The Daily Front Row

Page 12

bestDresses

Thoroughly

modern miller Nicole Miller explored her own archives in order to create a capsule collection, filled with her greatest hits circa the 1980s, subtly tweaked to feel very au courant. Ahead of its release and her Spring ’19 show, the designer fills in your Daily on her trip down memory lane.

Where did you get the idea to launch a vintageinflected capsule collection? I’ve noticed people have been copying a lot of my old dresses, so it just seemed like a trend—this longer, drape-y, kind of ’40s style dress that I used to make in the ’80s. There really is a movement for looser-fitting dresses. People have been begging and clamoring for my old dresses, buying them up on eBay. Christene Barberich from Refinery29 found an old dress of mine, and she posted a photo of it on Instagram—it was pretty cool. This idea [of revisiting the look] has been on my mind; I tried to do it three years ago, but I couldn’t really get the sales part behind it. Now, the timing is right. I dug up some of my old vintage prints and had them reprinted on a vintage-y disco drape. I’m excited about [Nicole Miller Vintage]; it’s come together really nicely. Some pieces are new styles that look like old ones, and FA S H I O N W E E K D A I LY. C O M

some are exact [replicas] of our old styles—yet they look totally contemporary. The dresses will be priced in the $200 range. Any favorite prints from the collection? There’s a funny print with little paint tubes on it. It’s really cute! I have a picture of Belinda Carlisle from the Go-Go’s wearing one dress—she’d shortened it, because it was actually a long dress. I found one in a Melrose Avenue thrift shop a few years back, and then, I found a few other pieces from that exact same [print] group. I resurrected that print; some have more of a ’40s look, and some are more conversational. Where do you keep your archives? I have a whole big archive closet downstairs [at the brand’s HQ], which has the looks from all the fashion shows, starting from Spring ’91, our first one. But a lot of these dresses predate that—I made them before I did

fashion shows—so they came from a different closet, which has a lot of fun ’80s stuff in it. What’s the mood of your Spring ’19 collection? Nostalgic and timeless. I have used a lot of ideas that came from the archives closet, but literally everything is newer and updated. There’s a little bit of an ’80s influence, but I didn’t want to get too caught up in one period or one time zone. The collection has a lot of very contemporary dresses. Any favorite silhouettes you’re loving for fall? I’m sure I’m not the only person doing this, but I do love a long, oversize blazer. I began last fall, and there was a lot on my runway, but for Spring. I made it bigger and longer, and tweaked some of the details. The jacket is like the length of a short dress now. Blazers weren’t around for a while, and now, the blazer is definitely back! It’s just got to be a little more interesting.

d a r i o c a n tat O r e / g e t t y i m a g e s ( 1 ) ; a l l o t h e r s c o u r t e sy

BY ASHLEY BAKER


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