Khaite RTW Spring 2021

“I’m drawn to darkness,” Khaite designer Catherine Holstein said during a Zoom preview of her spring collection.

Cate, this is your moment.

In a powerful collection, Holstein offered a bold alternative to much of what we’ve seen through this COVID-19-directed spring season. While many designers have opted for escapist, feel-good fashion or tried their best to include clothes that work for life at home, Holsten showed a compelling lineup rooted in what one might call power dressing, and worn by models whose determined attitudes approached defiance, as though they’re up to whatever challenges 2020 and beyond throws at them. “There’s no going back after this. You’re rarely in your life faced with such a huge shift, where you know your life is never going to be the same,” she said.

“As a brand I’ve always celebrated New York, and New York is where I’m most comfortable,” Holstein continued. “I think it’s the richest and most interesting city in the world, and I think there’s going to be an artistic renaissance in New York,” she said, “but in New York right now, the feeling is dark.”

From a philosophical and creative stance, she wanted to address that feeling head-on rather than escape from it. For her look book and film shoot, each model was shot alone, her image sometimes distorted in reference to the new voyeurism in which we all participate, via video conference. The clothes telegraphed a precise glamour in which siren and utilitarian elements mingled. Holstein moved back and forth between alluring tailoring and body-con knit dresses, with a sexy Josephine moment or two worked in.

While Holstein loves a good sweater and included a cashmere beauty in her presentation, there was no hint of luxury-at-home-wear in her lineup. These are clothes for the world — a world that Holstein believes women want to reenter ASAP — maybe to the point of engaging in some one-upsmanship with friends. “My instincts are telling me that people are going to want to dress up,” she said. “I think it’s going to be more competitive in terms of dressing than ever. People are going to want to look their best seeing people they haven’t seen for six months or a year.”

As a way of making the non-runway season special, Holstein developed a “Keepsake Box” sent to retailers and editors. It included a candle with signature matches, a pouch made from leftover handbag leather and a giant look book with fabric swatches and an AR component. Right, now, it’s just the shoes that spin off of the printed page while showing every angle; within the year she expects to extend the technology to the clothes.

“Not knowing when we’ll be fully back in stores, I had to think about how to make this not two-dimensional but three dimensional. And tactile,” she said. “As tactile as possible, because this is a tactile business.”

Launch Gallery: Khaite RTW Spring 2021

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