Seattle Met Logo
Advertisement

Wear What When

Posts tagged with: Grunge

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
Seattle Style News

Hedi Slimane x Frances Bean Cobain

Email
Francesbean

One of the recently published photographs of Frances Bean Cobain by fashion icon Hedi Slimane.

If you had any sort of personal investment in the music and fashion scene in Seattle in the 90s, you’ve had at least one middle-of-the-night panicked thought for Frances Bean Cobain.

The images that just popped on up the blog of French fashion designer, photographer, and all-around icon Hedi Slimane don’t necessarily put any fears to rest, but neither will they keep you from falling asleep tonight.

You will see both Kurt and Courtney in the images of their not quite 20 year-old daughter, but moreover, you will see stark beauty and a very pinpointed approximation of the Nevermind years.

Moreover, you will find it pretty difficult to look away.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Style, Photography, Nirvana, Seattle Style News, Grunge

New Merchandise

Just Landed: Fiorentini and Baker at A Mano

A favorite boot line shows up for fall.

Email
Fiorentini_and_baker_

Fall has arrived at A Mano, in the form of Italy’s Fiorentini and Baker.

Seattle women do like their boots. Many of us, I’d say, love our boots, and a perennial favorite is Italy’s Fiorentini and Baker.

Several styles just landed at A Mano, where fall arrivals mix it up with on-sale summer styles. The overall vibe is, as ever, handmade and earthy but not too casual, and as European as it is Northwest.

I remember that last fall a friend was socking away money for a tall, taupe neo-Victorian pair of lace-up Fiorentinis, but my favorite style from A Mano’s current edit is this softly studded biker. Picture it with a full-length everyday dress in some fall texture and weight, or with a pair of summer’s sharply hued denim and a big sweater.

And keep in mind the very Seattle, quite 90s autumn mood at the recent Nordstrom Designer Preview; combat boots with Missoni dresses, and quasi-industrial stompers with Chanel.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Style, Shoes, New for Fall, Just Landed, Grunge

Slideshow

Slideshow: Nordstrom’s Designer Preview

Email
Lanvin_hat_cape

SLIDESHOW: Down the runway, after the runway, and all about the runway from Nordstrom’s July 21 Designer Preview benefit for Seattle Art Museum. Here, Lanvin. We loved the wide brim hats and tone-on-tone taupes.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

SLIDESHOW: Down the runway, after the runway, and all about the runway from Nordstrom’s July 21 Designer Preview benefit for Seattle Art Museum. Here, Lanvin. We loved the wide brim hats and tone-on-tone taupes.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Compared to recent seasons, Marni designer Consuelo Castiglioni really reigned in the pattern mash-ups and eclectic approach to color theory…

View Slideshow » Illustration:

…which just made the exceptions, this this tote, all the more appreciated.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

There were so many sumptuous coats on Thursday night. This one, by the always impeccable Dries van Noten, was princely and perfect.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The Missoni look is so Seattle circa the 90s. Slouchy sweater dressing with combat boots and knit hats. Grunge would seem to be the gift that keeps on giving. Chanel was pretty Belltown, too: steel toe-inspired black boots and oversized, copiously cuffed trousers.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Hats were a prominent accessory in general, most notably with Burberry Prorsum. The collection had a super 60s feel topped off by mink news boy hats.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The vibe at Dolce & Gabbana was 80s menswear—boxy Talking Heads style blazer references and short sweaters over slacks-with-suspenders paired with Creeper-style oxfords.:Teddy Boy-esque You can see it in the foreground there, but then in true D&G style, it’s followed by a curve-hugging dress. Animal prints and sequins punctuated the boyish looks, ensuring that the average glam-loving Dolce & Gabbana client got her fix.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Case in point: This dress. I don’t normally go for sequins, but paired with black ankle socks and glittery Dorothy from Oz pumps, it won be over. After the show we watched a serious Nordstrom collector try it on; up close you got the detail of the extra, extra, extra long sleeve. So luxurious.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Gucci is all about the 70s—but with technicolor, supermodern color. The salmon roe red of this high-neck, mid-length dress was in tune with deep emerald greens and iris-blue purple.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

More from Gucci: raspberry and an electric shade of eggplant. Photographer Lucas Anderson caught this shot just off the runway; it gets at the moodiness of the film noir-meets-flare legged decadence of the collection.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The finale is the best part, because you start to imagine a real life parade—say, up Pike or down Pine—of all the best pieces. Here, a Givenchy fur in the classic style of a baseball jacket.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

With eight or ten looks each from lines like Chanel, Akris, Dries van Noten, and Marc Jacobs, the runway has an electrically charged feel. It’s a once-a-year (at least in Seattle) thing. Some Designer Previews hang around afterward (there’s Pete Nordstrom in the foreground), while others rush to get to where the genuine articles are ready to be tried on.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

In addition to the dresses and coats, shoes and bags are available for inspection and order. Nordstrom personnel are there with trademark service.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The day after the show I flipped through my copy of W and noticed that these Miu Miu Bowie-esque glimmer bootie pumps are everywhere.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Of course, the show is always good for people watching. And it’s good for showing off your favorite pieces. This gal took the opportunity to wear boots and a bag from a recent Chanel collection. (Wonder if she was at the Chanel show at Novelty Hill-Januik that we reported from last spring?)

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Yours truly with Jamie Fish from Heffner Management and Mia Harrison from Fashion Network Seattle.

Once a year, Nordstrom brings partial collections from top designers around the world to Seattle, and sends them down the runway so that shoppers and Seattle Art Museum supporters (ticket sales benefit a specific exhibit; this year, Gauguin and Polynesia: An Elusive Paradise, on view February 2012) can whet their appetites on the coming season. It’s like New York or Paris fashion week distilled into one evening.

This year’s show was last Thursday. We all cruised out to Pier 91 and filed into the pavilion, first for drinks, then for the show itself, and then for a sort of pop-up shop in which the runway pieces are tried on, coveted, and sometimes pre-ordered.

Nearly $150,000 was raised for SAM; our slideshow gets you on the runway and in the crowd.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Style, Nordstrom, Grunge

Just Landed: Dr. Martens Clothing

You know the shoes. Now Dr. Martens branches out into the world of apparel.

Email
208342_136625019742578_110998592305221_243718_8206438_n

Many pieces recall the ’90s with plaid patterns.

If you came of age in the ’90s, chances are decent you owned a pair of Dr. Martens (even if you didn’t, you remember the trend). The brand’s sandals, boots, and mary janes seemed to fit just about every dress code—whether you rocked the grunge look, listening to Nirvana, or worshiped Clueless’ Cher Horowitz, preferring then-schoolgirl Britney Spears.

Flash forward to 2011, the footwear company just launched a clothing line for men and women.

The collection has a relaxed vibe, and includes shirtdresses, T-shirts, and button downs with lots of gingham, stripes, and, of course, plaid.

To shop the collection in person, stop by the Dr. Martens store on Second Avenue. Did you know there is a Dr. Martens on Second Ave? It’s on an odd block for retail, though it does feel appropriate to the grunge years. At any rate, the shop just received its first shipment; you can also check it out on the Doc website.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Just Landed, Grunge

Scene

True Story

An open reply to the MN reader who sent me an email asking, “What should I wear when I’m in Seattle?”

Email
Final

Maresa Patterson, this month’s Style Counsel subject. On-trend, organic, and locally made. This is what Seattle looks like. Sometimes. Other times, it doesn’t look like this at all.

Dear Visitor,

Thank you for your kind note regarding the dress code of our city. Your inquiry shows a kind of humble respect that I sometimes fear American travelers have abandoned. You know, the kinds of travelers who venture to seaside South American cities without learning simple phrases like, “Me gustaría pagar con tarjeta de crédito.” So kudos to you, Visitor, for asking.

People around here do like to question the nature of Seattle style. I suppose every city has its version of this topic. Maybe. But maybe not. Do they, in New York, trouble over the essential nature of their civic wardrobe? I guess I kinda think not. But then, that’s one of the luxuries of being a New Yorker. A cool nonchalance comes with the area codes.

The simple fact is that, for seven or eight months out of the year, rain and drizzle come with our area code, and that pervasive dampness does, in fact, color our collective look. And — and I appreciate this — our out-of-the-way station allows us freedom from playing the sartorial hero. What I mean is: As a rule, Seattleites don’t twist their ankles stepping around mud puddles in high suede heels or delicate calfskin oxfords in January. We wear solid but beautiful European-made boots and classic Red Wings. We pretty much live in boots, all made for walking. (If you think San Fran is hilly, call me after you’ve given us a try.)

And the thing is this, Visitor: They wear the sensible look in Italy, too. The whole heritage brand thing? Tough-to-impossible to pull off without a key piece or two from Filson, the timeless gear and clothing company of pioneering Seattle hipstsers since 1850.

So, you know, did we take it from them or did they take it from us? I mean, really. People around here get annoyed when you invoke the G word too often, so I will, for the most part, leave that topic where it last leapt up and demanded to be noticed, but let’s just say that we’ve already been co-opted at least once.

Still, what you’ve heard about fleece, Gortex, and Birkenstocks is true. Socks and sandals. Guilty. I mean—not personally, but it happens. Boy does it happen. Even at this time of year. On a recent sunny but sharp, bitter-cold post-holiday afternoon, I saw a mailman in short pants, socks (the kind they make those monkeys out of), and Teva sandals. Not a proud moment. Or one I could wrap my head around.

Sometimes bad things — or at least really … different things happen to good people. Even in Seattle. And sometimes, as Adam Sinding of Le 21eme Arrondissement is fond of documenting, Seattleites do show up in studded stilleto boots, cuffed, cropped pants, and directional trenches.

It’s important that you know that we don’t walk around in yellow slickers underneath umbrellas all the time. In fact, it’s almost as if the degree to which we really feel we’re O.G. Seattle, we wear layers and layers of knits and biker jackets instead of Outdoor Research rain gear. Cashmere, wool, and cotton knits work for four-seasons in Seattle, so you’ll see a lot of them.

Then again, the archetypes don’t exist for nothing. Seattle-based sportswear company Eddie Bauer calls their guy the casual sportsman and you will see him and his female equivalent all over town.

It’s not for nothing that Bauer and other sportswear companies are based here in the Northwest, But neither do high-end, locally owned department stores like Butch Blum and Mario’s as well as smart, innovative, globally bookmarked online boutiques exist in some vacuum without us locals.

I suppose the question isn’t very easy to answer. Or so it would seem by this long-winded, back and forth reply. We are very much a city of contradictions. In a good way.

Geographically isolated, yes, to some degree, but our population is anything but homogeneous. We love that certain elements of our culture - our approach to food, wine, and dining for one, our cutting edge technology for another - give us Big City cred all over the world, but we cherish the small-town vibe of our neighborhoods and we fight to protect the integrity of the greenbelts and waterways that surround us.

Yes. Contradictions. Imports working on the casual software campuses in our suburbs wear Marni, and when our indie rock exports appear on late night television variety shows, they wear whatever they’ve been wearing for the last eleven days. We hold fast to ripped denim, old cowboy shirts, and eclecticism even as global luxury brands come to town and set up shop. We do sometimes wear jeans to the ballet, but only sometimes.

I like how Maresa Patterson, a local dress designer and style-maker featured in our February issue, puts it.

“There’s a willingness in Seattle to be casual and to combine things in quirky ways,” she told me. “I respond to that.”

I do, too, and I hope, Visitor, that you will also.

Sincerely,

Laura

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Style, Seattle Street Style, Style Counsel, reader mail, Filson, Heritage Brands, Grunge

Retail News

More Fun in the New World

Brand new Damaged Goods carries good, old music and fashion, and some new stuff that’s “actually good”

Email
Bins

Slideshow: Alt-psych songwriter/mid-90s Big Deal Mark Pickerel opens Damaged Goods in Belltown

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Slideshow: Alt-psych songwriter/mid-90s Big Deal Mark Pickerel opens Damaged Goods in Belltown

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Looking for a broken-in 70s-era Levi jacket, something to spin at your go-go themed dinner party, and a Motown biography to read over the weekend? I know just the spot.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

I expect there’ll be tie-ins, promotions, and good shelf space for products from local labels like Sub Pop and Light in the Attic.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Pickerel got hooked on selling vintage clothing in Ellensburg, where he ran Rodeo Records and became the hero of countless Central Washington University Japanese foreign exchange students as they discovered Americana via Lee Hazelwood and deadstock Lee jeans.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Mark Pickerel

Outsiders think they’ve spotted a grunge comeback when Marc Jacobs puts short pants over leggings on the runway and a new generation of 15-year-olds discovers Doc Martens, but Seattleites will note a familiar and distinctly 90s refrain when they pass by the brand spanking new Damaged Goods on Second Avenue next store to Roq La Rue.

They ought to also recognize shop owner Mark Pickerel as the original drummer of the Screaming Trees, and the guy who has played with the likes of Kurt Cobain and Neko Case — but from here on out, he’ll be the their source for vintage psych rock vinyl, Vampire Weekend LPs, art-pop box sets cutely packaged in lunch pails, handpicked noir DVDs and paperback jazz memoirs, oversize art books, and salvaged moto jackets and snap-front cowboy shirts.

Pretty gutsy move, opening what is more or less a record store as even Pandora-plugged-in 63-year-olds begin to settle into the fact that they can probably get away with never paying for music again. But Pickerel figures he’ll buy new releases with an ear for the feverish, culty, collectible indie and outre stuff that tends to be needed – the “recent stuff that’s actually good” (check the slideshow image of the vinyl bins for new ways to classify genres; “rock,” “pop,” “punk,” and “folk” are out) and curate the kinds of essential odd-ball stuff collections that just can’t be downloaded or otherwise digitally transmitted. And, in this town and a few others, vinyl will never go out of style - especially not the kind of stuff that Pickerel saves from backwoods thrift shops and down home estate sales.

And speaking of curating; Pickerel plans to party with his art gallery neighbors on second-Friday art walks beginning February 11. With a few tweaks and updates here and there, he’ll reinvent his inventory to reflect and spin themes and concepts from the show next door. Pickerel will also, of course, show art distinct from the gallery’s exhibitions; upcoming this spring, portraits by alt-rock/country hero Jon Langford.

The music business isn’t the only thing alive and well on Second Ave as of last Friday.

Damaged Goods collaborator Jan Dikkers published, edited, and art directed one of the art world’s fav fashion, music, and culture rags, Issue. Now locally based and currently reimagining the fashion initiatives of a certain online retailer, Dikkers plans to relaunch his magazine.

So take that, New York. Spinning discs are not dead yet, and neither is print.

Damaged Goods, where 80s LA rockers X soundtrack the random discoveries of dusted-off ephemera and shrink-wrapped reissues, puts me in the mind of Spencer Moody’s Anne Bonny - though the former Murder City Devil doesn’t focus on music the way Pickerel does. There’s just something about a strong personality – an already trusted point of view and a reverence for the things that used to matter (not to mention a sort of comeback kid/nostalgic Belltown vibe)- that makes arguments about consumer habits and downward spirals feel downright null, void, boring, and mute.

Add a Comment »

Tags: music, Belltown, new, Seattle Vintage, Grunge

Advertisement