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knits

In Darling-land we are online, um… a lot. Some days we go batty, others we are saved by the music. Today I noticed I converted a blog post by Darling K.Hendrix into a bit of fashion poetry in my mind (RTW Fall 2011 Collection lookbook). I bet she won’t mind, she’s lovely and so are her designs. It must have been meant to be, look – the words made a heart. I love the new knit/shred pieces and endless love for a the reclaimed sparkle in her collections. Catch some K.Hendrix on sale in her Darling boutique, and check out Fall ‘11 below.

Gorgeous    Gritty
recycled leathers, hand-dyeing.
Metallics: pewter, copper and bronze,
Knits hand-shredded, beaded, accents.

A Philosophy:
Reclaimed, recycled materials
Perfectly imperfect, and
one-of-a-kind.

always

be

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Photos: Jeffrey Williams Boring

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If you find yourself prancing around the Hamptons or Nantucket in August, don’t walk -RUN- and have Karelle Levy whip you up something fabulous. (Or shop the Darling KRELwear boutique now.)

August 15-18
SUNSET  BEACH
35 Shore Road, Shelter Island, NY

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August 21-24
Legends Boutique
12 Main Street, Nantucket, MA

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Whether glamorous and glittery or luxuriously matte, the client is invited to choose their favorite fabric to be custom fit by Karelle, to flatter any shape. These quickie couture one-of-a-kind pieces are constructed from fabric designed personally by Ms. Levy.

With an emphasis on community, KREL-2-GO’s Knitty Gritty Tour is reminiscent of America’s pioneer days, when campaigns were started grassroots and fortunes were built from the ground up.  We believe in handmade and good old American “service with a smile”.   Each unique design is a collaboration between the client and Karelle Levy, with all the nuance and preciousness of KRELwear’s sought-after hand-knit couture. The entire  experience takes under an hour and is captured by Polaroid to be added to the KREL-2-GO family album; a ritual that echoes a sense of “working together” to make something magical.

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It was a truly great Darling afternoon meeting designer Karelle Levy and checking out her KRELwear studio in Miami! Yarn from floor almost to the ceiling, surrounded by racks of lovely, shimmering KREL designs everywhere. Karelle Levy knits her own fabrics, finding inspiration in the inherent beauty and formal aspects of the process. Levy has developed garments by reconfiguring what she calls “toobular” fashion, using few or no seams in her knitting technique. This makes her garments interchangeable and convertible; a single piece can be worn as a sleeveless top, or a skirt, and they all reflect her independent, no rules ethic, “Living garments, embracing flaws – let it run.”

SD: How did you end up in the fashion industry?
KREL: In college, I took a knit machine technique class and got really into it. So when I graduated I bought myself a knitting machine so that I could continue knitting. I haven’t stopped since. I accumulated so many pieces that I started doing performance art with the pieces I made, which were sometimes more creative than wearable. Soon after I had so many pieces that I started selling them.

SD: When and how did you know you would choose this path?
KREL: Once I started to sell them, and people were interested in purchasing them, I wanted to concentrate on making and selling clothes. I traveled to LA and New York in search of boutiques that would be able to carry such items and was basically selling straight from my suitcase.

SD: Where did you go to school and what did you study?
KREL: I went to Rhode Island School of Design and studied Textile Design

SD: What was your first job in the industry?
KREL: I worked in boutiques but never for any fashion design industry. I’ve been learning the business since I started selling.

SD: What inspires your designs?
KREL: The every day, what is coming up in fashion.

SD: What is your design process?
KREL
: My assistants and I knit more than we draw. We make a lot of test garments and then turn them into actual samples. We make the specs for them after we’ve decided it is a good garment for production.

SD: Describe your philosophy behind your designs?
KREL: By creating geometric shapes combined with little construction detail, I design eco-knit fabrics that mold around the body to make innovative clothes.

SD: What does your average day entail?
KREL
: Factory visits, meetings with potential buyers, lots of emailing, yarnbuying, yarn researching.

SD: If you knew then (before you entered the industry) what you know now, what would you do differently?
KREL: I would have moved to New York once I got divorced and tried to work for the industry getting connections that I try to make now.

SD: In your opinion what is the best and worst current fashion trend?
KREL: I tend not to pay much attention I like what I like. :)

SD: What do you think the hardest aspect of your industry is?
KREL: Getting recognition that pays off in sales.

SD: Do you have any events you are getting ready for in the near future? If so tell us a little about it. KREL: I just did the Style Wars competition in NYC and won!

Article: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/12/nyregion/12fashion.html

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