TORONTO -- They did it in unusual places like a renovated
movie theatre, an underground garage, a historic building
and a church.
Toronto fashion designers who presented fall/winter collections
took their runway shows to places they had never been
to before.
It was a sort of rebellious reaction to being forced
to go it on their own, with each designer organizing his
or her own event during Toronto Fashion Week.
Weeks earlier, the cigarette company Imperial, through
its Matinee Fashion Foundation, pulled out as main sponsor
of the twice-annual Canadian event that normally puts
more than two dozen designers from across the country
under one roof.
The setback didn't stop Toronto designers, including
Brian Bailey, Joyce Gunhouse and Judy Cornish of Comrags,
Marilyn Brooks, David Dixon, Crystal Siemens and Joeffer
Caoc, who were anything but timid in their solo efforts.
There were few overwhelming trends, although hemlines
tended to be at the knee or longer and shapes were looser
and more relaxed. Innovations in fabric did most of the
fashion-forward talking.
Brooks, president of Designers Ontario which helped organize
the fashion week, said holding individual shows cost designers
more money.
"It costs everyone more, but the spirit that has resulted
and the creativity that we've seen is one of the most
important things we've learned from this," said Brooks.
Imperial is still supporting designers through business
grants and advertising. But federal anti-smoking legislation
restricts tobacco advertising at cultural and sporting
events.
Toronto Fashion Week participants carefully chose specific
venues to attract fashion media and buyers.
Siemens' venue -- in a dank underground garage near Union
train station -- was perhaps the most original, with Caoc
using the Ontario Place amusement grounds along Lake Ontario
as his backdrop.
The collections presented by more than a dozen designers
ranged from stylish frump inspired by previous decades,
to techno-glam.
Traditional and natural fabrics like wool, mohair, leather,
denim and organza were used on their own, or mixed and
matched with technologically advanced versions and other
high-tech fabrics.
"Fall 2000 is a season of contrast," said Bailey, a Camrose,
Alta., native whose regular and large-sized collections
were paraded down stairs and along a carpeted runway in
the living room of the historic Ontario Heritage Centre.
His show started with stunning cashmere, such as black
and grey floor-length hidden-button and wrap coats. Deep,
strong colours like crimson red and chocolate brown were
accented with lilac, tangerine and apple green.
Stretch techno-denim and leather were staples in Dixon's
collection shown in his new studio -- a renovated downtown
Toronto church.
Dixon said his inspiration was watching high-style women
and men in the Roman Catholic church he attended as a
child. He's put an understated-sexy slant on glam dressing
for men and women this fall and winter.
"Fashion today is really about mixing the old with the
new," he said. "You can make new statements with old looks."
Dixon's strapless tunics, halter tops, lean and cropped
pants, strapless dresses, sweaters and suits were in a
range of fabrics -- from old-fashioned tweed and cashmere,
to laser-cut plaids and wool, latex and fur.
Cornish and Gunhouse, whose show was at the renovated
Capitol Event Theatre in mid-Toronto, embraced vintage
looks, with pieces like A-line skirts and wrap sweaters
that could easily have been in grandmother's closet. But
for the millennium, they loosened the fits to accommodate
a growing number of women who want casual-dressy comfort.
The duo stuck mostly with wool, silk and cotton, with
an emphasis on typical fall colours such as black, grey,
rust and olive, because women prefer natural fabrics that
move and breathe, they said. But recognizing the growing
influence of man-made fabrics, they also threw in vinyl
pants and skirts.
"We're living in a technological age," said Cornish.
"A lot of designers are looking at techno-fabrics because
they feel they should, but nothing works like wool, silk,
cotton and other natural fabrics to make clothes look
good."
Brooks, who's into her fourth decade of designing, waved
her patriotic flag with a line called Upper Canada Impressions,
using thick, rich wools blended with angora and cashmere,
with details such as hand-cut fringes, scarves and native
British Columbia beads. Her winter-garden prints featured
large rose patterns in jersey separates.
Her hairy tube dresses, tops and wide pants in lilac
and burgundy signalled she means business in the new century.
The "strand" pieces were an updated Stone Age look, reminiscent
of what Betty and Wilma wore on the Flintstones, complete
with chunky clear plastic jewelry.
New designers Olena Zylak, Kafi Wilson and Karen Uhm
of vir-go, and Shelli Oh of harebell injected energy and
creativity to fashion week. The four are with the Toronto
Fashion Incubator, which houses newcomers in a building
with mini-design areas to give them a start in the business.
Dixon sponsored their show at his church studio as a thank-you
for receiving incubator support when he was starting out.
Trends
Old-fashioned and funky fabrics: Old and technologically
advanced versions of wool, denim, leather and suede, with
man-made latex, vinyl and other high-tech fabrics; also
natural fibres like tweeds, silks, cottons, organza, angora,
cashmere, mohair and fur.
Warm colours: Typical fall colours like dark brown, black,
rust, olive, deep orange and red, with secondary colours
such as lilac and apple green adding interest.
Hemline ups and downs: Hemlines are all over the map,
with an emphasis on knee-to-ankle lengths.
Pushing pants: Relaxed fit, with some skimming the body
but mostly looser. Belts aren't an issue because many
styles have no belt loops.
Details: For many pieces, belt ties around sweaters and
jackets replace buttons; top stitching; funnelnecked tops;
ruffles.
No-sweat sweaters: Knits are big, in chunky and streamlined
styles of dresses, tops and skirts.