In regard to
- NEW ROSE
Autumn/Winter 13/14 - FANTASTIQUE MAGNIFIQUE
Spring/Summer 13 - SEA MONSTERS
Autumn/Winter 12/13 - THE AMERICAN GIRL
Spring/Summer 12 - NORTH
Autumn/Winter 11/12 - Perfect Day
Spring/Summer 11 - Salzburg U.S.A
Autumn/Winter 10/11 - The Village
Spring/Summer 10 - She’s Cracked
Autumn/Winter 09/10 - The Believers
Spring/Summer 09 - Angels
Autumn/Winter 08/09 - Lucky
Spring/Summer 08 - KAREN TO THE RESCUE
Autumn/Winter 07/08 - VICTORY GARDEN
Spring/Summer 07 - DOUGH AND DYNAMITE
Autumn/Winter 06/07 - KAREN IN TV LAND
Spring/Summer 06 - TREE GIRL
Autumn/Winter 05/06 - LIVING WITH CANNIBALS AND OTHER ADVENTURES
Spring/Summer 05 - LIBERAL & MISERABLE
Autumn/Winter 04/05 - QUEENIE WAS A DOG
Spring/Summer 04 - YOUNG, WILLING & EAGER
Autumn/Winter 03/04 - RUNAWAY
Spring/Summer 03
Karen Walker has been nursing an affection for the Dexys Midnight Runners album Searching for the Young Soul Rebels for about 20 years. So it was probably inevitable that she would eventually tap the record for inspiration, as she has this season with great wit and charm. More specifically, Walker went deep into Young Soul Rebels’ homage to the Northern-soul scene that had its heyday in the mid-seventies.
It’s worth talking a bit about Northern soul, because Walker really used the reference. Every weekend, working-class young people would swarm the dance floors at clubs across Northern Britain, the most famous of which was Wigan Casino. The dancing there was athletic and competitive, and it went on all night, and sometimes for entire weekends; then, come Monday, the dancers would return to their jobs on the docks or in the mines.
“I loved the idea of combining the three ways of dressing that went into the scene,” Walker explained after her show today. “There was this very working-class thing, with dockworkers’ coats and caps, and then the racerback singlets that were worn for the more athletic dancing. And then,” she added, “there was the super-femininity of some of the women’s looks. They’d turn themselves out in their Sunday best clothes, with these full skirts that really moved on the dance floor.”
Walker updated those references nicely. A key motif was black vinyl detailing, which added an industrial edge to wallpaper floral-print blouses and girly pleated skirts, and gave a graphic touch to Walker’s pop-color coats. There were ultra-feminine “Sunday best” frocks, like a timeless bias-cut chiffon, and two standout pairs of mannish trousers, one high-waisted with a gentle wide-leg silhouette, the other skinny, cropped, and cuffed. The clothes looked easy and modern, and the inspiration was never too overt, with the exception of the print Walker derived from the souvenir patches the Northern soul-sters used to collect. That was perhaps a little too on-the-nose, but it was still a nice tip of the hat.
STYLE.COM
Karen Walker’s AW11 show was her toughest yet. Inspired by working a class dance club in Northern England, Wigan Casino (where the dock workers went to boogie for the weekend), Walker’s peachy aesthetic received a touch of edge. The palette was considerably less saturated than most Walker showings, with black, navy, grey, dusty rose, and white as the main colorway, plus added hints of teal, cobalt, orange and red towards the show’s end.
While working class Britain may have been the inspiration, this collection radiated with a 90s sensibility. The models’ tiny black beanie hats and greased back hair recalled street urchins, and the mix of pretty and punk looked fit for Sassy magazine’s pages. A navy sleeveless jacket over a white tee worn with loose gray pants was reminiscent of Alexander Wang’s early street wear, mixing comfort with structure. While this collection felt like a departure from Walker’s cute and wallflowery aesthetic, it still had the desirability factor that will make it a hit in stores.
FASHIONISTA.COM