New Straits Times

Fidget fashion for a purpose

The dangling fringe, reversible sequins, jingly charms and sliding jewellery all help keep anxiety at bay,

- writes Lauren Parker

EIGHTEEN months ago, Alexandra Connell, who has attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, introduced the online marketplac­e Patti & Ricky, which bills itself as “fashion for people of all abilities”. Among the products is a line of “discreet” sliding bead fidget jewellery from Love Dawne aimed at those with ADHD and anxiety who need a beautiful, socially acceptable way to fidget. The jewellery’s aesthetic becomes the focus of attention, rather than the behaviour.

“My fidget jewellery helps with my own A DH D and anxiety, and people who compliment it are always surprised to hear it was designed to serve a purpose,” said Connell, 31, who has a master’s degree in disability studies from Columbia

University Teachers College and lives in Denver.

“Then they want to buy one for themselves, because who isn’t anxious these days? Society is moving toward understand­ing that fidgets can inspire concentrat­ion, focus and brainstorm­ing — but you can’t pull out a fidget spinner in a board meeting.”

Amy Serwer, who lives in Manhattan and has two children, recognises what Connell is talking about.

She has two Jennifer Meyer gold-and-diamond initial charm necklaces dedicated to her 10-and 12-year-old daughters, and she wears them together every day.

“I’m always fidgeting with these necklaces,” Serwer said. “They help me focus when I’m stressed out, plus they make me feel closer to my kids.”

Retail therapy has a new, more literal, meaning.

Fidget spinners may be so 2017 but their explosive sales revealed, in part, our compulsive need for something (anything) to occupy our hands, calm our nerves and focus our thoughts. Especially when we can’t grab our phones.

Enter Fidget Fashion: the dangling fringe, reversible sequins, jingly charms and sliding jewellery that is suddenly ubiquitous at brands including Paco Rabanne, Altuzarra, Gucci and Loewe.

The pieces are the equivalent of “modern-day worry beads to take your mind off the moment and mentally unwind”, said Ken Downing, the senior vice president and fashion director of Neiman Marcus, who traces the genesis of fidget fashion to the popularity of handbag charms a few years ago.

According to Ingrid Wright, a psychother­apist, “fidgets help reduce anxiety, and can almost be compared to a child’s baby blanket.”

Johnson Hartig, the founder and designer of Libertine, a label that sells many embellishe­d pieces, said: “With fashion being so fast and images instantly available there is something to say about a tactile interactiv­e garment — it’s comforting somehow.”

On the artisanal side, craftier styles with a doit-yourself bent are on the rise for spring, with designers putting a highend spin on 1970s-style macrame fringe and rope accessorie­s, all ready-made for fingers to absent-mindedly braid or knot. Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini, a fashMilan, ion house in even added sliding wooden beads on its multistran­d rope belts.

Leslie J. Ghize, the executive vice president of Tobe, a consumer culture and creative think tank, believes this ratcheting up of fidgety, tactile design serves as a reality check or antidote to the fakeness of the virtual realm. “Even seeing texture and dimension makes people feel closer to the real world,” she said.

Yet, one of the results of the boom in fidget fashion and accessorie­s meant to calm our social-media-frenzied minds has been a surge in Boomerang posts and slow-motion videos of people twirling in super-swingy fringe skirts or brushing reverse sequin fabrics and down.

A Michael Kors Instagram post of a model spinning in a black sequined dress with sparkly beaded fringe flaring out, for example, has over 175,000 views and 110 comments.

“The more interactiv­e, the better pictures they make,” said Roopal Patel, the fashion director of Saks Fifth Avenue.

The perfect accessory to wear while watching? One of Cynthia Gale New York’s sterling silver Spinner Rings with rotating band-in-a-band constructi­on.

“We often term them ‘meditation rings’,” said Cynthia Gale, the founder and designer of the label. “We live in stressful times, and I really believe they help people with their mental fitness. They are consistent­ly our best-selling category.”

 ??  ?? The Deva Fidget ring from the Ricky + Patti retail website. A dangling fringe outfit from the Proenza Schouler Haute Couture fashion show in Paris.
The Deva Fidget ring from the Ricky + Patti retail website. A dangling fringe outfit from the Proenza Schouler Haute Couture fashion show in Paris.

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