The Do List: San Francisco Fashion Events Oct. 24-30

Among the stylish San Francisco events to look forward to this week are a fundraiser fashion show featuring condom couture, a fashion blogger-writer meetup, live window fashion and an international student fashion symposium and competition. Intrigued? You’ll find the details on the SF Indie Fashion Calendar.

  • Get the week going with fashion for a good cause courtesy of the annual Evening of Hope – A Night of Lifesaving Fashion, benefiting Project Inform’s programs and initiatives supporting people living with HIV/AIDS. Real Housewives’ Countess LuAnn de Lesseps will make a special appearance at the fundraiser, which is capped off with a condom couture fashion show featuring gowns constructed using prophylactics.
  • On Thursday, you’ll be sure to find an impressive number of San Francisco fashion bloggers and writers descending upon Swig for the Blogger-Writer Meetup hosted by Lindsay Stevens and Caitlin Flemming of Sacramento Street.
  • Also on Thursday, local designer Larissa Verdussen will be showing her latest work for her label Rag Doll Designs during a live window presentation at her eco-minded Noe Valley boutique Loft 1513.
  • Taking place this weekend, the annual Arts of Fashion Symposium & Competition showcases emerging design talent during a two-day event held at the San Francisco Art Institute. In addition to the competition itself, which features work by 60 students from around the world, program highlights include free lectures and exhibits with industry leaders such as CFDA CEO Steven Kolb and culminates in a runway show competition (tickets, $50 and up).

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

The Do List: San Francisco Fashion Events Feb. 21-27

Feeling (fairly) fresh from the long weekend, we’re ready for what’s ahead. And for that, we turn to the SF Indie Fashion Calendar in search of events just begging to keep San Francisco fashion lovers busy with trunk sales, beauty happenings, fashion shows and places to shop from independent sources. Here’s our pick of top San Francisco fashion events this week:

  • If you’ve been meaning to take your latest haul of giveaways to Crossroads Trading Company for…like…weeks…and…weeks but haven’t gotten ’round to it, some added incentive comes this week in the form of a Crossroads and Shotwell event on Thursday night. Sell your clothes to Crossroads, and you’ll receive 10 percent off your purchases that night at the downtown boutique.
  • Also on Thursday, Noe Valley’s Loft 1513 gets festive with a Live Window Fashion Presentation featuring work from local designers and labels Ikohl, Nneka, Sofie Olgaard and Rag Doll.
  • Round out the week with a visit on Sunday to Noise Pop’s Pop ‘n Shop, part of the music festival’s cultural mashup of music, craft and commerce taking place at Public Works this weekend. Along with locally-made purchase-ables from 30-something vendors that include local accessories designers The Feathered Leopard and Sora Designs, the complete schedule also features crafting and D.I.Y. sessions from Workshop and talks on such topics as D.I.Y. and the non-profit world.

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

Snap Judgment: Rag Doll Designs Bridal

Our very-visual, (almost) chatter-free snap judgment of the day: all-lace wedding gown by Rag Doll Designs, the bridal collection from Noe Valley’s Loft 1513 co-owner Larissa Verdussen. Want to peep it in person? Stop by Loft 1513 this Thursday, when Verdussen will be showing her entire line for brides and bridesmaids and everything in the store will be 10 to 40 percent off.

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Get Your Z’s: A Chat with Artist + Designer Rachel Znerold

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We love it when fashion and art converge. We found just that when we met up recently for a chat with local fine artist and fashion designer Rachel Znerold, who does everything from painting to reconstructing vintage wedding gowns for modern-day brides to creating one-of-a-kind apparel and accessories using upcycled and scrap materials.

Intrigued? You can spot Znerold’s latest art and clothing at eco-friendly Noe Valley boutique Loft 1513 during a fashion show (yes, they even have a raised runway) Thursday night.

Read on for more about Znerold’s designs, inspiration and current iPod obsessions.

How long have you been designing?

I taught myself how to sew when I was 24, and I am 29 now. In high school, I adjusted my clothes. My parents didn’t have much money, so I would go to thrift stores, sew and cut clothes to make them fun and fashionable.

How do your fashion designs connect with your art?

I work with fabrics the way I do paints. I will do clusters of appliqué, and I try to mirror the cluster of shapes that take place within the natural world.

What is your next project?

My next goal is to dye a few of my dresses. I am always learning.

How do you stay inspired?

I stay inspired by old movies, like, look at those puckered sleeves and making it my own.  Color is huge. I am a color maniac. I relate to flowers and organic colors and shapes. Traveling is a big influence for me. Last summer, I went to Peru. Peruvian textiles are made with such a wide array of color. I was really moved by it. I like meeting the women and figuring out where my textiles come from. I find recycled materials, travel and anything in the natural world inspirational.

Do you have a design philosophy that you follow?

All of my fashion shows are for not-for-profit organizations. I believe in giving back to the community.

I don’t want women to have to fit a certain shape to be sexy. Women of every size should feel fashionable….Everyone is beautiful and deserves to have a pretty party dress.

Who are your favorite designers?

Alexandar McQueen, he was the bad boy of fashion. He embraced organic materials, playful silhouettes and drama. Growing up, I related to Betsey Johnson. Jean Paul Gaultier, because he embraced corset forms, performance art of fashion and the feminine figure. He was self-taught, and he was the underdog coming up. I love that story. Classic forms like Chanel. I feel like I can learn a bit from each of them

So what’s an average day like for you?

Diving into these Tupperwares of vintage scraps, and, a lot of times, I spend it putting scraps next to each other, draping them on the models. A lot of working with people, fitting, pinning. Depending on the projects I have, I will spend a few days painting. I try to keep them separate. So the paint won’t end up on the fabric! I think a lot of it is putting in the hard work, face time in the studio, finding inspiration. Also returning emails, arranging models and makeup artists and dropping off new deliveries to boutiques. I do it all, from hand-sewing the clothes to distribution. It’s definitely about multi-tasking.

What is on your iPod right now?

I love Bat for Lashes, Elliot Smith, Sarah Vaughan and Fever Ray.

Where do you see your line in five years?

I see myself moving into more couture and artistic, dramatic pieces. I really enjoyed doing wedding gowns. I want to design costumes for music videos and photo shoots. I am working with a group working on eco-friendly staple pieces…I love making one-of-a-kind pieces.

Where can we find your work in San Francisco?

At Loft 1513. They sell local designer pieces. You can also shoot me an email to order something custom made.

– By SF Indie Fashion Contributor April Miller

All apparel and art pictured above by Rachel Znerold. Photography courtesy of Julie Michelle and the I Live Here project.

More interviews with San Francisco designers

Age, Schmage: Guilded Youth Tonight

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Tonight, get a peak at the latest from Charlie B. of Invisible Hero Industries, a veteran label on the local indie fashion scene, at Church Street boutique Loft 1513. Not for the preppy nor the particularly demure, the upcycled and almost exclusively one-of-a-kind pieces Charlie makes in her Hayes Valley studio frequently boast up-to-there hemlines, sheer panels and lace in silhouettes befitting the artsy adventures of the City’s free-wheeling and stylishly experimental set.

Along with the showing from Invisible Heroes, find a Champagne bar, beats, an outdoor garden to party in and a traveling photo booth ready to snap your best angles.

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