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Fashion Week Brooklyn To Debut Internatio­nal Fashion Fair in London

It's Brooklyn meets London for this fashion show.

- BY KALEY ROSHITSH

Fashion Week Brooklyn is debuting its first internatio­nal fashion fair in London Sept. 16 to 17.

The show will be held at London's

Indra Studios and will return to its home court with a flagship Brooklyn show happening Oct. 14 to 21. For the past 16 years, Fashion Week Brooklyn has extended its vision beyond the traditiona­l runway show by fostering collaborat­ion, community developmen­t, innovation and inclusivit­y. Nonprofit BK Style Foundation is the show promoter.

In line with the nonprofit's core values, the London event is themed “Fashion Pronoun #FEMMAS” (a mashup of the words feminine and masculine) and will celebrate creativity, diversity and global fashion, featuring designers from Brooklyn and London. Events span “Uniting Brooklyn and London with #FEMMAS,” "Japan in Brooklyn,” “the Gen K Kids Runway Show” and the inspiring student show featuring designers from U. S. colleges and universiti­es.

“Fashion is a little more fun and doesn't have a gender identity,” said Rick Davy, chief executive officer and founder of

BK Style Foundation and Fashion Week Brooklyn.

There will be eight designers showing in London across the two-day event. One designer is behind a U.K.-based streetwear label called Soi86. “I hate to use the word streetwear,” Davy said, “But I think he's more fashionabl­e with a lot of sweatsuits but not graphicall­y made. He's also doing some interestin­g pieces. It's a mix, it's genderless…Most of the brands that we are showing in the U.K. are genderless.”

For the Brooklyn event, Davy described a full run- of-show including the kickoff kid's show at Kings Plaza and an outpost at experiment­al shopping mall in Brooklyn's Park Slope neighborho­od called Brooklyn Beauty/Fashion Labo. There, an upcycling workshop will be held where show- goers can remix denim and kimonos. Students from Baruch to FIT are also playing a part behind the scenes with setup.

The impetus for BK Style Foundation has always been impact. The U.S. Census Bureau logged 7,130 fashion designers in New York State with estimates showing only a slim representa­tion of Black designers and those from the

LGBTQ-identifyin­g community.

Fashion Week Brooklyn is determined to change these statistics by providing a global platform for designers of color and emerging talent, according to the event's organizers.

Davy and his partner Bridgett Artise at Sustainabl­e Fashion Week U. S. pioneered the designer-inresidenc­y program at Material for the Arts. Residents include Sarah Nsikak, who makes richly storied patchwork designs (@sarahnsika­k on Instagram), and Sunni Dixon, who makes edgy Saks-loved footwear (@ sunnisunni­studio on Instagram). The program provides free items and materials from MFTA, as well as a

$1,000 stipend.

BK Style Foundation has a similar program at Brooklyn Beauty/Fashion Labo called "Sustainabl­e Market." Under its “Stitch for Success” program, the nonprofit secures sewing machines for aspiring fashion designers and provides a space to work and sell their items.

According to Davy, there are plans in place for a Japan show in November 2024, and the hope is that the nonprofit can further secure partnershi­ps to advance its legacy.

“We would like to get more funding, and we'd like to really be recognized by our peers, like the CFDA," Davy said. "We'd hope that they'd support us or a big brand like Jay-Z who would come in and spend some money and [show] dedication behind our program.”

He mentioned the organizati­on's Fashion Movie Evening Out with Brooklyn's Central Library and its Stitch for Success programs as key ways to partner with the nonprofit. “Anything to do with fashion and a collaborat­ion would be helpful not just to us but the community,” he said.

 ?? ?? A community-first show, Fashion Week Brooklyn heads to London.
A community-first show, Fashion Week Brooklyn heads to London.

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