Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Sunny Disposition at VAWK


THE most anticipated show of LG Fashion Week here in Toronto took place Monday at the AGO (Art Gallery of Ontario) under the most gorgeous natural light in Walker court- an indoor, glass roofed courtyard dominated by a chunky winding staircase conceived by the one and only Toronto born architect Frank Gehry. Sunny was dangerously late coming to the venue, missing the a key interview. He came over to us cheekily grinning and sheepishly admitted that he had been sewing last minute! Those of us who tune in to Project Runway have seen how crazy last minute alterations can really be before the judging!
VAWK Spring 2010 consisted of French Polynesian influences and statements made about conventional beauty. I ate with the models along with the other assistants (models + food = no oxymoron at Sunny's show). Although the food provided were sandwiches the size of my fingers, no stick thin, starving girls were in sight. Sunny included two models that did not match conventional beauty standards. One woman was older, perhaps in her early 40s. She was tall and beautiful yes, but definitely no hip swinging young thing. She had noticeable poise and elegant cropped hair. Another model sported half a sleeve of tattoos and was considerably curvier than her peers. Again, very tall but had gorgeous curves and a bum that really filled out the fuchsia floor-length gown. She even rocked the scandalously high slit. My favourite quote given by the smiley designer was re-Tweeted by his business partner Ben Barry and fellow champion of model diversity:
"I want the body to translate the garment. On a skinny girl, it says nothing." - Sunny Fong, VAWK
. Clearly Fong recognizes where the big bucks are- real women.
Highlights included a pair of shorts, suggestively cut out at the back with draping that managed to softly sweep against the outer thigh (First photo below). The leather jackets and blazers were perforated by hand, with a hammer- fantastic craftsmanship but won't come cheap in the stores. The palate of the dresses was surprising- tan, fuchsia and red- definitely evoking a Polynesian sunset but I thought the dresses could have been a bit more effective without the thick, darker brown belts. The tattoo-like appliqués were reminiscent of hibiscus flowers growing like vines up and down the bodies of the models.
Some other insider notes to share: Gift bag contents included wasabi peas, yogurt-covered raisins, a Winners notebook, VAWK canvas bag and AGO brochures.
The DJ's playlist consisted of heavily house-ified top 40 hits by Gaga, Black Eyed Peas and Britney. When the show started, tribal drum beats got the house beats treatment as well with booming bass to compliment the confident bounce in the step of the models.
The after party was in the village. Sipping a VAWK-tini, I took the opportunity to lock eyes with the man of the hour and was able to introduce myself via air-kisses and complimented the white strapless number in particular, shouting over the music "that one is going to sell like crazy!"
Photo Credits: Fashion Magazine.com, ElleCanada.com, Toronto Life

1 comment:

  1. Great review! Sunny's show stood out as one of the most cohesive and mature collections during fashion week. His craftsmanship really shined through the blazers, trenches, tailored skirts and pants(my favorite pieces). Might need more work on the hem and structure of dresses and usage of bright colors, but I have a lot of faith in him! He is a star!

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