Isaac, Karl and quality
Mizrahi coat from the show |
"'They don't print fabrics like this anymore'", he said, looking at swatches of fabric he used early in his career".
"'... now everything is Xeroxed onto fabric. But I don't want this (the show) to be about the decline of quality—the steep decline of quality.'"
A fewer days later I was in The Bay, the Canadian department store owned by Lord & Taylor, and saw his new casual-wear line, IM NYC. (It's relegated to the lower-priced area of the women's department.)
I beetled right over, but soon wanted to turn Mr. M. over my knee. The quality was horrid: flimsy blouses cut in one flat piece, without set-in sleeves. The example below is poly-viscose, dry clean only: say no more.
IM NYC blouse |
Across the corridor, I saw Karl Lagerfeld's name applied to an entry-level collection, and (I believe Karl left this world at least a decade ago, leaving a wax facsimile for appearances) he must be rolling in his grave. Huge, lumpy exposed zippers formed the back closing on tops; I tried to photograph those but was asked to stow my iPad. If I owned a department store, I'd ban such photos too!
This cotton/nylon acrylic fringed sweater will look like it was fed through a leaf-blower after one season:
Karl Lagarfeld fringed cardi |
The challenge in a department store today is finding quality, period, at "bridge" level. It can show up at Pink Tartan, MaxMara Weekend, and less consistently Vince, Tahari, Vince Camuto, Diane von Furstenberg, but they are inconsistent. Ralph Lauren's bridge line has slipped, using too many cardboardy fabrics, and the once covetable Anne Klein is probably beyond reviving.
Pink Tartan shirt |
Pink Tartan's grosgrain trim fly-front shirt is nearly $225 (in US dollars, Canadian readers can easily do the dismal math), three times the price of the Mizrahi poly, and they too specify dry cleaning the white cotton-elastane blend. OK, I know how to ignore that, but why won't they direct you to wash in warm water, hold the bleach, and hang to dry?
I don't expect miracles at the lower end, but when a dress bumps $700, why is the hem overstitched in plastic thread?
A parallel reality is that my senior status has not come with an automatic price adjustment. Things seem weirdly expensive. Sometimes I bite the budget bullet and think, That's what it costs to have the fabric and construction I want.
But more often, when I notice, for instance, a tulip-print spring Stella McCartney scarf, at $420 (at Nordstrom) for modal, I wonder, What is this? The fabric (a second-generation rayon) is made from reconstituted cellulose, cheap and abundant.
Stella McCartney modal scarf |
Despite Mizrahi's hopes, his show will spotlight the decline of quality, because it's his own damn fault. In the last decade he's produced shoddy goods under the IM NYC and Isaac Mizrahi Live! (on QVC) labels—and you may recall the failed Jones New York partnership, with clothes that looked so witty in the ads, so limp on the racks. If you don't want to pay for quality, you'll find better choices at Zara.
I plan to visit this show next weekend, and would like to ask him, What would it cost now for a bridge line made with your bygone-days' fabric and construction?
Plenty of quality-loving but price-conscious women are still knocking about, wise as ever, women who know tailoring and fabric and a good button from a sad hunk of plastic, and we're wondering what to do, after we've visited the museum to look at his once-great clothes.
Comments
The only reasonable response, for those of us who can do it, is to refuse to buy these cheap things, and hold out for the very best that is available. Only when we vote with our dollars (Canadian or US) will there be any incentive for designers to do things well and properly!
regards,
Janice
I can't count how many times I have either ordered online or gone into a mall, and have ended up with nothing.
I suspect this is part of what is behind Nordstrom's recent downturn also.
Perhaps vintage is the way to go. Not sure I'm up for home sewing anymore.
Unknown: 2008 was a bloodbath for department stores; as I recall Saks had a 70% off sale, of even the current season. A number of smaller designers went under then. And in the intervening 7-8 years the department stores seem unwilling to give space to such talent.
Cherry: Beats me, I guess we are supposed to wear boxes or envelopes.
Cathy: I still buy Talbot`s jeans, because they are cut for women and with a sale-which they hold often- are well-priced. But I find the clothing colours have grown shreiky, and the further they stray from preppy bqsics the more they struggle to present a stylish, coherent design. (Someone referred to it as Forever 47). Company is not doing well, many closures of stores.
Chanterelle: I love to look at vintage but it is iffy for women over 50. It can (unless in the hands of an assured aesthete) look like we never updated our wardrobes. But I love those bound buttonholes, tailored blouses and gorgeous tweeds. Secondhand current clothing of high quality is quite hard to find where I live because women wear theirs into the ground more than those in in my former city did.
If anyone has a line of clothing that they can suggest I am all ears!
I've decided to make my own except for the very strict basics of underwear, t-shirts and jeans. At least I'll get the colours I want with a certain amount of quality. I'm not that interested in designers' vision of what I should wear if it's going to look like what you showed in your article.--Louise
hostess: I don't see anyone stepping up, perhaps "quality" and "department store" are mutually exclusive. Pseu likes Everlane, sold by mail. For excellent quality (mostly knots) in wool and cotton, I like ça va de soi, who ship throughout Canada. Quite pricey but lasts. But yes, maybe sewing, and you could also make things for your adorable grandchildren!
Louise: What I showed from IM is not from the "designer" floor, there you will find better-looking clothes, with very significant price tags (but often skirts too short for grown women!) But Pink Tartan is from the designer section and their fabric is much better, though the skirts are too short for me and for many grown women. You have to look and look, and honestly I am not that interested in putting in the work.
Psue: I like Everlane's clothes but wish they ventured a bit more out of navy, grey and putty. They remind me of what the Gap used to be before their own quality slipped to the bottom. (I bought the most beautiful Irish linen shirt there, once.)
Kristien: Why not order and see? Nordstrom does give exceptional service but if the clothes are not there, we need to cast a wider net.
Fiona: Oh, Fiona! I too have a pair at the back, agnès b., must be 25 years old, navy stovepipes. Cannot give up.
Jeannette: Do you know the site Halsbrook? They offer good clothes, some of which are tailored. But yes, that is a daunting search. Perhaps Georges Rech, Aquascutum, Marni if you wear more avant-garde designs? Vivienne Westwood can stil turn in deft tailoring but the clothes are cut narrow.
Kathy Niederkorn: Agree! And don;t get me started on what happened to hems, real hems that you could alter. Yet, Mizrahi's high end boutique in NYC went under, as the world flocks to TJ Maxx.
I agree with Janice: refuse to buy cheap! And, I'd add another caveat: inspect not-so-cheap clothing very carefully, and know what you're looking for -- finished, smooth seams, good (natural) fabric, minimal trimming, etc.
Kathleen
I am probably moving back to making my own clothes, and am grateful that I have a stash of some quality fabrics because finding good fabric is becoming difficult. It is probably impossible for the average seamstress in the average city to source good quality materials locally.
Beth: Oh, you don't like electric lemon or seafoam pastel? I only buy neutrals for my occasional purchases from LE or Bean, it's hard to wreck denim blue. The Internet is a good way to source interesting or fine fabrics; if I still sewed I'd do that too but would miss the pleasure of being able to see and feel the bolt while standing in the store.
Sisty: Thank for these sources; another very good doc is "The True Cost", available on Netflix.
Kathleen: Sewers have an edge but sometimes one needs jeans or a down puffer jacket. When I tour the high end I sometimes judge things are overpriced, so my current approach is to buy from small, local designers- but they too tell me of problems sourcing their fabrics.
Mardel: Read this!
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-21350013
That "Made in Italy" label increasingly means by Chinese-owned companies, with Chinese labour and sometimes fabric smuggled in from China.
Besides the fine manual skills, the sewer needs what I call "the geometry mind", the ability to think in three dimensions. This is a refined visual skill. When I made pull-on pants, they were really two-dimensional (as are many beginner patterns). But once you essay pleats on a coat, or are setting the shoulder on a tailored jacket, you have to think, intervene, and produce quite a daunting construction.
I have enormous respect for sewers! These days I think I could muster an apron.