Showing posts with label fashion week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion week. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Highlights from Cambridge Style Week 2015!

I was really pleased to be invited back again this year to DJ for Cambridge Style Week!

CSW really celebrates the quirkiness of Cambridge, and all its shapes and styles. They have been gradually perfecting the formula of mixing up catwalks from bigger brands in the city, alongside carefully chosen talented emerging designers. This has really enabled CSW to carve out a strong identity, which sets it apart from other fashion events in its own right. This year we were treated to even more acts and performers in between collections, that fit alongside the themes of each show. This really helped to round each event off perfectly for me.

The location this year was at the Quy Mill Hotel, which is situated just outside of Cambridge city centre. First impressions certainly make a difference, and the Quy Mill Hotel really rose to this challenge. Visitors were greeted with fire lanterns lighting up the red carpet, as well as a champagne reception whilst they browsed pieces from local designers before and after each show.


Obviously being in the DJ booth, I had a fantastic view of the catwalk, though for this post I've used photos from the paparazzi present (credited of course) who were situated in the perfect position at the front of the catwalk to capture all the action.


I DJed for two out of the four shows this year. Here were my own personal highlights!


Opening Show:


Jose Hendo: Fresh off the catwalk at LFW, Jose Hendo was certainly the perfect choice for the opening of the first show this year. Jose Hendo's motto is 'reduce, reuse, recycle' which she certainly does in imaginative ways. As a big fan of sustainable fashion,  I absolutely loved the way that Jose Hendo took to the stage and talked us through the background and context to her work, explaining her innovative use of bark cloth in her collection. Jose uses off cuts in new and exciting ways, and works with unusual materials to play with texture and pattern. I particularly loved the dress below, the arms of which opened out in a crotcheted, billowing fashion. Jose Hendo's work is clearly inspired by the wider world, and her experiences come across in a very distinct way.






Charles Davis Photography


The catwalk also featured collections from Dogfish and Cloudberry shoes, Boudoir Femme (a firm favourite local boutique which dazzles the catwalk year after year)  John Lewis, Cambridge Market Traders, Kairee, and Triumph, a lingerie brand which certainly got everyones attention to say the least!

Triumph Lingerie UK

The show was also supported by singer Kez Miles, who warmed the crowd up beautifully.


I chose a few songs that I thought would compliment the designs, including some house hits like Mat Joe, Betoko, Oliver Heldens and Natema to ensure a strong beat on the catwalk.


For the more vintage inspired brands, like Boudoir Femme, I opted for artists such as Tube and Berger and the Gotan Project which had a slower, sexy beat.



CSW Catwalk Show, with the Ottoman Empire


The second show was unlike any other I'd ever been to before, with special guests including the Turkish Royal Family themselves! 


For the first half of the show, I chose upbeat house and dance songs like Max Manie, Imany and a Philip George remix of 'Dancin'  to match the individual colourful, bright designs.


I-Unique: I loved the range of jackets on display from I-Unique, each one tailored differently to suit different sizes, all of which absolutely oozed individual style, through the use of various textures and patterns.




Image taken from CSW 


Leigh Rawlins: I loved seeing Leigh's work on the catwalk, not least of all because I realised I'd met her four years before, when I organised a fashion show at The Junction in Cambridge, and we featured her work as an Anglia Ruskin fashion student! She was always one to push the boundaries then, and it seems her designs are even more bold and interesting than ever before.



Image taken from CSW Twitter
Image taken from CSW Blog

There was also fab jewellery on the catwalk in the form of KFD Jewellery.


The second half of the show was absolutely fascinating to watch. It featured the Fashion School of Turkey which had some absolutely incredible, intricate designs, which really emanated the exotic vibrancy of Turkey and it's colourful and artistic culture. The show opened with a Turkish dancer, who whirled and glided around the stage to Mercan Dede, so much so that I couldn't take my eyes off him. I nearly missed my cue! It was also
 accompanied with entertainment from various classical musicians.

We chose Turkish music to accompany the second part of the show with a slower beat, matching the solemnity of the designs whilst still being powered by a powerful drum, resonating and highlighting the bold patterns.



Patrick Anderson



Images taken from CSW website
By far my favourite catwalk of the evening was Yasemin Biricik, who as well as stunning the crowd with her highly intricate pieces, ended the show with a head turning wedding gown, accompanied with models holding candles. You could just hear everyones breath being taken away as the show culminated in its final carousel walk.



In terms of the catwalks themselves, the models were just on point this year. The backstage manager, Kim Able, and the rest of her team did a fantastic job of making things appear seamless (despite how crazy things must have been!)




I had a great time this year and can't wait for CSW 2016. The Director, Nicky Shepard, is absolutely clearly so passionate about what she does, and this comes across in all the hard work and attention to detail that goes into every show. In fact, it's not often you come across such a dedicated team of people in general, and CSW just delivers on this every single year. If you didn't go this year, put it in your diaries for next March! You honestly won't regret it.




Thursday, 6 March 2014

Cambridge Style Week!


I am very excited to have been asked to DJ for Cambridge Style Week this year, from the 26th - 30th March.  I love stepping off the train in Cambridge station, a joy I get less and less nowadays since I moved away a year ago. Because of this, I was already in high spirits when I found myself thrown in at the deep end at a CSW meet up last week end, pitching in with some frantic practice dressing of models and plotting out a practice catwalk! The CSW team are boldly attempting to showcase and represent a wide array of local retailers and independent boutiques across the course of the week, and I can't wait to be a part of it.
Measuring the models!



If Cambridge were to be a person, I imagine her to be a quirky and confident lady, who loves experimenting with a range of vibrant colours, enjoys her red wine, and embarks on the occasional bohemian inspired adventure. It's no secret that the city itself certainly has it's own unique, fabulous style of its very own. Cambridge dwellers seem to be quite confident with experimenting and mixing their trends, translating them in a seemingly effortless way into everyday life. Perhaps its the comfort of relative affluence, the increased number of fashion graduates, or the diverse range of cultures that contribute to the unique trends that Cambridge seems to produce, but the outcome is eclectic nonetheless! 'The Cambridge Satchel Company' is a great example of this - a small family owned business in a village close to Cambridge, who manufactured a bag inspired by Cambridge living that became an international craze.

Cambridge Satchel
My own experiences living in Cambridge, in many ways, opened my eyes to my own love of fashion. I organised a show in 2009 called 'The Four Seasons Fashion Show' at local arts venue 'The Junction', which expanded my knowledge of the industry and various artists and designers. The show was an exploration of sustainable fashion, with a decon-recon approach to using clothes and materials. It went so well that the year after, we all became more ambitious - and created a 'Cambridge Fashion Weekend', working with local designers to create collections representing the 1940's to the 1980's. We incorporated playful modern twists and vintage pieces from local boutiques, and had dance acts, a swing band, singers and performers that set the scene for each collection, to move the audience through various eras. It was absolutely incredible, and I got a real buzz that you only get when you realise that somehow you've blagged it and convinced someone to pay you to do something that you really love anyway. I loved the quirky pieces that our talented designers created, and the support that we got from various London Fashion Week designers, who sent us clothes, donated pieces for the charity auction and spoke at the shows. We raised over £3000 for charity, and I was very proud of our achievements.

It was these experiences which led me to CSW, and such memories which now fill me with a familiar bubbling of anticipation. It is a different experience, watching a fashion show, when you are acutely aware of the mania that is happening behind the scenes. The calm ocean you witness whilst the models strut their stuff on stage, completely juxtaposes against their state of being five seconds before, whilst they were amongst the crazy panic of hairstylists, backstage staff, models and make up artists just behind the curtain. I truly enjoy the panic, the 'I've got to go on stage and I only have one shoe!' scenarios, the buzz when the show is starting and ending - I love it all. The team for CSW are so professional, and truly dedicated to producing shows that will not only reflect the great style that Cambridge offers, but also represent a range of styles, shapes and ages that live there. In this way, they are representing the true beautiful stylish qualities of Cambridge and its people, and the vibrant diverse mix of individuals within one of my favourite cities in the world.
Kim, Backstage Manager, and Izzy, Assistant Creative Director of CSW

If you'd like to join us, you can! To buy tickets, follow the link here, and check out the different themes across the week. Personally, I am most looking forward to the 'Celebration of Spring' on Saturday 29th because it truly is my favourite season. 'The Celebration of Colour' as an opening show is a great theme to start with too, and looks to be a vibrant visual showcase that will finally banish winter for good. The closing show is at Hidden Rooms on the 30th, so you can always come down and experience the buzz and atmosphere that only the end of a week filled with incredible style and exciting people can bring!

Are you a catwalk fan, too? What do you love most about fashion shows? I'd love to hear from you!

Much love, Alice x