t was business as usual at Ruffian, and by that we mean Brian Wolk and Claude Morais presented clothes designed for the pursuit of pleasure
www.ruffian.comNewYorkFashion WeekFashion Brand
t was business as usual at Ruffian, and by that we mean Brian Wolk and Claude Morais presented clothes designed for the pursuit of pleasure
It was business as usual at Ruffian, and by that we mean Brian Wolk and Claude Morais presented clothes designed for the pursuit of pleasure: a ruched party dress whipped up in a colorful, Picasso-esque print on silk taffeta; a micro shift embroidered all over in beads; a black cotton Swiss eyelet baby-doll dress. This collection, more than their last, had a dressed-up feeling that the designers' detractors call prissy.
It's true, Ruffian's brand of ladylike is about as far as it gets from the tough-chic body con and tailored androgyny that are fashion's current fixation. But it wasn't all frivolity and frills. The second look featured a vaguely military-looking dress with epaulets at the shoulders and two rows of brass buttons marching up the front, and the two slouchy, slightly oversize trenches in the same washed beach linen had a swagger that even the edgiest types probably couldn't resist. The team's second-skin jodhpurs—they called them "equestrian tights"—make for a sexy, seasonal alternative to the ubiquitous leather legging. Still, the show's strongest piece, a strapless dress in nubby black-and-white bouclé with a flash of baby pink at the neckline, was unabashedly feminine. Good for them for sticking to what they do best.