I always like to see how a designer can take influence from a tribe of people and make the outcome sway more integrated to modern inner-city society and less like a literal interpretation. Not many fashionable people want to wear a costume representative of a tribe admired, they'd rather wear components that show they admire in their own modern way. Enter Nicholas K Spring 2014.
Inspired by the indigenous peoples that formed the Ndee and Apache nations, The Kunz brothers took the medicine man lore, shamanistic mysticism and natural earth wrought metals and textures to make a collection that was both purist, nomadic and enlightened. The collection had a languid fluidity to it with washed silks, drapey leathers, wispy cottons and gossamer-like knits. Long duster jackets, oversized necklines, puddly collars & lapels and loose cut trousers & shorts all had a swaddling-like and comfortable quality to them.
Colors and prints hearkened to the land and abstract imagery of the Western US terrain which created a beautiful palette on which to infuse color from other pieces of one's wardrobe or to display the beauty of the fresh pattern-making. With melding and cleverly interpreted collections like this, apparently tribes can exist in the metropolis as well.
www.NicholasK.com