Los Angeles Times

She creates closet envy

Ayanna James is the costume designer who brings high-end and cutting-edge L.A. style to HBO’s ‘Insecure’

- By Leigh-Ann Jackson image@latimes.com

If you’ve tuned in to Issa Rae’s hit HBO sitcom “Insecure,” you’ve no doubt criticized the characters’ stunningly bad life choices, while simultaneo­usly coveting their clothes.

For every one of lead character Issa’s dating disasters and work blunders, there’s a hip-hop-inspired top or bohemian-bourgeois blazer you’d love to own. Meanwhile, her glass-ceiling-cracking BFF, Molly, steals scenes in a dizzying array of tailored power suits and Fendi heels.

Fans who’ve found themselves Googling Issa’s “A Different World” tribute tee, deconstruc­ted De La Soul top or Harriet Tubman sweatshirt have costume designer Ayanna James to thank for their new closet obsessions. She dictates what this crew of thirtysome­thing Angelenos wear as they messily maneuver their personal and profession­al lives. James thinks relatabili­ty is the key to the show’s styling success.

“I feel like every character on the show is relatable,” she says. “You either know someone like that or you’ve been that person at a period in your life.”

James and Rae began collaborat­ing after the showrunner’s seminal Web series, “The Misadventu­res of Awkward Black Girl,” started gaining viral status.

Formerly a biochemist­ry student, the Jamaican-born aesthete tested her styling wings by fashion blogging, assisting on local shoots and pulling looks for entertaine­rs including Usher and Jidenna. Since 2015, she’s headed “Insecure’s” fashion team and draped Rae in red carpet looks by brands and designers such as Balmain and Christian Siriano. Samples of costumes from the show are now on display through Oct. 7 in FIDM Museum’s annual Outstandin­g Art of Television Costume Design exhibit.

Sitting in her live-work space in Inglewood — the neighborho­od where much of the show is filmed — James compares characters like pretentiou­s Tiffany and perfection­ist Molly to young women she’d met while attending Florida A&M University or here in L.A., which she has called home for the last seven years.

She’s filed away mental images of, say, Howard University coeds, with their “heightened levels of dresstivit­y,” or dressed-to-kill revelers at a Kiss-n-Grind dance party.

She then channels all that material into outfitting the show’s predominan­tly African American cast.

“A lot of the elements that I use that are pop-culture-related, they’re easily noticeable within black culture,” she says, offering Issa’s memorable Prince, Michael Jackson and Public Enemy Tshirts as examples. “If it’s something that’s influenced or inspired us, I’m going to use it. It’s a way to invite the viewer into this world.”

Always on the hunt for authentici­ty, James and her team shop where she feels the characters would shop. Setting aside the occasional sighting of a Givenchy dress, Maje jumpsuit or Bella Freud sweater, Issa’s fly sensibilit­ies are largely hampered by her frugal means. James figures she’d frequent the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza and pick up handmade jewelry from street vendors near her nonprofit mentoring job in Leimert Park.

“Molly’s fly,” James says of the impeccably dressed attorney played by Yvonne Orji. “If she wasn’t a lawyer, she would probably be an editor at a fashion magazine. She loves labels and high-end designers, but she would shop online a lot. She doesn’t like going to the mall, right? That’s too much.”

While it’s not uncommon to see cast members in pieces from Urban Outfitters, the Slauson Super Mall and even Amoeba Music, James has a passion for representi­ng lesser-known independen­t labels. For the Season 2 premiere and finale, she wanted to push the envelope with a sweatshirt from emerging New York-based label Omondi. The piece was bold and controvers­ial, with its embroidere­d display of the N-word.

“I know that costumes on television are prime real estate,” James says. “I can use that platform to educate … to promote … to influence how the viewer feels.” James has encouraged her costume department to put out feelers on the ground. “I’m saying, ‘Go to your contacts, go to your homies who make T-shirts. Show me what they’re doing and we’ll see if we can plug it into the show.’ So, it feels very grass roots. It feels very ‘lift as you climb.’ ”

Season 2 of “Insecure” ends tonight, and HBO has renewed the show for a third season. So viewers will be seeing more of Issa’s vintage Levi’s and beloved Converse, as well as the next stable of up-andcoming designers James is eager to share.

“I want to continue to break indie brands and bring exposure to black and brown designers,” she says. “Let’s make this a communal thing.”

 ?? Christina House For The Times ?? EVERY “INSECURE” character is relatable, Ayanna James says. “You either know someone like that or you’ve been that person.”
Christina House For The Times EVERY “INSECURE” character is relatable, Ayanna James says. “You either know someone like that or you’ve been that person.”
 ?? Justina Mintz HBO ?? YVONNE ORJI, left, Issa Rae, Amanda Seales and Natasha Rothwell star in the series “Insecure.” Their looks are designed by Ayanna James, who makes it a point to include styles from indie brands.
Justina Mintz HBO YVONNE ORJI, left, Issa Rae, Amanda Seales and Natasha Rothwell star in the series “Insecure.” Their looks are designed by Ayanna James, who makes it a point to include styles from indie brands.
 ?? Justina Mintz HBO ?? JAMES AIMS for authentici­ty when dressing Rae, above.
Justina Mintz HBO JAMES AIMS for authentici­ty when dressing Rae, above.

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