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Designer Michael Kors visits St. Louis to talk fashion history and its trendy future

5 On Your Side sat down one-on-one with the household fashion name to discuss the St. Louis Fashion Fund and reclaiming the city's garment district. Fashion designer Michael Kors has visited Washington University to discuss fashion history and its future. He also spoke about the St. Louis Fashion Fund and reclaiming the city's garment district. Kors compared being a designer to making a cake, comparing it to looking at a group of ingredients, having an idea, and creating something beautiful. The designer also discussed his start of his iconic fashion line in the 1980s and his advice on how to sell your ideas on social media. Susan Sherman, co-founder of the St Louis fashion Fund, supported Kors' efforts to keep young creatives in St. L. Louis and other industries.

Designer Michael Kors visits St. Louis to talk fashion history and its trendy future

Published : 2 months ago by Annie Krall in Lifestyle

5 On Your Side sat down one-on-one with the household fashion name to discuss the St. Louis Fashion Fund and reclaiming the city's garment district.

Kors told Krall that when he started judging the now-hit show "Project Runway" back in 2004, he didn't think it would be so successful. Yet, as Kors spoke to Washington University students on Monday at the Graham Chapel, being a designer is much like making a cake. Kors compared it to looking at a group of ingredients, having an idea, and making something beautiful.

The designer spent a large part of the hour-long Q&A on campus discussing the start of his iconic fashion line in the 1980s. Sewing with his colleagues in his New York apartment living room.

"One of my seamstresses was a lady who had a beautiful British accent," Kors shared with the 850-person audience. "I would make her answer the phone. So she was, sewing and the phone would come up," Kors said as he mimicked answering the phone. "Hello Michael Kors," in a British accent which got a laugh and round of applause from the St. Louis assembly.

Now making history for the city is Shrewsbury native and moderator Derek Blasberg who was YouTube's first head of fashion beginning in 2018. He has now become a trendy tastemaker covering and working with the likes of Kim Kardashian, Jennifer Lawrence and fellow St. Louis native Karlie Kloss.

"Fashion is a language and it's the way that we communicate," Blasberg told 5 On Your Side. "We all say the same stuff. We all put our pants on one leg at a time but deciding what kind of pants, if they're pants, what if they're not pants? Says a lot about who you are."

"The St. Louis Fashion Fund has emphasized the fact that you don't have to go to New York, you don't have to go to L.A. to be a fashion designer," Krall asked Kors. "What does that mean to you?"

"I think you can do that anywhere in the world," Kors said. "If you've got a great idea and you know how to sell yourself on social media and get your ideas and your designs out there, I think you could be in a small town in North Dakota."

"We want to keep the young creatives in St. Louis," Susan Sherman, co-founder of the St. Louis Fashion Fund. "We want them to build and scale brands here. If we're not here to support, if the investment is not here, they're going to go to the coast, Nashville or Austin or umpteen other places."

The multi-talented art and business student who helped put on the trunk show on campus in tandem with the STL Fashion Fund celebration listened especially closely to Kors's advice about artistic opportunities here in St. Louis in the digital age.

"It's been my home for four years," Goldstein said. "I'll always have a place here and being part of building back that industry here has been special beyond words."


Topics: Fashion, Style

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