Las Vegas Review-Journal

Menswear trends preppy, tailored, outdoorsy

- By Christophe­r Lawrence Las Vegas Review-journal

Bold menswear prediction: Guys will continue to buy pants.

Also, probably shirts — with the possible exception of Adam Levine.

Beyond that, it can be hard to get a sense of trends at a fashion trade show, especially one like Project, MAGIC’S menswear hub at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center.

“What we’ve seen is a lot of influx of young men’s brands and streetwear brands,” says Jason Peskin, brand director for men’s fashion at Project.

As a result, you have heritage companies such as Levi’s, Champion and that old stalwart Members Only jockeying for attention alongside the likes of Jeff Staple, the designer who just debuted a collaborat­ion with Roy Choi’s Best Friend at Park MGM. He’s playing pingpong with MAGIC attendees for the chance to win swag and a pair of his white-hot STAPLE X Nike SB Panda Pigeons.

It’s a difficult room to read, made more so by the reviewjour­nal.com/ menswear

fact that every designer and wholesaler is angling to impress an army of retailers with what they’re convinced is the next big thing.

Thankfully, there are people such as Brian Trunzo, a senior consultant and forecaster at trend analyst WGSN.

Yes, it sounds like an

East Coast TV station. But that’s OK, because Trunzo is basically the fashion equivalent of a weatherman, and he’s expecting big things for the outdoors.

“We’re seeing hiking styles really infiltrate the marketplac­e in an ironic way. These styles are performanc­e grade, but they’re never really intended to actually see a mountainto­p or a slope or anything like that.”

Young consumers, Trunzo says, are taking that irony to a new height, buying hiking gear to purposeful­ly never wear on a mountainto­p — much like the mother who purchases an SUV that could scale a cliff only to use it to drive her kids to the mall.

Ivy League prep is cycling through once again, Trunzo adds. It’s a look that should be familiar to anyone who’s ever owned a letterman’s jacket.

“We’re seeing these varsity styles come back into play a little bit more mixed and matched — a new interpreta­tion. Not so sort of buttoned-up and polished the way that you would have seen in the Ivy League.”

And, despite the inevitable howls of protest, it finally may be time to return those sweatpants to the gym, where they belong.

“Over the course of the last two to five years, we’ve seen suits depart from the marketplac­e by most luxury designers,” Trunzo says. “There was this great casualizat­ion of menswear. We saw the rise of athleisure.”

Now, though, some of those high-end labels seem ready to reclaim their turf.

“We’re seeing some designers return to tailoring and try to present it in a more interestin­g, fashionfor­ward way. Maybe not the way you’d wear it in the workplace, but maybe something a little more streetwear inspired.”

But the T-shirt-and-jeans crowd can rest easy: Not every red carpet look is ready for the masses.

In other words, you don’t need to rush out and buy a harness, that eye-catching, Everyman-baffling accessory sported by Timothee Chalamet at the Golden Globes and Michael B.

Jordan at the Screen Actors Guild Awards.

At least not yet.

“I do think we will see harnesses in the marketplac­e, but it’s going to be for a very directiona­l, very fashionfor­ward person,” Trunzo says. “I don’t think people are going to be leaving their sport coats at home, going to weddings in harnesses.

“But you might see one or two.”

Contact Christophe­r Lawrence at clawrence@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4567. Follow @life_ onthecouch on Twitter.

 ?? Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Puffa jackets at the Hawke & Co. booth at the fashion trade show.
Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal Puffa jackets at the Hawke & Co. booth at the fashion trade show.

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