to deal with the intensity of the process was a big challenge. "They just turned me down all over the place," Gerona explained, "even though I was willing to pay, because to them it was just too much of their time. They want to produce a thousand shirts in 3 days, and here I am asking them to produce 100 shirts in 5 days!" Some went so far as to discourage her from even pursuing it. Perseverance and exposure-boosts from Gen Art have paid off, and Gerona found a downtown LA producer, keeping the economic benefits within her community.
Chris Cone is executive producer of Portland Fashion Week. |
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