Gulf Today Report
After a long hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic, New York is opening its Spring/Summer 2022 Fashion Week with the return of in-person runway shows featuring big names like Tom Ford and Altuzarra.
But Covid-related curbs will deprive the series of some of its usual international flavour as it rolls out this week.
The pandemic overshadowed the last two fashion weeks, in September 2020 and February 2021, as both were dominated by virtual runway shows.
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Steven Kolb, chief executive of the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA), says he sees room for both digital and in-person shows.
But "there is a real optimism and energy and enthusiasm about returning to live shows," he added.
The Covid factor
Fashion Week this year overlaps with the Metropolitan Museum of Art's own fashion extravaganza, a high point of the city's social calendar, set for Monday.
Fashion Week's organisers have announced a strict protocol: All guests and participants must be vaccinated, masks are recommended -- though not for runway models -- and audience sizes are limited.
According to the CFDA, "a large percentage" of the 91 official events will take place outdoors, while some labels continue to rely on digital presentations.
A model walks the runway for the Proenza Schouler fashion show. File/ AFP
And with travel to the United States still banned from many countries, "there will be many of our normal international guests... not getting to New York," Kolb said.
Less routine
Even before the pandemic, the American fashion world faced some major defections, with onetime tentpoles like Ralph Lauren, Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger dropping high-end lines or moving their shows elsewhere. New York had also lost designers like Pyer Moss, Rihanna and Victoria Beckham.
This time, the CFDA has been touting the return of Thom Browne and Joseph Altuzarra, who earlier left New York for Paris.
The week gets fully under way on Tuesday with Christian Siriano and Collina Strada.
Also on the calendar are Liberian-American stylist Telfar Clemens, whose vegan leather shopping bag created a sensation, and Peter Do, the young designer who grew up on a small farm in Vietnam and is now taking part in his first fashion Week.
The week closes on Sunday with shows by big names Tory Burch, Oscar de la Renta and Tom Ford.
Meantime, the pandemic, by at least temporarily de-emphasising in-person shows, has left some designers with mixed feelings.
"I don't think designers necessarily feel the pressure to show every season, as some of them have maybe once felt," said Cathleen Sheehan, a professor at the fashion Institute of Technology in New York.
"It's a tremendous relief for a lot of brands, because shows are incredibly expensive.
"It's less of an obligation and a routine. There's more freedom."