June 19, 2013

The Do List: San Francisco Fashion Events Dec. 6-Dec. 12

With the holiday season in full swing, the SF Indie Fashion Calendar is full of events to keep San Francisco fashion lovers busy with trunk sales, beauty happenings, fashion shows and opportunities to shop from independent sources. Here’s our pick of top San Francisco fashion and style events this week:

  • On Thursday night, fans of D.I.Y., local design and African penguins (which, let’s face it, completely rule) will descend upon the California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park for a 21+ event featuring a bevy of designers and distractions curated by Kelly Malone during the Indie Mart D.I.Y. & Design Holiday Night. We hear the tickets ($12) to this event could sell out, so you may want to buy them in advance if you want to go.
  • Guys and girls will find chances to shop some of our favorite independent brands on the cheap this week, thanks to a trio of stylish San Francisco sample sales happening over the weekend. The annual Rebecca Beeson sample sale promises the local label’s uber-California apparel at up to 70 percent off, while a Goorin Brothers sale will deck you out in the perfect head-topper for less and an Obey sample sale going down at Jack’s gives guys a chance to suit up in the much-loved label’s gear at a discount.

You can find details on all of these events and more happening this week on the SF Indie Fashion Calendar.

Snap Judgment: Goorin Brothers Flora Hat

Our very-visual, (almost) chatter-free snap judgment of the day: the droplet-style pinstripe Flora hat, $55, created by local painter Amanda Lynn for the Goorin Brothers 1333 Minna Fall Collection, featuring the work of local artists and newly available for purchase online and in stores as of this month.

More snap judgments…

Top Hats: 1333 Minna Artists’ Collection by Goorin Brothers

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We’ve always maintained that there’s a fine art to wearing a hat, so you can imagine we were intrigued by the idea of hats wearing fine art. Officially dropping this weekend, the spring 2010 1333 Minna collection from San Francisco-based Goorin Brothers pairs fine artists’ work with the hat company’s dapper head-toppers for a result that’s sure to attract style and art fans alike.

“It combines the classic authenticity of Goorin Brothers mixed with very edgy contemporary fine art,” Ben Goorin says of the latest collection, originally launched in 2005 and is known for combining urban-minded art with original fabrics, embroidery and custom printing methods.

In the works for nearly a year, the current collection bears the name of the company’s collaborative art studio in the Mission and features original work from artists such as Reyes, Steel, Yutaro Sakai, Kami, Sasu, Retna, Bert Krak, Lango, Michael Ryan and Orli Laqcuaio.

For Goorin, the project reflects the longtime San Francisco roots of his family’s company, founded in 1895.

“Our identity was born and raised in San Francisco,” he says, adding, “This is about doing something that’s authentic and extremely original.”

Want to get in on Goorin’s latest hat tricks? Head to the Haight Street shop on Saturday from 4-9 p.m. for the launch celebration. Along with music and free bevs, limited edition hand-printed posters by 1333 Minna artists and giveaways will be on offer with the purchase of a hat. Starting at 9 p.m., the party continues at 1333 Minna with a gallery installation of participating artists’ work.

Photography courtesy of Goorin Brothers

More fashion events

How Do You Do, Jasmin Zorlu?

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Plenty of people spend years striving to stick that special feather in their caps. An easier route? Head on over to San Francisco milliner Jasmin Zorlu, whose sculptural creations have been topping the tresses of local fashion fans since the designer settled for good in the City by the Bay in 2004. With fans that range from Erykah Badu (she once commissioned three Molecular Mermaid Hats) to Barneys New York, Zorlu has spent recent years designing hats and bags for Bay Area hat company Goorin Brothers, working on her own collections inspired by the 1920′s-40′s and scooping up honors like Best Accessory Designer from this year’s San Francisco Fashion Awards. Next up for Zorlu is a men’s collection of caps constructed from rescued men’s wool suiting fabric, due out this fall.

You can keep up with Zorlu on her blog and peruse her work in person at this Friday’s Show Me a Hat Show, Sugar!, a hat-centric event showcasing San Francisco’s wealth of millinery talent. In the meantime, read on for our recent chat with Zorlu, in which she dishes on her forthcoming collection, unveils her love for Myrna Loy and reveals her secret hip hop career.

If you could magically place one of your creations atop the head of one person you’ve never met – living or dead – who would it be and why?

Myrna Loy. She wears the most amazing hats in the ‘Thin Man’ movies.

Tell us one thing we’d be shocked to find out about you.

I write, memorize and perform spoken word with a hip hop tempo here and there. I’ve experimented with making tracks in Garageband. You can hear some of my work here.

We hear you’re working on a new collection. Give us the details.

I’ve been amassing a collection of men’s wool blazers that are slowly taking over my closet. I’m working on an eco line of men and women’s soft caps from them (with a few styles of bags!). I’ve been making hats out of rescued cashmere sweaters for nearly 3 years now and am excited to use a new material that is gentle on the Earth and sustainable too! I can sell these hats at less expensive price points in a response to the economy. Plus, you can sit on them, let a friend wear them and then wash them!

We love the beauty-marked mannequin modeling the hats in your etsy shop. Is there a story behind her? Does she have a name?

Lucy came into my life in 2001 on the hippest street in Brooklyn: Bedford Avenue in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. She’s half human, half mannequin, actually.

You describe your hats as sculptural headwear. What are some of your favorite sculptural elements included in your recent work?

I’ve been making cocktail hats inspired by aquatic life and quantum mechanics lately. Finally I’m getting into wedding hats for the avant-garde bride. I’m creating them out of horsehair (100 percent nylon) combined with rescued nylon mesh fruit bags, handmade abalone shell buttons and feathers.

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Pardon us, sometimes we get confused. Can you educate us on the ways a haberdasher, milliner and hatmaker are different?

To me, a Haberdasher is an antiquated term for a person who sells men’s clothing. A Milliner is a person who designs, makes and sells hats primarily for women. A Hatmaker is a person who makes and sells hats. Depending on who I’m talking with, I will call myself a milliner, hat designer or hatmaker.

Seniors are familiar with the term. So are the English, since it’s a strong artform there. A lot of people aren’t familiar with the term “Milliner” or “Millinery.” Millinery refers to the art of hat design. When I was in high school in Iceland, I wanted to be a fashion designer. By some crazy precognition, I made a joke to the school paper that I wanted to be a “Milliner” since I had just learned the word and thought that sounded cool. They printed that I wanted to be a “Millionaire.”

What do you find to be the biggest challenge of being a fashion designer in the San Francisco Bay Area?

You can’t be insular if you want to grow your wholesale business. You need to get yourself to New York City and Los Angeles to show your line. Or get a sales rep or showroom in those cities.

On a Sunday afternoon when you were otherwise unencumbered with work and chores, where would we find you?

In nature! At the outdoor Mission pool swimming or in Golden Gate Park biking.

More after the jump….

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Inside the Gift Bag: Gen Art

Gift bags stuffed with goodies never fail to make our day. So we were oh-so happy to sit down in our seats at last week’s Gen Art Fresh Faces in Fashion show to find a stuffed bag waiting for us.

Doing the online gift bag reveal is kind of like fashion blogging’s version of porn, don’t you think? We especially loved our Goorin Brothers hats (the knit one on the left is going to be rockin’ Tahoe with me this winter), Ooma gift certificate ($5-$100 value, our was $5) and the free brow shaping from Benefit.

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Imagine our surprise to find this little packet in our gift bag. Check out the unit on that guy! Woah nelly! In other news, yes, we do happen to be 12 years old.

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Dapper hat by Goorin:

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