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    Designer Interview

    Rebecca Taylor talks frankly about dressing for all seasons and perils of plastic surgery

    Clifford Pugh
    Mar 21, 2014 | 3:33 pm

    Seasons may change, but, increasingly, shoppers are looking for clothes that transcend a particular time of year. Rebecca Taylor, the hip New Zealand-born designer whose collections appeal to a young, fashion-forward customer, is among the designers who are turning upside down the notion of what to where when.

    Her spring collection, in stores now, features perforated leather in dark shades. For fall/winter, she is showing designs in soft pastels — icy blue, soft pink — that are usually more connected to warmer times of the year. Taylor based the spring collection, which I saw at New York Fashion Week, on the work of Parisian street artist Philippe Baudelocque with chalk prints that look like images that have been washed away in a light rain.

    "I wanted to do something that is beautiful and modern and fresh and just show my girls a different way to wear femininity," Taylor said.

    "People are wearing cashmere, silk, leather year-round," Taylor explained a few months ago when she appeared at Fashion Houston. "It's very trans-seasonal. That's what the stores sell. They sell true fall/winter and summer three weeks of the year. Otherwise, it's buy now, wear now."

    Her fall collection includes modern yet feminine looks — a Taylor trademark — that, indeed, encompass all seasons. Slouchy pants with satiny flight jackets, sleeveless dresses in chiffon prints and a moto jacket over a kaleidoscope print dress can be worn all year long. Lightweight mohair sweaters can ward off over-air-conditioned rooms during the Texas summer.

    "I'm an eternal optimist. One of my favorite quotes is a Roald Dahl quote, which goes something like, 'Those who don't look at the world with sparkling eyes will never see the magic within.' That is me. I see everything that is magical and sparkling," Taylor said. "I wanted to do something that is beautiful and modern and fresh and just show my girls a different way to wear femininity."

    The refreshingly frank 44-year-old designer also touched on other subjects in her no-nonsense manner.

    CultureMap: What do you like most about designing?

    Rebecca Taylor: I love that I get to go shopping and call it research. And I like to tell my husband with a straight face that my clothing budget should be four times his. I grew up in the '80s. I was Cyndi Lauper. I was Madonna. I was at all the thrift stores. I had paint from the art room in my hair just making it all work. The funnest thing in the world is to dress up and become someone else.

    CM: Do you still want to have fun doing that?

    RT: I do. I lost it for a little bit, to be honest. I had kids. ... I feel more secure and now than I did. But growing old is not cool.

    CM : You seem to have your finger on the pulse of what your target customer likes.

    RT: I think she's me. I think she likes beautiful things, but she needs to be comfortable. We share many similarities. She needs to go from work out to a function. She wants to be on a date with her husband on the weekend when they can get a babysitter. I need clothes to wear to the playground to go with the kids to be comfortable.

    But you don't have to hang up your "hip" at the hospital [when you have children]. What women wear during their pregnancy now is so much cooler now, even from when I had my last child, which was four years ago. Maternity clothing is so much fun.

    CM: If you didn't do this, what would you do?

    RT: I used to say dolphin trainer, but that's so un-PC now. Did you see Blackfish? It's amazing. It throws things in a such different perspective. I am an animal rights activist. I do use leather, but I won't use fur, ever. People ask all the time; I'm not going to do it.

    CM: What celebrities would you like to dress?

    RT: What I'm looking for is some role models in fashion, in Hollywood, anywhere, that are growing old gracefully, and I'd like to dress them. It's a real problem, this whole plastic surgery, women having expectations of what we're supposed to look like. We're really messing up a whole generation of kids. And I'm trying to think if I'm brave enough to do it without any help. I'm not sure if I am.

    But if I had somebody else who was doing it ahead of me, it would be like we've done it and it's okay. Did you see Gravity? Incredible, but what's the deal? [Sandra Bullock] didn't have any cellulite or a mark on her body. Did they redo her after or was she really like that? I want her doctor. It's tempting. But if she was a little bit chinny, it would be like I could do [without cosmetic surgery].

    Look at Nicole Kidman on Vanity Fair. Have you seen Renee Zellweger? She just looks like another blonde. They all look alike. I was on the airplane looking at trash magazines, which I love, and there was a picture of — who's that girl with a big bum with Kayne West? Kim Kardashian. They had all these plastic surgery pictures of her, and now she looks like Beyonce and JLo's love child.

    CM: You seem to be having fun as a designer.

    RT: It's an incredibly stressful job. I think I'm getting perspective on it with age. And we're selling really well at the moment. That helps.

    Rebecca Taylor icy blue wool coat with chain detail, dove gray quilted mini and two-tone shrunken sweater.

    Rebecca Taylor look 1 fall 2014 collection
    Photo courtesy of Rebecca Taylor
    Rebecca Taylor icy blue wool coat with chain detail, dove gray quilted mini and two-tone shrunken sweater.
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    Fashion on display

    Rare Halston fashion exhibition now on display in unlikely Texas city

    Brandon Watson
    Feb 16, 2026 | 4:40 pm
    Halston: Inventing American Fashion exhibit Ellen Noël Art Museum
    Photo courtesy of Ellen Noël Art Museum
    An colorful eveningwear grouping takes advantage of Ellen Noël Art Museum's curved walls.

    A rare exhibition honoring fashion pioneer Halston has popped up in an unexpected place: West Texas. Dallas fashionistas who are fans of the designer can make a five-hour pilgrimage to Odessa’s newly revamped Ellen Noël Art Museum to view "Halston: Inventing American Fashion."

    Halston’s minimalistic fashions are rarely the subjects of retrospectives, although the designer’s dramatic life story recently had a pop-cultural resurgence through a 2021 Ryan Murphy miniseries. "Halston: Inventing American Fashion" assesses the talent that made him a household name.

    Known now for outfitting 1970s icons like Liza Minelli and Bianca Jagger, Halston changed the international reputation of American sportswear as part of the famous 1973 “Battle of Versailles” fashion show, holding his own against Paris’ most lauded couturiers. His uniquely louche style still influences contemporary brands like Marc Jacobs, Zac Posen, and Tom Ford, who was briefly the creative director for a revised Halston label.

    The mannequins in the Odessa display are outfitted with 75 ensembles from flowing Ultrasuede daywear to more dramatic draped gowns. The pieces “illustrate how Halston revolutionized fashion by prioritizing comfort, confidence, and modern femininity,” according to a release.

    Although Odessa may seem an odd choice for the show, Halston had deep Texas connections. After he moved on from hat making, Amarillo millionaire Estelle Marsh was his sole backer willing to fund his first Madison Avenue boutique.

     Ellen No\u00ebl Art Museum, Odessa, new facade. The new facade at Ellen Noël Art MuseumPhoto courtesy of Ellen Noël Art Museum

    Halston: Inventing American Fashion exhibit Ellen No\u00ebl Art Museum

    Photo courtesy of Ellen Noël Art Museum

    An colorful eveningwear grouping takes advantage of Ellen Noël Art Museum's curved walls.

    And the recently completed renovation of Odessa's Ellen Noël Art Museum has some of the designer’s signature sleek. Designed by architect R.J. Lopez, the renovation includes new galleries and improved circulation, but the centerpiece is a striking transparent façade, replacing the original brick of the 1985 building.

    “The renovation project has been over 10 years in the making and in the construction phase for the past two years,” says the museum’s buildings manager, Steve Patton, via a release. “The completion of the project has resulted in an incredible facility that is a shining star in West Texas, offering programs and exhibits that will be a destination point for people all over the world!”

    "Halston: Inventing American Fashion" will run through March 22. Admission to the Ellen Noël Art Museum is free.

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