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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, September 17, 2007

Colors for spring erupt at N.Y. Fashion Week

By Samantha Critchell
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Michael Kors' 2008 spring /summer collection was presented at Fashion Week in New York earlier this month.

DIMA GAVRYSH | Associated Press

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TIPS FOR WEARING SPRING COLORS

Head-to-toe colors may have been hot on the runway, but that doesn't mean you should wear it all at once.

  • Stylist Mary Alice Stephenson recommends infusing color into your wardrobe with a bright lipstick or shoe. Perhaps a hot pink top with jeans. "All the color piled on at once is a no-no," she said. "Don't take the trend so literally, don't go dye your hair pink."

  • Designer Michael Kors included a lot of neutrals in his collection that he says can be worn in "an uplifting way" with metallic accessories. "We've finally convinced women that gold isn't just for night." Kors said.

  • Color-blocking is a very modern way to wear color, says Suze Yalof Schwartz, fashion editor at large for Glamour. It's bold and eye-catching but not too much of any one thing.

  • Schwartz also recommends breaking up a single-color, voluminous dress from last spring with the new "it" belt — a long skinny one wrapped two or three times around the waist.

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    The Marc by Marc Jacobs 2008 spring/summer collection.

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    The Calvin Klein spring/summer collection.

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    The Oscar de la Renta 2008 spring/summer collection. Most fashion designers are utilizing brilliant colors in their spring wardrobes.

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    NEW YORK — It's going to be a bright and sunny spring, judging by the rainbow of colors previewed at New York Fashion Week.

    Forget the war, forget the mortgage crisis — it's not fashion's role to tackle the weighty issues on people's minds, said Michael Kors, who presented one of the most upbeat shows of the week with models in sherbet-colored stripes bopping up and down the runway to "Xanadu."

    In fact, fashion can provide a welcome distraction, one that — luckily enough — can also get shoppers in the mood to buy.

    "You open the newspaper every day and it isn't necessarily filled with a lot of happy news. There's the war, worries about the economy, the election — the list goes on and on. My reaction is that, when times are dour, you go the opposite with fashion, particularly with warm-weather fashion," Kors said. "The only way to switch your mood is to put on something that's delicious. Color becomes to be the instant mood elevator."

    It wasn't just Kors' collection that overflowed with bright colors — it was most of them. Only a handful of designers, most notably Donna Karan and Calvin Klein's Francisco Costa, went in the complete opposite direction using serene, tranquil palettes. Still, though, there was little or no black, usually a staple for both.

    This Fashion Week was about escapism, often quite literally. Trend analyst Tom Julian, of ad agency McCann-Erickson, noted that many designers cited exotic locales, from Biarritz in southwest France to St. Tropez to the Italian Riviera as the starting point for their look.

    There's plenty of financial incentive to introduce a bold new look when wallets are tightening. Designer Kors said the business side of his brain knows that right now consumers have enough black in their closet, so if he wants to drive sales, he has to give them something new.

    "Clothes are expensive. People aren't discarding what they own. So, what don't you have? Not a lot of colorful clothes," he explained.

    While Kors and Cynthia Steffe had the candy colors, BCBG had the softer hues of pink and peach. Diane von Furstenberg highlighted tropical tones, and Carolina Hererra and Oscar de la Renta did beautiful reds.

    "You saw color in different ways," said Candy Pratts Price, executive fashion director of Style.com. "Marc Jacobs' color was beyond gorgeous salmon, turquoise, red, and at Oscar (de la Renta), you saw a red column strapless dress. It was gorgeous, the way it fell when she walked. ... it was just the right red. ... And Ralph (Lauren) did so much bold color. That yellow dress was that long drink of water."

    Pratts Price thinks the love affair with brighter colors was just in the air.

    "It might have to do a bit with all the gray this fall, but I think this is more about what happens in fashion: an eruption," she said. "This time it was an eruption of color."