FASHION Magazine

  • Halifax: Musicians take the stage at Off the Cuff, Week 4

    Kolston Gogan of Stereo Penguin in Louanna Murphy's winning design. Photography by Shaun Simpson
    Kolston Gogan of Stereo Penguin in Louanna Murphy's winning design. Photography by Shaun Simpson

    Challenged to dress a local musician for the stage, the four remaining Off the Cuff competitors were back with new work on on August 2. Heather Rappard dressed her musician, a harpist, in a floor-length midnight blue gown–but was again warned by judges to step up her technical game.  Bree Mackin, paired with Mary Stewart, dressed the guitar-strummin’ songbird in a bubbly party dress trimmed in black lace that unfortunately won’t take her to the final round.

  • Halifax: Off the Cuff Week 3–The designers tackle avant-garde outerwear

    Akshay Tyagi's winning design from week three of Off The Cuff
    Akshay Tyagi's winning design from week three of Off the Cuff. Photography by Shaun Simpson

    Last Sunday’s challenge in Halifax’s Off the Cuff, a fashion competition and runway show presented by Argyle Fine Art gallery, couldn’t have been any more inappropriate. The designers were assigned the task of making a garment that was inspired by Halifax’s tempestuous weather and that could be transformed in some way. And so, on one of the scarce sunrise-to-set sunny days in the ‘fax, five designers wrapped their already-sweltering models in practical, toasty outwear.

  • Halifax: NSCAD’s Wearable Art block party


    A piece by Kaleigh Dunlop at NSCAD's Wearable Art show. Photography by Anna Gilkerson.
    A piece by Bree Mackin at NSCAD's Wearable Art show. Photography by Anna Gilkerson.

    I’ve got five words to say about NSCAD University’s 19th annual Wearable Art Show: thank god it was good. Taking a turn from the bar venues WAS has occupied as of late, organizers Sarah Roy and Bree Mackin brought the AIDS Coalition of NS fundraiser to the streets, piling the event’s hundreds of guests under a tented portion of the city’s Granville Mall.

    A novel idea, really, except that it was raining, gusty and bloody cold. Within minutes, my coifed bob was flattened, my notebook pages were rippling and the jots of ink on my program were running. The evening’s hosts—Brian MacQuarrie and Bill Wood of Halifax-based sketch comedy group, Picnicface—even distributed shammies to audience members on either side of the runway’s potentially troublesome wet spot.

    But all those grisly details got swept away with the frigid wind when the 2009 WAS unveiled some truly spectacular pièces d’arts.