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Filson’s New Guy on the Runway

Images from Richard Chai’s February 9 runway show, featuring Filson-inspired accessories.

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SLIDESHOW: Richard Chai Love by Filson creative director Richard Chai. The fall/winter ‘12 collection sparked what would become the formal relationship between the designer and the local brand; many of the upcoming season’s pieces feature Filson-informed elements. Check the fanny pack-belt-coat situation here. Swoon.

View Slideshow » Photo: Style.com

SLIDESHOW: Richard Chai Love by Filson creative director Richard Chai. The fall/winter ‘12 collection sparked what would become the formal relationship between the designer and the local brand; many of the upcoming season’s pieces feature Filson-informed elements. Check the fanny pack-belt-coat situation here. Swoon.

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Filson’s tried and true shooting bag was one of Chai’s big inspirations. Why should hunters get all the fanny packs, after all? (And why have I not seen this thing before and worked it into my personal collection?)

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And a version for the guys. Overall, the collection has a sort of androgynous egalitarian/utilitarian thing going on.

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The designer riffed on the shooting bag in a number of different ways. According to style.com, his aim was ‘handsome femininity.’

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Filson’s backpacks were also adapted for the runway. Personally, I think backpacks are better left in elementary schools, but to each his/her own.

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Another gorgeous, shooting-bag coat.

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Though not strictly Filson-informed, this outerwear example also fuses the urban setting with an outdoors one. It would be interesting to see this piece in person; it’s a little unclear what’s going on with that mock drawstring neck …

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I think it’s exciting that a designer who shows shooting bags, tin cloth, and rugged backpacks in the same narrative as classic prep knitwear and voluminous free-form slacks is now working for our favorite local brand.

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Same thing goes here. Sheer pants and oversized menswear? Please pack those ideas when you come out west, Chai.

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If you see this guy on streets of Seattle—maybe down around SoDo—wave back.

Filson must have given him the day off. The brand’s new creative director, Richard Chai, presented the fall ‘12 collection for his Richard Chai Love line in New York yesterday. Of course, it was this collection that sparked the partnership and the Filson-informed uptown/outdoor vibe was prominent, so I’m sure local HQ was more than accommodating.

By the way: Richard Chai Love isn’t available in Seattle. No one carries it. Let’s see if that doesn’t change here soon …

For now, click through the slideshow here to see highlights from the runway presentation and get some background knowledge on the practical, rugged pieces that Chai adapted for his no less practical or rugged ready-to-wear.

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Tags: Filson, New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2012, Richard Chai

Trunk Show

Stella McCartney at Mario’s

Check out looks from the upcoming season, grab a veggie appetizer or two, and talk with brand ambassador Andrew Dershaw.

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A sheer polka-dot shirt and short-short combo, paired with sporty summer sandals from Stella McCartney’s spring/summer 2012 show; select pieces from the collection will be available at Mario’s on February 17.

Where: Mario’s

What: A Stella McCartney trunk show of the spring/summer 2012 collection and celebration of the return of the luxury line to Mario’s.

The bright prints, eyelet, and subtly alluring mesh details showcased in the pieces for the upcoming season create a look that’s as fresh and relaxed as it is sophisticated; the slinky shapes and lightweight fabrics have a subtle but energizing athletic twist. Preview the collection online at stellamccartney.com and get geared up for a firsthand look.

The trunk show will be open to shoppers during normal business hours but from 2 to 5 guests can enjoy cocktails and vegetarian hors d’oeuvres (McCartney is true to her eco-friendly persona in more than just her design aesthetic) while they’re viewing key pieces in an informal model presentation. Fashion expert and brand representative Andrew Dershaw will also be on hand for one-on-one styling tips and insider information on the designer’s inspiration of the collection and more. Mario’s is the only retailer in the region to host a trunk show event from the English designer this season.

When: Friday, February 17 from 10–5, special reception from 2–5. For an appointment please 206-622-6161.

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Tags: Mario's, Seattle Trunk Show

Fashion News

Headlines: Filson Hires Richard Chai

Now the local brand is really in fashion.

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The guy who designed this, Richard Chai, now has his hands in Seattle’s 115-year old pride and joy, Filson. Hunting, fishing, and blue runway lipstick? We can’t wait to see what comes of it.

A short list of people attending New York Fashion Week while you and I order double espressos in the rain: Anna Wintour, Kanye West, local photographer and Seattle Met contributor Alvin Nguyen, and the dude from Filson.

Seattle-based CEO and president Mark Korros is previewing the fall ‘12 shows and mingling with editors, stylists, and buyers because, as Style.com recently reported, his brand new coworker is big player the week’s events. Hot young American designer Richard Chai has been named Filson’s new creative director. This is no contract gig or one-off collaboration. Chai’s on staff.

Sure, our beloved SoDo-based retailer of all things rugged and hipster-approved has been in fashion for the last few years, but this new partnership means they’re really in fashion.

When Chai shows later today, his models will be sporting gear inspired and informed by Filson sport gear. The New York–based designer, a longtime Filson fan, worked with the Seattle company last year to negotiate this; it was during these collaboration conversations that Chai was offered a position with the company.

I exchanged emails with Korros just after he touched down in NYC yesterday; next up (fingers crossed), I’ll be able to chat with Chai when he comes into town. Korros says Chai is “very anxious to experience the brand in its environment.” Is it just me? I can’t help compiling a mental list of restaurant recommendations and shopping stops for him.

Check back tomorrow for images from Chai’s show; for now, read my dialog with the Filson boss.

WWW: Filson’s collaborations with fashion brands of late have been really exciting—I’m thinking of the Levis x Filson thing. I imagine these kinds of projects will only get more interesting if Chai is encouraged to bring in other exciting young designers.
Korros: We will continue to work with Iconic American brands on a select basis to bring new and exciting products to market. Richard’s influence will be focused on helping us build out our “Rugged Casual Apparel" offerings as we work to provide our customers great Filson apparel and accessories to fit their everyday needs.

I know it’s always been important for the company to stay loyal to outdoorsmen and those who don’t necessarily have fashion on their compass. At the same time, a new customer is finding Filson every minute … and looking for fashion pieces. Presumably, Chai will offer more for the latter than the former—do you foresee him having a hand with utilitarian duck hunting vests, too?
It is as important that we maintain our commitment to function as our commitment to building high quality everyday apparel with a focus on Filson classic styling and comfort. Our customers can enjoy both from Filson, but they do not need to be the same.

Should we expect radical changes and new product lines from Chai as creative head?
We do not see this as change as much as expanding upon the heritage we have enjoyed for 115 years. Richard shares in our passion of Filson’s classic design. Together, we will continue to build approachable, timeless styles from the best materials and combine craftsmanship that is built to last the test of time.

Some Filson pieces are now being produced in China; are there any plans to move all manufacturing back to the U.S.—back to Seattle? Does Chai have an interest in domestically produced goods?
Over 70 percent of what we sell today comes from our Filson Seattle-based factory. We employ 95 people here with several who have decades of experience crafting our apparel, luggage, and accessories. [Seattle] is very important as it relates to the core of our brand. We would choose to produce everything here in Seattle if possible. Resource limitations we’ve faced have forced us to source elsewhere in the U.S.A. and other countries around the world. Made in the U.S.A. is very important and is part of what the Filson Brand is; we are looking to keep producing [Chai’s] designs in our [Seattle] factory or with our other authorized sewing partners in the U.S.A.

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Tags: Filson, Retail News, Seattle Retail News, New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2012, Richard Chai

Wedding Wednesday

Cedarbrook Wedding Showcase

You won’t even know you’re in South Seattle.

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Where: Cedarbrook Lodge

What: A wedding open house showing off the gorgeous, lush, and modern setting that is this hidden experience in South Seattle. You really have to see it to believe it. Preferred vendor presentations from Celebrity Cake Studios, Mode Photography, Affairs to Remember, and Marine View Floral set you up to experience the local but worldly cuisine from the truly phenomenal in-house caterers at Copperleaf Restaurant.

When: Sunday, February 19 from 2 to 5; register online at cedarbrooklodgeweddings.com or RSVP to weddings @ cedarbrooklodge.com

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Catering, Seattle Wedding Catering, Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Venues, Seattle Wedding Photography

Wedding Wednesday

Introducing Rebecca Cairelli

Vera Wang has competition; she lives in Bellingham, has a gorgeous Australian accent, and can make you the dress of your dreams.

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Perhaps, when flipping through the new issue of Seattle Met Bride & Groom, you noticed a knee-length wedding shift by a dressmaker whose name was not Vera Wang or Elizabeth Fillmore or Paloma Blanca. Her name is Rebecca Cairelli, she lives in Bellingham, and her style couldn’t be better suited for the current bridal market—easy but romantic, sweet but sophisticated, and aware of ready-to-wear fashion silhouettes and traditional bridal shapes but not beholden to either one.

Having held several of her pieces in my hands, I can tell you her work is meticulous, and her fabric choices are impeccable. Event designer Steve Moore, he of the highest taste and greatest standards, introduced me to her work, and that says a lot, too. Birds of a feather flocking together and whatnot …

For the time being, Cairelli’s dresses are available directly from the designer herself. The best way to familiarize yourself with her shapes and ideas is to click through our slideshow of wedding day looks and read the following Q&A. The best way to see her full collection and talk to her about custom work is to ring her up and talk to her about an appointment. Can’t say that about Ms. Wang.

WWW: You started making wedding dresses at a very early age; where do you think that came from? Who inspired your earliest notions of romance and grand elegance?
Cairelli: I think it’s just in my blood. I come from a long line of artists. My grandfather was accepted into the same art school as Salvador Dalí in Spain; he is an amazing painter. I have always created. I think though, it started as a need. My Barbie needed to get married and she absolutely needed a dress to do it in. Actually I don’t even think I had a Ken at the time, I’m not sure who it was that she was to marry. But as for first inspirations I think the Givenchy dress Audrey Hepburn wore in Sabrina was, in my eyes, the most fabulous thing I had ever seen—at least at the age of five. I probably watched that movie 100 times while growing up just for that scene.

You’re from Australia but you’re now living in Bellingham; does geography and place play into your perspective as a designer? I know Australia has a really vibrant fashion scene, and Bellingham seems to really support the idea of a small independent artisan. But beyond that, getting into style, are you influenced or informed by your outer environment?
Yes and no. I have lived all over: Australia, Argentina, Singapore, and now the Pacific Northwest, so my outside influence has been very broad. A lot of who I am as a designer today is because of my life, my whole life and all of the experiences that encompass that; geography, my faith, who my parents are, and my husband have all been key in shaping my philosophy to design. But when talking style, Australia has played the major role in my aesthetics. It is an extremely creative culture and with that, artists who are not afraid to push the boundaries of beauty.

You were married yourself not long ago. What was your dress like and how on earth did you manage to distill all your skills and ideas to create your own perfect dress?
Is ironic the right word? Lets just say love was the only perfect thing about that day… oh and maybe the weather. Because of all of the immigration laws my husband Henry and I decided that we would have what they refer to as a ‘spontaneous wedding’. I created my wedding gown ‘Project Runway–style’ the night before. I struggled with deciding on a design, so instead I let our environment dictate the direction. We had a beach wedding down at Ballard’s Golden Gardens. It was super casual. So in the end I walked down the isle in a dove gray high-waisted mermaid skirt with horizontally stripped panel inserts. My top was also gray, billowing over where the skirt met. It was far from perfect, but when I look back I love how well it went with the overall feel of the day.

Your style takes classic, traditional wedding fashion into account, but adds fashion detailing and modern shapes. Is it a conscious decision to keep that balance or is it a natural result of your ideas about what’s beautiful and current? Do you look at current ready-to-wear lines and think about incorporating those silhouettes? If so, who are some of your favorite designers?
I think it is an unconscious decision. I have always been drawn to the unconventional shapes and fashion detailing of ready-to-wear lines, there is a freshness to them that the traditional bridal fare is absolutely missing. But really I think it just lands on personal aesthetics and how I feel when I look at a gown. For me what dictates the balance is movement. How my eyes move across the gown, how the gown itself moves. One of my favorite designers at the moment is Australian Designer Alice McCall. Her clothes are really urban and relaxed. They make me think of flowy dresses.

Okay, Kate Middleton already had her wedding. Who—anyone in the world, really, don’t bother thinking about if they’re actually married or engaged or whatever—would you love to design a wedding gown for?
Hmmmm, this is a tough one. Maybe top model Miranda Kerr. I met her several years back at Australian Fashion week. She is a really genuine person.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Gown, Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Vendors

Gift Guide

Give It Up: Valentine’s Day

Five new gift ideas—and then some—for going outside the flowers-and-chocolates realm.

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Photo: Momo

SLIDESHOW:Pictured here are Trois Petits Points enamel lockets, available in a variety of colors at Momo, and shipped here especially for you from Paris.

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SLIDESHOW:Pictured here are Trois Petits Points enamel lockets, available in a variety of colors at Momo, and shipped here especially for you from Paris.

View Slideshow » Photo: Laura Cassidy

Spice it up with something exotic, flavorful, and possibly love-inducing from World Spice Merchants.

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The iPhone case by Hex, available at Goods, the perfect gift for the romantic texter in your life.

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The Indoor Sun Shoppe in Fremont, where you will find cacti, succulents, orchids, carnivorous plants and even an artichoke flower. Consult with the experts to choose the best option for the lifestyle of your special someone.

View Slideshow » Photo: FES Quintessentials

Flower essences are believed to promote emotional health. Each mixture is designed to boost the spirit in specific ways. Pictured here is Fear-Less by LES Quintessentials. The complete collection is available at Dandelion Botanical Company.

Do we say this every year? Maybe so. But it remains true: there’s nothing wrong with chocolates or flowers, but you may want to go in another direction just to prove you can. From the north end of town to the International district, here are five suggestions for thinking outside the box this Valentine’s Day.

Named for the Japanese word for peach, Momo – manages to offer a variety of men’s and women’s clothing, vintage and new housewares, jewelry, and gifts from Asia, Europe and Hawaii inside a small corner shop in the ID. We like the assortment of accessories made from kimono fabric; owner Lei Ann Shiramizu suggests the Trois Petits Points’ enamel lockets, available in a variety of colors.

Because lovers love to eat, and, especially in Seattle, lovers love to cook, point your nose in the direction of World Spice Merchants. Loose leaf teas, cook books, and gift sets (perhaps Provencal Taste or Chile Exotica?) are all well and good, but we love the pure spices best. Bright yellow curries and deep pink beet powders are pretty enough to jar and leave unwrapped; research a full-meal deal to create with your freshly ground potions and you’ve got a pretty sweet gift on your hand. You might even investigate which spices have aphrodisiac qualities.

Maybe the two of you aren’t quite at that stage yet. For V’Day hunters whose tastes are more sporty than spicy, check out the Hex line at Goods. The maker of bags and watches does nice iPhone cases; they’re elegant, hip, and simple—and just right for couples who wouldn’t be where they are today without those unlimited texting plans.

If flowers have always been your thing, try changing the plan just a little this year with a plant that’s reminiscent of sunlight and sand, or a tropical forest. Indoor Sun Shoppe Sun Shoppe/ tends to an indoor oasis of orchids, succulents, carnivorous plants, and other tropical botanicals. If you think your sig other might get serious about this exotic green thumb thing, the shop also vends greenhouse supplies, and lots of lighting options capable of subbing in for the sunshine. (See that Theo Chocolate shop across the street? No one’s going to call you on it if you spring for some of that, too.)

Another way to tweak the flower tradition is to try Dandelion Botanical Company where the flower essences are packaged in colorful bottles and intended to lift spirits, boost moods, and carry one off to sleep—and all kinds of other things too. The distilled formulas are said to have the energetic properties of the blooms they’re derived from, so even if you don’t think your giftee needs a remedy, you might consider giving them the vibrational equivalent of their favorite bouquet or beloved herb. You never know when hibiscus or larkspur might come in handy.

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Jewelry Marketplace

Indulge at BAM

It’s time for this year’s jewelry sale and gallery on the Eastside.

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Seattle jeweler Maria Carter is one of several Washingtonians in this year’s Indulge at BAM.

Where: Bellevue Arts Museum

What: Sure has been a lot of talk about local jewelry lately, huh? BAM’s yearly Indulge marketplace can be viewed as a sort of pop-up and a gallery show for local jewelers as well as artists outside of the area. The museum’s body adornment experts curate the accessories fair with an eye for contemporary trends, craftsmanship, and local interest.

When: Friday, February 10 through Sunday, February 12 from 11 to 5 each day. Tickets start at $10

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Tags: Bellevue Arts Museum, Locally Made Jewelry

Stylish Exhibit

Opening Soon: Mary Lee Hu at Bellevue Arts Museum

The innovative wire jewelry artist is feted beginning Tuesday, February 7.

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SLIDESHOW: Preview pieces from Knitted, Knotted, Twisted & Twined: The Jewelry of Mary Lee Hu, happening Feb 7–June 17 at the Bellevue Arts Museum

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SLIDESHOW: Preview pieces from Knitted, Knotted, Twisted & Twined: The Jewelry of Mary Lee Hu, happening Feb 7–June 17 at the Bellevue Arts Museum

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Choker #81, 1993

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Brooch #27, 2009

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Choker #87, 2002

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Praying Mantis #2, 1974

Where: Bellevue Arts Museum

What: A collection of more than 90 earrings, rings, brooches, and neckpieces spanning the last 50 years by celebrated local metalsmith and jeweler Mary Lee Hu. Knitted, Knotted, Twisted and Twined combines publicly and privately held pieces that demonstrate the hand woven wire technique that sets Hu in a class of her own. Structure and pattern, hard and soft, wearable and maybe not so much, these pieces represent a body of work that’s been shown in such national venues as Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in the UK, and the Museum of Fine Arts Boston.

Hu’s honors include being inducted into the National Metalsmith’s Hall of Fame (2008), the Twining Humber Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement from Artist Trust (2008), the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Seattle Metals Guild (2006), and three National Endowment of the Arts Craftsman Fellowships.

Click through the slideshow here for a selection of her work, and read our interview below for further insight on the artist herself.

When: Tuesday, February 7 through June 12.

WWW: A retrospective provide an almost overwhelming opportunity to assess your own work. What have you noticed about yourself and your work and your growth as an artist as you’ve witnessed BAM put this show together?
Hu: Almost overwhelming is the operative phrase here. This whole process has taken so much more time and energy than I ever expected. I have given numerous lectures about my work over the years—several hundred. It has always been basically the same lecture… [ideas about] about how I got interested in metals, how I got interested in wire work, how I explored various ways of manipulating the wires, how I happened onto twining, and then how I explored twined forms and surface patterning, always in a roughly chronological sequence, broken down by process. So I have been looking at and analysing my work constantly over the years, even as I continued to push and explore different forms.

[BAM], in choosing which pieces to include in the show, has included most of what I consider my better and more pivitol ones, but declined to include a few others so that the show does not quite match my own story about myself. And then, unfortunately, a few could not be obtained for one reason or another—we could not locate them, or the owner would not loan them. Some of these latter we were able to include in the catalog.

Of course some of the earlier work does reflect the times in which it was made. The late ’60s and into the ’70s were a time when we studio jewelers were making *large neckpieces.as a reaction to the small, safe, precious fine jewelry tradition. A curvilianer psychedelic look was prevalent – mingling Art Nouveau with the back to the earth hippie movement. My work reflects this with—what I was hoping for even at the time—a bit of elegance added.

What’s changed in terms of the exterior conditions of your work? Were there other women working in metalsmithing when you started? What do you see now in terms of women working in jewelry and metals?

I think that the fact that I decided at 16 that I wanted to work in metals was unusual. Not that it was metals, but the fact that I knew what I wanted to do. I see so many college students who do not know what they want to pursue until quite a few years into their college career. There were women metalsmiths early on, ever since the Arts and Crafts movement at the turn of the century, although I did not have any as teachers or mentors. There were plenty of fellow women students in both my undergraduate and graduate classes. When I was president of SNAG (the Society of North American Goldsmiths) from 1977-80, membership was about equally divided between men and women. I have not looked at the membership roster with this in mind lately, but I would say that there are now more women in the field..

You were born in Ohio and came to Seattle later in life, eventually teaching at the University of Washington for 16 years as a professor of art before your retirement in 2006. How has the Northwest influenced your work?
This has been asked and I find it hard to answer. My colleague at the University of Washington, John Marshall, used to say he felt the Northwest, with its vast panoramas of mountains, influenced work to become larger. Mine became smaller since coming here in 1980.

My twining process is based on my study of a Northwest Coast Native American basket that I bought when traveling here for the first time in 1966, but I was living in Ohio at the time. I have often remarked when lecturing on our field, that we are generally less influenced by where we live as by where we studied and who with, with the exception that I have seen in some colleagues who live in the Southwest begin to exhibit Native American and or Hispanic influences.

I have often wondered just how my travels or my collections have actually influenced my work. I used to show pictures taken of the curvilinear rice paddies stepping down mountainsides in Taiwan or Bali and say that much of the line quality in them is like that in my coiled pieces (Neckpiece #22, Headpiece #5 in the show) done a couple of years after I returned from seeing them. But then I stop and back up. I took the picture of that particular thing from the vast choices in the landscapes I was seeing and
then chose to show it from the hundreds of pictures I took because of some other, deeper feeling for that type of line. I remember being in grade school, learning how to write my name and then drawing lines roughly parallel to the curves of the script one after another starting close to each other and then getting further apart and less close to the original curves, until I got to the edge of the paper. Lines not dissimilar to some that I used in my work, and saw on the hillsides. So where do influences come from really? If my work were political statements, that might be easier to say. But one’s choice of line, form, texture, pattern… where does that come from?

What do you hope visitors from Seattle and Bellevue will see in this show? What do you want them to know about the work?
I hope they like what they see. I am trying to make beautiful objects. I do not know if it will change their thinking in any way, as we are sometimes taught art should. I know that occasionally, very occasionally, when viewing something in a museum, I get a visceral charge that runs through me. I forget that I have a cold, that it is dark and rainy out, that my feet hurt. I just stand there staring at this piece behind the glass. It is not a verbal thing, but a physical reaction, an intake of breath and leaning to get a closer look. If my work can do that for someone else I will be very pleased.

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Tags: Bellevue Arts Museum, Locally Made Jewelry

Shopping Event

We Were There: Jason Wu for Target

Our report from the early morning debut madness of Jason Wu’s Target collection launch.

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SLIDESHOW: The start-to-finish madness of Jason Wu x Target at the Northgate store. About 90 women were lined up when the doors opened this past Sunday, February 5.

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SLIDESHOW: The start-to-finish madness of Jason Wu x Target at the Northgate store. About 90 women were lined up when the doors opened this past Sunday, February 5.

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The store was a madhouse as shoppers grabbed whatever they could hold.

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It’s always so depressing when it’s over.

Few things get me out of bed before ten on a Sunday morning, but the release of Jason Wu’s Target collection is one of them. Waking at 6:30 on Februrary 5, I checked the Target website for the status of the collection: sold out. That was my first indication that the Northgate Target would be a nightmare. Deciding to forgo a cup of coffee, I raced out the door and was roughly the thirtieth person in line at 7:15, forty-five minutes before the store opened.

This was clearly my first time at the rodeo. I passed on Missoni for Target last September, and opted to stay warm and indoors for the Lanvin Hearts release at H&M in chilly November, 2010. So when the store manager came out 10 minutes before opening to inform the crowd of about ninety women that no pushing, stealing out of carts, running, or fighting would be tolerated I smiled naively thinking she was just being overly cautious. When she then pleaded with us to please only take what we personally wanted, in our own sizes, it hadn’t occurred to me that anyone would behave differently.

How wrong I was.

The doors opened and a stream of women power-walked at a pace just on the verge of running to the five racks situated about fifty feet from the entrance, and then, mayhem. I managed to snatch up a sleeveless floral-print chiffon dress in my size while those near me indiscriminately grabbed three or four. The crowd pushed me around the rack where I found the blush-colored sheer blouse I had lusted over online, again thankfully in my size. I looked for the black flared dress only to find an empty rack and one woman carrying several of them–including two that would fit me. Sigh. Making one final scan of the remaining hangers for anything that I could reasonably wear and seeing that my sizes were all gone, I slowly backed out of the madness.

From the periphery I observed carts spilling over with tote bags, people complaining and gesturing wildly to the manager, women unsure of what they had picked up while sorting through their handfuls of finds amidst the melee. It was like Y2K with shift dresses and trench coats instead of canned goods and bottled water. One shopper whispered to her clothing-laden friend, “let’s head over the bedding section to see what we got.” My two items and the straw satchel I found looked pretty pathetic by comparison.

By 8:15 there wasn’t an item left on the racks. I made my purchase and was heading out to my car as a hopeful latecomer ran past me in the parking lot. I briefly thought she looks about my size, I wonder if she has any cash on her before reprimanding myself for getting caught up in the profit-motive of the morning.

Click through the slideshow for images of the Northgate Target bedlam, and take a minute to let us know if you were among the early birds, and how you fared. Seen Wu merch at a far-flung Target outside the metro area? Anything in our size? Don’t hold back on us.

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Beauty Trends

Lip Color of the Month: Sephora Collection

New series! Our February shade is Sephora’s Always Red, a dramatic and romantic hue for an equally amorous month.

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Sephora Collection’s cream lip stain in Always Red goes on glossy and dries to a flawless matte finish. Smack!

A fiery, vibrant red pout is perfect for the passion-filled month of February. Sephora Collection’s cream lip stain in Always Red is a classic matte-red hue that has it all: it’s vivid, velvety, and effortlessly long-lasting.

Attempting to channel our inner-Gwen Stefani, we first picked up a tube of Always Red after seeing dramatic pops of the color on last month’s red carpets, and we’re finding it adds just the right touch of studied glam to the coming season’s bright brights and glossy neons.

Unlike many stains, Sephora’s is ultra pigmented and delivers bold high-coverage color without drying your lips. It goes on like a gloss but dries into a smooth and silky lightweight stain that lasts the entire day and stays put, ideal for showering your Valentine with kisses.

Pick up this punch of lip color at one of the four Seattle-area Sephora stores or online. It’ll only put a $12 dent in your V-Day budget. Oh, and we suggest applying the cream stain with a lip brush in order to achieve a flawless cupid’s bow.

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Tags: Lip Color of the Month

One-day Sale

Super Bowl Garage Sale at Curtis Steiner

Bring cash for treasures to this is a once-a-year rummage sale.

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Curtis Steiner at his eponymous Ballard shop.

Where: Curtis Steiner in Ballard

What: The highly discerning stuff collector’s annual Super Bowl sale, in which a year’s worth of treasures—paper goods, jewelry, miniature decor, carnival deadstock, and other items that for some reason isn’t quite right for the Ballard boutique but was, for some other reason, too good to leave at whatever flea market, estate sale, or back alley stuff shop the curator and artisan was visiting—are offered at decent prices.

Our source, one of Steiner’s best buds, says “Curtis literally empties his store and re-merchandises with his one-day-only finds.” And friends, if you know the inspiration that is the shopkeeper’s ability to transform a retail space into a history-spanning narrative, that re-merchandising alone is worth the trip. For some of us, a bunch of guys running around in tights just doesn’t even hold to Steiner’s version of fair play.

When: Sunday, February 5; doors open at 9. Steiner’s invite says the sale is cash only and it notes “No early birds.” Hmm… we’ll see about that. When I chatted with the store owner upon the close of his original location he told me that in past years, it wasn’t uncommon to find 60 or 70 people lined up outside his door when he was ready to open it. You can lead the horses to water, but you can’t force them to stay in bed when they’re so darn excited about it. Or something like that.

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Tags: Super Bowl Sales

Special Collection Sale

Merge Splurges on Jarbo

The Fremont shop has loads of locally produced, easy-to-wear outfit architecture priced to go.

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Patricia Wolfkill has 400 pieces of the locally produced line Jarbo at Merge, her Fremont women’s shop.

How do you know when a shop owner really likes a line? When she buys 400 pieces of it for her boutique.

How do you know when a shop owner really believes in a line? When she buys those 400 pieces at the end of their season.

What’s your clue that the shop owner really believes in her customers also? When she offers these at 30 percent off—unless you happen to buy five or more items, in which case the savings is 50 percent off.

Who am I talking about here? Patricia Wolfkill at Merge.

What did she buy? Casual but luxe winter (more on that in a moment) sweaters, dresses, wraps, and more in cashmere and other materials from the line Jarbo, easily the most under-the-radar local label.

Okay let’s ditch that Q and A thing. Jarbo is the in-house line of Bellevue’s Design 10301, the new world/old world atelier of Mercer Island’s Sharon Roth. The designer has a diverse and impressive background in apparel design; she may not be a household name, but she’s probably the most successful clothing designer in the Seattle metropolitan area.

Wolfkill’s been carrying directional, wearable, often asymmetrical, always on-trend Jarbo dresses and separates for years now (she’s got a special affinity for slightly off-kilter cardigans and architectural sweaters), and when the opportunity arose to buy some of the fall/winter collection in bulk, she says she “thought that since it’s still so cold outside and we in the Pacific Northwest have several months of chilly weather to look forward to, I would stock up on some and sell them at a discount.”

Wolfkill says Roth “does an amazing job of producing modern, sophisticated styles in the most luxurious fabrications; a lot of it is seasonless and a lot of it is ‘buy now, wear now’ so it’s a great opportunity to refresh our wardrobes with pieces that stand the test of time.”

And that’s something you can believe in.

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Tags: Seattle Designer, Seattle Designer, Seattle Designer

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