South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Outfits stitched with love

On, off the ice, US figure skater feels a special tie to mom. ‘I just feel the best when I wear them.’

- By Juliet Macur

BEIJING — As soon as Karen Chen skates onto the ice, the dreaded feeling returns.

Her coach could be pounding on the wall of the rink to get her excited. Her family and friends could be screaming encouragem­ent from the stands. The fans could be cheering her name.

Yet in that spotlight, standing there waiting for the music to begin, as the figure skater has done during the Beijing Games that end Sunday, she still feels so vulnerable.

“It’s only me, my body and my mind, and it just hits me that, ugh, I’m doing this by myself,” said Chen, a two-time Olympian and the 2017 U.S. national champion. “That can be so scary.”

She knows the remedy is close, so close that she carries it with her. A quick touch of her jade rabbit necklace and a glance at her costume remind her that it will be OK because her mother is out there with her too.

Chen’s mother, Hsiu-Hui Tseng, gave her that necklace when Chen was 9 after her first serious injury in the sport, a chipped bone in her foot, and the rabbit is Chen’s Chinese zodiac sign. It’s meant to protect her, and Chen always wears it.

A handmade tale

And her costume?

That’s a different story, one stitched together over years of a mother’s love and support for a daughter who had an Olympic dream and now has realized it twice.

For most of Chen’s career, her mother has made her sparkling costumes that are designed with Swarovski crystals that are the best for catching the light. There could be thousands of them on each costume, and each is individual­ly glued on. The bigger ones are also sewn on, so they don’t fall off.

At this level of the sport, where dresses can cost several thousand dollars each — or more because, in some cases, Vera Wang has designed them — a homemade dress that can pass muster at the top level of the sport is a rarity.

There is a lavender one with a deep V lined with shining butterflie­s and flowers, for a performanc­e to “Butterfly Lovers Concerto.” Another, purple with a splash of white and fuchsia flowers that flows daintily across the bodice. A black one with a moody deep V design of dazzling blues on the front and a matching deep scoop on the back.

And one that’s among Chen’s favorites: a lavender dress with an ombre design that took Tseng multiple tries to perfect because she bought the fabric from a Jo-Ann store and dyed it herself. You can learn anything on YouTube, she said.

Chen, 22, wore mom-made dresses in both the short program and the free skate of the mixed team event two weeks ago, when the United States won the silver medal. A week later in the women’s singles event, she placed 13th in the short program, 17th in the free skate program and finished 16th overall.

She can’t imagine wearing a dress made by anyone else.

At first, Chen didn’t skate with bespoke dresses. When she was 7 or 8 and needed a costume, her mother bought one at the rink’s pro shop, albeit balking at the price. Chen ended up complainin­g about it, saying “Oh my God, this is like too itchy and I don’t want to wear this!”

Her mother offered a familiar parental reply: “I paid money for this. You are going to wear it.”

And Chen did wear it, but only for a while.

Her complaints wore her mother down.

“Her body is very sensitive, and so her dresses need to fit in a certain way,” Tseng said. “So I said, ‘I’ll see what I can do’ and solved that issue on my own.”

Tseng’s old Barbie dolls helped.

As a girl in Taiwan, Tseng was not satisfied with Mattel’s fashion choices, so she ripped apart her dolls’ clothes to examine the deconstruc­ted fabric, then used them as a template for her own designs and borrowed her mother’s sewing machine to create new, improved clothes.

Years later, she also tore apart her daughter’s first competitio­n dress and put it back together in a way that made Chen feel comfortabl­e — and, maybe more important, confident.

That dressmakin­g was just the start of Tseng’s devotion to her daughter’s career — and Chen said her mother’s effort and sacrifices have helped her reach the top of her sport.

“I was so young and needed so much help that I couldn’t have done this without her,” Chen said. “When I made the team in 2018, it was a dream come true, and I also knew that my mom was behind it all.”

A family affair

When Chen was in middle school, her family partly uprooted so she could train with the internatio­nally known coach Tammy Gambill, who was based in Riverside, California, 400 miles south of where the Chens lived in Fremont.

Chen’s father, Chih-Hsiu Chen, couldn’t move because of his job, but Tseng could work remotely as a database engineer, so she rented an apartment in Riverside, where the family lived during the week.

Eventually, Chen’ s younger brother, Jeffrey, also started training in Riverside, as an ice dancer.

On weekends, they would drive back to Fremont so the whole family could be together, and Chen remembers her mother being so tired during the six- to eighthour drive in their Honda minivan that Chinese podcasts or game shows would be blasting in the car to keep her awake.

During the week, Tseng would wake up at 6 a.m. for East Coast business meetings and bring her laptop to the rink, where she would work in the stands.

“My husband and I could never do a sport like figure skating because we didn’t have the resources,” Tseng said. “We will do anything to give our children the opportunit­y to do what they love.”

Tseng continued to make Chen’s dresses until 2016, when Chen’s first chance at the Olympics drew near, and they turned to a profession­al instead.

Dresses are such an important part of a skater’s presentati­on that athletes show them to coaches and even judges before competitio­ns to get feedback on how a dress makes their body look as they perform jumps and spins.

“The dress, the hair, the makeup, the music selection and the story behind it, it’s all about the packaging and that’s a big thing, right?” Drew Meekins, Chen’s choreograp­her, said. “The dress needs to show off the body line in a way that’s most appealing to show things like posture and stretch of the limbs. All those things are evaluated in the program component marks.”

He added, “Karen’s mom is great at highlighti­ng her in just that perfect way.”

But the cost of those profession­ally made costumes is high, and Tseng said she sometimes paid more than $3,500, and extra for alteration­s.

Sometimes Chen had to buy a whole new dress because the judges didn’t like the one she showed them.

‘It saves money’

In 2018, the cost became unmanageab­le and Chen went back to her mother for costumes.

Ts eng also makes costumes for her son, Jeffrey, and his ice dancing partner, Katarina Wolfkostin. They were named as alternates for the Beijing Olympics.

“I don’t care what people say because, first, it saves money and second of all, she’s super, super talented,” Chen said. “That’s why my dresses are always dropdead gorgeous.”

Before turning on her sewing machine, Tseng listens to the music Chen will perform to and then spends hours searching online and flipping through magazines to check out wedding dresses, gymnastics outfits, other skaters’ costumes and fashion, in general, to get ideas for a new creation.

Then she meets with Chen to discuss possibilit­ies and, later, tweaks such as which stone color looks best and which direction the crystal design should go.

Tseng said she spends about $1,000-$1,500 on each dress and creates about 10 of them per year. Chen receives them by FedEx at the U.S. Olympic training center in Colorado, where she has lived and trained for the past few years — and each time she opens the box, her heart jumps.

Her latest dress arrived the day before she left for Beijing.

For 20 hours a day, four days in a row, Tseng had cut fabric, sewed and glued, and sewed some more for her daughter, who plans to retire soon from internatio­nal competitio­n and return to her premed studies at Cornell University.

“I barely slept at all, but I wanted to make something really special,” Tseng said. “I know in the future I won’t have this chance because she will have a different life, and I will miss this.”

 ?? MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY ?? US figure skater Karen Chen competes in the women’s free skate program Thursday in Beijing. A week earlier she helped the U.S. mixed team win a silver medal.
MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY US figure skater Karen Chen competes in the women’s free skate program Thursday in Beijing. A week earlier she helped the U.S. mixed team win a silver medal.
 ?? SYLVIAJARR­US/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Hsiu-Hui Tseng makes Olympic-quality outfits for her daughter at her home in Novi, Mich. For most of Karen Chen’s career, her mother has made costumes with Swarovski crystals that are best for catching the light.
SYLVIAJARR­US/THE NEW YORK TIMES Hsiu-Hui Tseng makes Olympic-quality outfits for her daughter at her home in Novi, Mich. For most of Karen Chen’s career, her mother has made costumes with Swarovski crystals that are best for catching the light.
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP ?? Chen competes in the women’s short program Tuesday in Beijing.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP Chen competes in the women’s short program Tuesday in Beijing.

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