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Slideshow: Logan Neitzel’s Latest

A New York Fashion Week report from our favorite former Seattleite.

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SLIDESHOW: Leather macrame (leather macrame!!!) and more: We’ve got all 16 looks from former Seattleite Logan Neitzel’s Spring 2012 line—straight from his recent NYFW show.

View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography

SLIDESHOW: Leather macrame (leather macrame!!!) and more: We’ve got all 16 looks from former Seattleite Logan Neitzel’s Spring 2012 line—straight from his recent NYFW show.

View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography
View Slideshow » Photo: Rick Kim Photography

On Friday, September 9 during New York Fashion Week’s opening weekend (otherwise known, to readers of the New York Times, as the 48 hours that define fashion) former Seattleite Logan Neitzel showed his new collection in an art gallery/“secret bar space” on the city’s Lower East Side.

There were 16 gorgeous looks created by hand with leather, silk jersey, denim, and burnt chiffon and styled by James Valeri.

Local creative content engineers, Wintr, hooked up a connection with Spotify which Wintr’s Taylor Kieburtz used to create and spin a playlist for the show and an open-to-the-world collaborative playlist for the after-party. It lives forever at Spotify (which I would link to, but you have to be a member to get into the site, and you have to have an invite to be a member, so …).

The slideshow here puts you in the front row with edgy fashion editors and followers of the dark aesthetic practiced by the likes of Rick Owens, Helmut Lang, and Ann Demeulemeester.

More? Yes, you can see more via this Portable T.V. report And keep your eyes open around town, too. We talked with one of the city’s top fashion consumers who went more or less directly to Neitzel’s showroom in NYC upon her arrival, and quickly placed a pretty epic order.

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Tags: Logan Neitzel, Project Runway, New York Fashion Week 2011

Retail Spotlight

Meet the Shopkeeper: Sweet Life

A stop-off in the state capital for some girly fun.

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Project Runway season four contestant Kit Pistol (left) once visited Olympia’s Sweet Life. You might consider visiting, too, now that you’ve met owner Erin Gillet (right).

Figuring you have some end-of-summer road trips on your calendar, we thought we’d go outside the city limits a bit in the next month or so. If you’re headed toward Ocean Shores or related points south and/or west, this first one is for you.

At Sweet Life in downtown Olympia, Erin Gillet delivers an unexpected, luxed-up vibe to local shoppers. Tucked among secondhand and vintage stores that peddle the ironic, indie look to Evergreen students and like-minded types, this women’s clothing store offers a dressed-up alternative to casual retro styles. Owner Erin Gillet does up the walls with peacock-spotted wallpaper and puts out an abundance of filled candy jars to prepare passersby for kicky, flowery mini-and maxi-dresses, well-cut blazers from small up-and-coming lines, and designer denim—the kind that pairs with stilettos not sneakers.

WWW: What album is playing on your store’s sound system right now?
Gillet: Born This Way by Lady Gaga

What was your first job in retail? What did you love or hate about it and how does it compare to what you do now?
My first retail job was at Betsey Johnson in Seattle. I obtained a wealth of experience about the fashion and retail industry there, which helped me prepare for ownership, management, and the merchandising of my own store. I love that I am able to make my own decisions about my store. I love going to trade shows and being able to order what I love for the season. I also love that I get to create my own window displays and merchandise the store however I want.

What’s your favorite thing in the store right now?
My favorite thing in the store right now is a Free People over-sized leopard french terry cardigan. Its amazingly comfortable and light weight. Perfect for summer and into the fall.

What do you love about your store’s neighborhood? What nearby restaurants, coffee shops, etc do you recommend?
I love the atmosphere of downtown Olympia. Everyone is friendly and knows one another. I love all of our fellow downtown businesses but a few off my favorite restaurants are Lemongrass, Acqua Via, La Taqueria, and the 5th Avenue Sandwich Shop. It’s also very convenient to be right in between Starbucks and the Batdorf and Bronson coffee shop!

What’s the weirdest thing that’s ever happened in your store?
The weirdest thing that has ever happened in the store would have to be when Kit Pistol from Project Runway came to the store for a mini Olympia-style red carpet shopping event. It helped promote the store tremendously and was a fun day for everyone.

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Tags: Meet the Shopkeeper, Olympia, Project Runway

A Sort of Homecoming: Logan Neitzel

The one-time Project Runway hopeful hosts a party at Sole Repair.

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Project Logan: New York-based Seattle native Logan Neitzel is baaaaaaaack (Tuesday, May 10).

Where: Sole Repair, 1001 E Pike St, Seattle

What: Art Institute alum and Project Runway star (at least in our opinion) Logan Neitzel is headed home to talk to students at his alma matter next week. After he tips his hat to their burgeoning dreams and tempers their highest hopes with (I’m guessing) stories about how the cruel world treats young designers, he wants to party with you, and maybe sell you some stuff, at Sole Repair on Capitol Hill.

The editor’s fav and NYFW vet brings with him a silent auction of exclusive designs, an opportunity to pre-order runway samples, and the chance to get inside some custom-printed T-shirts, collaborations between the designer and Inner City Empire.

DJ Spencer Moody brings the tunes from 6-8; he’s followed by DJ Mullet from 9-2.

Full bar, friends.

When: Tuesday, May 10; 5 to 8, all ages and 8 to 2, 21 and over

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Tags: Project Runway, Art Institute Seattle

‘Project Runway’ Auditions in Seattle

Fremont boutique owner Patricia Wolfkill to help decide who goes on to the next round; here’s what she’ll be looking for on Friday.

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Will the next season of Project Runway have a Logan Neitzel? That is, will Seattle represent? Merge boutique’s Patricia Wolfkill is among those deciding.

Tomorrow, while you and I are returning phone calls and faxing signatures and sitting in meetings, designers from the Seattle area will be trying very hard to impress a panel of judges representing Project Runway. Yeah, the Seattle auditions are Friday, April 29. If you’re going to be there, good luck to you—and maybe consider reading this quick Q and A with boutique owner Patricia Wolfkill. When Merge’s owner told me she asked, for the second year, to help out, I thought it’d be fun to share her criteria and insight with you here.

WWW: What do you know about why the show’s producers asked you to help judge this round of Seattle-area Project Runway hopefuls?
I’m not sure how Project Runway got my name! They called one afternoon and asked me to send them my resume and bio and said that they would be making a decision shortly on who they would pick to help judge the auditions. I suppose my background in the garment industry in NYC and LA sealed the deal. I worked for over 20 years in the wholesale side of the fashion business doing everything from sales, PR, marketing, production/manufacturing, design/merchandising as well as owning two different apparel companies. I think I bring a very real world perspective to the table at audition time. I know how hard good designers have to work at every step of the process and how their business and creativity need to come together to make it a success.

What will you be looking for when you meet each of the candidates and see their work?
I not only want to see talent but also the drive to succeed. The fashion industry is a multi-billion dollar global industry and is not for the thin skinned or faint of heart. It’s tough out there in the real world outside of Seattle and Portland. Designers are “judged” every season they show a collection. They need to have the stamina and confidence to carry on. I don’t care what they look like or how sassy they are. That’s something for the producers of the show to deal with. I’m looking for the designer with the most talent.

We sometimes see contestants who are technically gifted but lack, perhaps, a sharp sense of modern style and current, worthwhile trends. On the other hand you get really stylish and interesting candidates who get not just the current look, but the one we’ll all want next season, too. But oftentimes that type of person can’t sew … When it really comes down to it, what’s more important?
The ability to sew, to artfully construct a garment, is a very marketable one. Good pattern makers and seamstresses make a great living. But the ability to do those things does not a designer make. A true designer has the vision and creativity to transcend the ordinary and create a work of art. I’m not going to name names, but there are quite a few designers out there that don’t sew. They work with the best pattern makers and tailors/seamstresses to create their vision. I think great designers understand style, have an eye for how a garment will flatter the body, understand fabric and how it will conform (or not) to different shapes, and have impeccable taste levels. So in the end, in answer to the question, I think vision and creativity is more important than being able to sew. However, Project Runway is looking for designers that can sew. It’s the nature of the competition (and the norm for the business) and they want to see the whole package.

Looking back at last year’s judging round, what did you think of Logan Neitzel? What did you think of his work versus how he came across as a character and a designer during the season?
I think Logan is an interesting designer. He reminds me a little of Haider Ackermann, Rad Hourani, et cetera…that dark edgy mysterious thing. I don’t think that really came through enough in the competition though. I wish there had been more “luxury” to his pieces, more refinement—the kind of garments you want to sink your teeth into because they look and feel so good. “Luxurious edge” is just hard to beat in my opinion. He’s young and doing a great job. I’d love to see where he is in five years!

And what about Gretchen Jones, last season’s winner?
Ohhhhh……Gretchen. Hmmmm. There is a fine line between confidence and arrogance that I think was crossed. It made “good” TV, but distracted me from being objective about her designs. Not one of my favorites. Sorry.

Complete this sentence: If I could dream up the perfect Seattle-based designer to represent our city on the show and ultimately knock the socks off of everyone at Fashion Week, he/she would hold designers like ___________ and _________ in the highest regard, he/she would strive to make garments that would be desired by _________ and __________ and he/she would fit perfectly in my store alongside labels like _____________ and _____________.
-Phoebe Philo AND Ann Demeulemeester
-young AND old
-IAN and Ilaria Nistri

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Tags: Merge, Logan Neitzel, Project Runway

Open Call: NBC’s Fashion Designer Reality Show

The major network is set to be first among the big players to do a fashion reality show, and they’re coming to Seattle to cast it.

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It’s not like we don’t have evidence that national exposure on a major TV show can be, you know, good for a career. (Ahem, Logan Neitzel on Project Runway.)

So when I got a message from an LA casting director saying that NBC was launching the first major network fashion design reality TV program, I was happy to help them spread their nets all over the 206, 253, and 425 area codes.

Here’s what they’re not telling anyone yet:

-What the show is called
-Who the Heidi Klum/Michael Kors equivalents will be
-The details of the prize at the end of the potentially alienating/potentially amazing taping and editing circus
-When they’re coming to Seattle for their big open casting
(When I spoke to the director she told me it was their first week on the project.)

Here’s what they are telling us:

-The producers are Magical Elves, the team behind the original Project Runway and Top Chef
-Seattle is one of many cities they’re rolling through as they search for the season’s contestants
-There’s a way around the zoo-like open casting call

Yeah. If you design, sew, and dream with the best of them, this is the part you want to pay attention to.

You can email nataliebcasting @ gmail.com to pitch yourself (advice: don’t come on too strong) and get the scoop on video submissions and pre-applications. Successful inquiries (read, in the words of the casting director herself: “really awesome potentials”) get a pre-interview and will likely skip the cattle call madness that will go down later next month.

We’ll be posting open call details as they emerge, so if you don’t get it together to apply early, stay tuned for that.

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Tags: Project Runway

Behind the Scenes: Logan Neitzel

Keeping it Seattle-y, but going super broodish and dark for New York Fashion Week.

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SLIDESHOW: Behind the scenes at Logan Neitzel’s Feb 12 New York Fashion Week presentation.

View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer

SLIDESHOW: Behind the scenes at Logan Neitzel’s Feb 12 New York Fashion Week presentation.

View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer

Part of the look of the show was a chartreuse green nail lacquer custom made for the designer, via a Seattle connection. Bumble and Bumble artists did the hair.

View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer

Neitzel is known for working with leather, and for presenting a dramatic aesthetic.

View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer
View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer
View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer
View Slideshow » Photo: Jeffrey Kilmer

For more context on this type of aesthetic, check out the Paris fashion week shows currently in progress, and look for lines such as Rick Owens, Ann Demeulemeester, Damir Doma, and Gareth Pugh. Whether or not the looks in Neitzel’s Brood are the kind of thing you can imagine rocking at the Fremont Market, there’s an ever-growing faction of folks who can, and do.

Flashback to NYFW in February; we’ve got this seasons’ report from Seattle designer Logan Neitzel.

Though the Art Institute of Seattle grad now dwells completely in the realm of New York fashion (Vogue and WWD were both at his show, and some verrrry impressive names made some serious inquiries about styling the presentation for him), Neitzel and his formerly Seattle-based co-pilot, Rachelle Robinett, managed to include some Northwesterners in the making of his Fall 2011 show, which was called Brood.

(Let’s just pause there to reflect on the regional pastime of brooding, particularly when it’s 27 degrees a month before spring is due to spring.)

There’s Bainbridge Island native Jeffrey Shirbroun, who is Neitzel’s design assistant, one-time Seattleite Devin Doyle shot the show (his pictures are available on Neitzel’s site), and the nail color was a result of a connection with sometime-local Kate Pawlicki from Pulp Lab. The online retailer and pop-up shop pioneer arranged for Neitzel and his team to deliver the vibe of the collection to the lacquer makers at Strangebeautiful, who formulated a custom color for the day.

So: points for keeping it real.

Not that, technically speaking, Neitzel and co. need our approval on that end. The last year or so has been good to them. Features in mags such as Elle, Marie Claire, Numero, and Nylon are spreading the love. The web’s been good, too; Not Just a Label, a sort of online home for the avant-garde, is a big supporter, and the site’s online shop sells Logan Netizel alongside other examples of nihilistically sexy, vaguely Japanese-inspired, ancient-future fashion.

To go behind the scenes and watch the pre-show pomp and prep, access the slideshow here.

You can see images from the collection on the designer’s blog; subscribers to WWD can see the show on their site.

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Tags: Logan Neitzel, Project Runway, Art Institute Seattle

Leanne Marshall Styles Southcenter

Project Runway Season 5 winner visits the south end mall.

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Slideshow: Leanne Marshall takes us through Westfield Southcenter’s Style Closet

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Slideshow: Leanne Marshall takes us through Westfield Southcenter’s Style Closet

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Leanne and the grey-clad Westfield crew prepare for the crowd

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Westfield crew members armed with iPads check shoppers in

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Fans snap photos with Leanne between stylings

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Rose, 15, won a drawing and got to be styled by Leanne. The consultation started with a session at the Beauty Bar.

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Rose and friend Heather get a personalized tour of the Style Closet

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Aly Scott shows us her favorite Westfield find

Project Runway victor Leanne Marshall was at Westfield Southcenter mall last weekend dispensing free fashion tips as part of Westfield’s Style Tour. The designer lives in New York these days (who doesn’t?), but the ex-Portlander finds time to visit the Pacific Northwest “about four times a year.” She says she jumped at the chance to come to Seattle.

Post-Project Runway life has been a whirlwind – that last wedding dress challenge transformed her collections; they now include way more bridal looks than she had ever anticipated. Not that she isn’t still trading in petals and waves. “Architectural elements will always have their place, but making clothes that are flattering and innovative is most important – making the woman feel beautiful,” said Marshall. Ah, yes. That. When asked about Tim Gunn and the final judging she smiled. “I’d say it worked out for me. I remember Kenley saying, ‘I should’ve been nicer to Tim.’”

Then again, Kenley might have been nicer to a lot of people. Check the slideshow here for a recap of Marshall’s appearance.

Aly Scott, founder of StyleChic, and contributor to Access Hollywood, Extra, and E! was also on hand talking trends, and hashing out the looks in Westfield’s Style Closet, all of which are available within the shopping center.

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Tags: Reality TV, Project Runway

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