Austin’s innagural fashion week hosted a slew of designers and artists to showcase their talents at boutiques and venues throughout the city - but none so impressive as LA’s contemporary cool Corey Lynn Calter.  Calter is a Philly girl at heart, as well as an FIT alum who found herself on the west coast and “threw a lot of spaghetti at the wall” while creating her namesake line.  Austin Fashion Week housed Calter at 2100 South Lamar (former home of Moxie), where she was able to create a whimsical setting with local Austin artists for her three day pop up shop.  Just because Austin Fashion Week has come to a close doesn’t mean you can’t get CLC anywhere else in Austin - she’s carried at By George, Girl Next Door, and C. Jane.  And, as I was lucky enough to sit down with Calter in the midst of the shop setup, you can get even more of a glimpse of her honest design sense from the interview below…

As an east coast girl, what made you base your line on the west coast?

I moved from New York to San Francisco after a personal tragedy.  I wasn’t running away from it, I just thought it was a good idea to leave.  I ended up working for the San Francisco Opera - in costuming.  Then I made corsets out of my kitchen that I sold to Henri Bendel, it was a pretty good business for being out of my kitchen.

San Francisco was a little slow for me - New York to San Francisco was a tricky adjustment. I had always thought I’d move back east after San Francisco, but I ended up moving to LA - where I met my husband, started my business, had kids, a house.

Has your personal style and design aesthetic changed since switching coasts?

I’m still a girl who wears a lot of black, I like cream a lot more now, I find myself wearing a lot of white.  I didn’t have my business in New York so I’m not sure if it would have changed the way I approach it.  Costuming at the San Francisco Opera definitely changed the way I design - I approach it now from a very storybook place.  What’s this girl doing?  Where would she wear this?  I tend to think of her in theatrics.

Your current collection is heavy in print - specifically ethnic - what are some of your favorite foreign destinations for inspiration?

I just had my second child - so I havent done a tremendous amount of traveling beyond London, New York, Paris - and the Jersey Shore, (she giggles) which you’d be surprised at how much inspiration I get from it.  A lot of times it’s based on what I think a place is like.  I did a whole collection based on Capri once, but I’ve never been there, so I have no idea what it’s like.  But - I do think people wear a lot of aqua and bright sun yellow - so again, it’s like an imaginary approach, a lot of imagination.

Have you always wanted your own line, or was it a gradual realization?

I really didn’t think anyone would have a need to hire me, I didn’t know how to approach getting a job in the industry.  I think it was a very organic procession for me.  I learned a lot by just throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what stuck.  So, now I’ve been doing this for 9 years and a lot more spaghetti sticks - but, I dont know - I think it just happened organically, who knows if it was the right thing to do.  

A lot of what I got at fashion companies, was that it didnt happen fast enough for me.  I didn’t want to do what amounted to intern work for the rest of my life, or however long it took me to be creative in a position.  I was obsessively creative at that age, I had to create things all the time.  I used to sew every outfit in my kitchen that I would wear out that night.

What kind of advice, if any, do you have for any budding Austin designers?

I think you just know if it’s right for you, or if it’s not right for you.  Some people just shouldn’t have their own businesses - not because they’re not good at it, but because sometimes it’s not the right fit for everyone.  Having a business is hard, I deal with an enormous amount of B.S. every day - from HR to customer service.  Not to be callice, but designing is about 20% on a good day of what I do - and that’s probably more than a lot of designers out there.  You know what’s right for you - and I think you should always say yes.  Get the orders and then worry about how to produce it.  Trust me, if you get an $80,000 order from Bendel’s, someone will finance it.  The hardest thing is to get people to understand and buy your designs.  

 

Shop Corey Lynn Calter online



Courtesy of friend & photographer Wayne Tippetts

www.StreetStyleAesthetic.com

Contact: Wayne@waynetippetts.com



Me by way of the Austinist…

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Me by way of the Austinist…

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I know, I know – I’ve been out of commission for a couple months now, and I’ve been getting harassed to get back into the Sidewalk.  I have recently become engaged (yay!) and quite frankly the initial process of wedding planning and excitement proved much more exciting than the latest fashion news (in my life anyway), hence the hiatus.  Now that I’m about a month into it, however, I need a break, so the blog will be bumpin’!  As you also may have guessed from my previous post, I started writing for the Austinist as well, which I’ll continue to post along with regular commentary – which will aid in contributing to the Austin Fashion category of the site.  So - apologies, but the Sidewalk will be back and better than ever with probably a bit more of a bridal spin than usual – and when isn’t that fun?



Lit is a stretch, and I may not be Jane Austen but I’m working on it.  Check out my first post as a fashion contributor for the Austinist - “Experiments in Porcelain and Silk: Finery at IF+D”.



Courtesy of photographer (slash street style maverick) Wayne Tippetts

www.StreetStyleAesthetic.com

Contact: Wayne@waynetippetts.com



Prada Fall 2008 - Prada $390 (left) and Forever 21 $7.80 (right)



Uh huh - looks far better than Barcelona! Ugh, ENVY!!!!!!!! Enjoy it New Yorkers!



Call me a mean girl, but I was whole heartedly turned off by this article from the Times Picayune in New Orleans - “Fast on her Feet”. Long story short - Louisiana native decides to create footwear line to rival Louboutins. Granted, the shoes are G-G-Gorgeous, obviously there is talent there - and I would definitely drool over them did I not know the back story, or rather I will still drool but silently condemn them and hold a grudge anyway - but I can’t help but be turned off coming from FIT knowing so many talented, penniless peers.

That being said - I live for meritocracy. And yeah, perhaps I’m not in the industry where that is best utilized, but I still have a huge respect for people who aren’t born with a silver spoon in their mouth and still manage to beat out all of those who were. So, the line, “When her law firm salary wouldn’t cover the three- and four-figure accessories at the store, she relied on her parents’ generosity”. We are talking Marni & Giuseppe Zanotti. Let’s just call a spade a spade and recognize that a working adult was given a shopping allowance. I also can’t get over how this is viewed as normal, commonplace, even commendable by the writer. I could go on about how said generous parents were generous in other ways contributing to the growth of her business, but I think you get the picture.

Sometimes I wonder, does one have to win the genetic lottery in order to REALLY thrive in fashion?

Signed,

Easily offended in Austin - Times Picayune “Fast on her Feet”