May 21, 2012

First Look: Discarded to Divine 2010

dd-fashion-shoot-343We recently enjoyed a preview of the garments and accessories created for this year’s Discarded to Divine, an annual benefit that taps emerging and established designers to turn cast-off clothing and textiles into new creations to raise much-needed funds for the St. Vincent de Paul Society and its programs. And with yesterday’s news that Project Runway contestant and San Francisco resident Jay Nicolas Sario is creating a garment as a guest designer for this year’s event, the spotlight on this San Francisco fashion event is only getting brighter.

We’re devoted fans of the event each year, but we were especially impressed with this year’s creations, which range from full-skirted party dresses in arresting pinks and blues to a jacket and skirt ensemble made out of reconstructed coats and outerwear. Some pieces tended toward the fanciful and exotic, while others were completely wearable options that we could see fitting into a normal gal’s day-to-day wardrobe.

Along with the apparel for women and children, new to the event this year are accessories, handbags and items for the home. So now for the first time, if you can’t swing bidding on a complete outfit during the April event’s silent auction, you can waltz away with a smaller, but no less meaningful souvenir in the form of a necklace, patchwork pillow or scarf.

Discarded to Divine takes place on April 29, and there’s a sneak preview on April 9 at the de Young museum.

In the meantime, enjoy a sampling of this year’s submissions.

Photography courtesy Gabriel Harber for Discarded to Divine

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Fashion from Art: Joui Turandot’s Vagadu

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There are the fashion designers who create clothing that doubles as art, and then there are artists who create using fashion as their chosen medium. San Francisco’s Joui Turandot is decidedly one of the latter.

While her studio on the border between the Mission and Potrero Hill is dotted with fashion magazines and images torn from their pages, the real inspiration for the larger-than-life gowns and hand-sewn vests she creates under the label Vagadu has very little to do with what’s heading down the runways of today.

Instead, Turandot, who is opening her studio up this weekend for a sale event, draws inspiration for her latest work from her grandfather, the Greek-born artist Jean Varda, a well-known figure in the Bay Area arts world during the 1950’s and 60’s who counted Henry Miller, Anais Nin and Zen Buddhism philosopher Alan Watts among his close friends.

“He really lived life as art and never bought anything new, was poor as dirt, but managed to live the most incredibly rich life that anyone could have just because he brought so much to everyone who knew him,” says Turandot, who never met her grandfather but has spent years researching his life and is currently trying to launch a retrospective of his work.

While Varda was widely known for collages incorporating paper, textiles, fabrics and paint, Turandot relies on reclaimed fabric as her medium.

“I really source him a lot, not only in his sense of color choice, shapes, the way he uses shapes for the feminine form, but also really in the sense of taking these left over things,” she says.

Just as her grandfather used scraps and found materials for his work, Turandot employs only fabrics and textile scraps cast-off by other designers and retailers. The one-of-kind pieces that result are structurally complex, often involving multiple parts that can be worn together or separately, yet they manage to be disarmingly whimsical at the same time.

A series of vests adorned with hours and hours’ worth of hand-sewn tucks and folds are among the most versatile and universally wearable items hanging on her studio’s racks at the moment, while the dresses and gowns beg for a stage all their own – or at least the kind of wearer who’s not afraid of an audience.

The images below reveal just how different Turandot’s gowns can look depending on the viewer’s angle.

Want to check out all the angles for yourself? Head to the Vagadu Studio Sale this weekend, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., 375 Alabama St. #490, www.vagadu.com. New clothing by designer Giselle Shepatin will also be on display.

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Haute Hemp: Disco Dress by Sust

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We’re enamored of the 100 percent hemp, garment dyed Disco Dress by Redwood City-based label Sust. With a flattering silhouette inspired by the 70′s, this sleek and simple California-made number from designers Tristan Gribbin and Marion McKee does eco-friendly in a most stylish way. Ruching along one side creates a fitted waist, while the asymmetrical shape means you can wear this casual take on the little black dress over one shoulder or two.

Another perk? It’s completely machine-washable, which is something we can’t say for many of our LBDs.

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Style with Sustenance: The Dish III feat. Kittinhawk

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We were so taken with these images, that we had to gobble them up from The Dish on Fashion Facebook page and serve them up over here. In the third installment of the ongoing event series from the W Hotel, longtime local designer Allysun Maria Dutra on Thursday shows off the daring creations she constructs under the label Kittinhawk – all of which are completely handmade from recycled materials, discarded textiles and found objects.

If you’re able to score a table (or glom on to someone who’s already snagged a rezzie), you can dine amid Dutra’s designs on Thursday at the hotel’s XYZ Bar and Restaurant. A table-side fashion show is on the menu, and Kittinhawk apparel and accessories will be available for purchase.

Want to see more of Kittinhawk? In addition to visiting the designer’s web site, peep this video of her work on the runway at the Charity Fashion Show.

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We’ve Got Big Love for this Dress

20th Anniversary Environmental Media Awards Green Carpet We were pleased as punch to learn from the folks at Academy of Art this week that the simply eco-chic dress donned by Big Love star and eco-advocate Ginnifer Goodwin to last weekend’s 20th Anniversary Environmental Media Association Awards, held in Los Angeles, was a clever design by students Priscilla Guimarais, Kumiko Haruyama, Nui Tanapornwattana, Audrey Wang and Tramaine Tillman – collectively working to create a collection dubbed 1Oak (One Of A Kind).

This is more than a simple strapless frock. Instead of traditional fabric, the students reused hospital scrubs that would have otherwise been tossed, then dyed, pleated and treated away using sustainable construction methods to achieve the final look.

The dress was part of a larger collection created as part of a class project devoted to showcasing sustainable design from inception to garment completion.

Just so ya know, this pic really doesn’t do the dress justice. We recommend taking a peak over at the school’s Fashion School Daily blog for some worthy close-ups.

[Photo: Courtesy the Associated Press]