Showing posts with label Thom Browne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thom Browne. Show all posts

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Thom Browne Men's Collection 09s/s

Astronauts used to head into space with vials of fragrance that would keep Earth close. Freshly cut grass was apparently the most popular. Thom Browne's venue reeked of it. The most comforting scent on the planet paired with the most deliberately discomforting men's collection? No, I won't go there. This time around, Thom actually reined in most of his more outré tendencies in favor of a relatively crisp, clean dissertation on American sportswear. And he did mean sports, as in Flushing Meadows. Terry headbands and armbands, embroidered criss-crossed racquets as a recurring motif, white polo shirts and shorts—bits and pieces to gladden a ball boy's heart were complemented by patrician seersuckers and paisleys, but as usual the hiked-high schoolboy proportions made you think that the Browne man's mom still buys his clothes for him—and that Norman Bates-ian notion flowered in the parade of shorts, long socks, and Church's-for-Thom shoes.And suddenly, the outré effortlessly reasserted itself: The checkerboard train on a racquet-embroidered coat, the gangsta-style low-slung shorts, the endlessly reiterated waders, and—the coup de grâce—the giant tutu that closed the show. They all whiffed of Thom's ongoing Barnum and Bailey assault on masculine convention. Browne's bigger picture is hovering into view. Those low-slung shorts, for instance. You could say they offered a new take on his continuing fascination with male powerlessness: a man caught with his pants down.

Thom Browne Men's Collection 10s/s


Thom Browne the showman has often gotten in the way of Thom Browne the designer, with the archness of his presentations infecting his collections. But shorn of the ceremony and shown simply in his Tribeca shop, Browne's clothes felt refreshed, confident, and as upbeat as the soundtrack of Beatles songs. Maybe it's something to do with a new business structure that will finally allow for the kind of growth Browne has long craved. Maybe the prospect of that growth inspired him to expand on his odd and insular aesthetic, to let more people in, as it were. Has his experience designing for Moncler and Black Fleece by Brooks Brothers broadened his repertoire? Whatever, there was a whole lot more to like in this collection, and it felt like Browne himself was really having fun with the design process. Best of all were the suits in distressed and mended fabrics (one in Prince of Wales, another in seersucker). Browne called them "Robinson Crusoe suits," because he was thinking of a castaway living in his clothes through thick and thin (the way he'd like men to wear his suits in the city). The Fair Isle from Fall (remember the bunny rabbits?) was summer-ized in print and knit with palm trees and swordfish. It looked great. Marks of a new accessibility were proportions more generous than before, and outfits that broke down more easily into individual pieces: silver cargo shorts, for instance, or a topstitched navy jacket with a little peak to its shoulder, or a tan coat-jacket worn over jersey pants (with someone as rarefied as Browne, one hesitates to call them sweats).A white coat with a cutout circular motif suggested Courrèges and his spacey sixties designs. So did a helmet with goggles. Not at all, laughed Browne. He just loves polka dots and Darth Vader. That's what I mean about the lightheartedness. It was winning enough that it compelled indulgence of Browne's signature oddities: the floating nylon curtain wrapped around the waist, the halter-neck playsuit in white piqué, the decontamination suit, the collarless double-breasted jacket with an unflattering portrait neckline. On the other hand, a full-length Japanese-influenced wrap dress in black nylon had a sinuously weird charm as an alternative—make that very alternative—evening option.

Thom Browne Interview

Thom Browne

Thom Browne (born in 1965) is an American fashion designer. He is the founder and head of design for Thom Browne, a New York City-based menswear brand. Browne was named the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) Menswear Designer of the Year in March 2006 and named the GQ Designer of the Year in November 2008.

Browne grew up in Allentown, Pennsylvania, where he graduated from William Allen High School. He then attended the University of Notre Dame, where he received a degree in business. He was also a member of the swim team. Following an attempt at acting in Los Angeles, Browne moved to New York City in 1997 for a job as a salesman in Giorgio Armani’s showroom.
Browne was picked up by Club Monaco, a brand of the Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, to lead its creative development team. He worked with the American fashion designer Ralph Lauren in this capacity. Browne spent several years at Club Monaco leading its design department before launching his own label.


Browne’s menswear line was created as a response to the broad acceptance of business casual as being considered acceptable in lieu of formal attire.
A Thom Browne suit is distinctive in structure and fit. The suits are composed of flat front pants with exposed ankles and a jacket that concludes mid-wrist and doesn't cover the backside. They almost always have three buttons, narrow lapels rolled to the middle button, side vents, and trouser without belt loops. The designer is best known for wearing suits in a range of charcoal-grey colors, always paired with a tie cut from the same fabric, a silver tie clip, a white button down shirt, and black leather dress shoes.
Since its debut in 2001, the Thom Browne collection has extended into a more complete menswear line with dress shirts, sweaters, ties, underwear, and accessories. Thom Browne can be purchased at retailers around the world and at the flagship store on Hudson Street in TriBeCa.

On September 8, 2006, Brooks Brothers announced its partnership with Browne as part of a guest designer program to create and distribute a 50-piece men and women’s high-end collection, named Black Fleece. Claudio Del Vecchio, Chairman and CEO of Brooks Brothers, felt that “Thom Browne’s brilliant eye, his ability to foreshadow the market and offer a special look will bring a new dimension to Brooks Brothers.” The line appeared exclusively in 30 Brooks Brothers stores worldwide beginning in September 2007.
In July 2008, Thom Browne and Brooks Brothers announced their decision to continue their partnership in the Black Fleece collection for another three years. The joint venture proved so successful that Brooks Brothers opened a standalone Black Fleece store located in the West Village.