The pandemic has driven most designers to offer videos in lieu of shows. But not Jason Wu. To host a show now is to declare that the runway still matters, even in a pandemic. It better be good
A model walks the runway for Jason Wu - September 2020 during New York Fashion Week: The Shows at Spring Studios Terrace on September 13, 2020 in New York City.
Image: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
NEW YORK — Jason Wu said he was feeling Zen, swiveling in an office chair in his studio near Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan.
It was Saturday afternoon, the day before his runway show, and he was surrounded by his design team and stylists, fitting models in outfits from his spring 2021 collection. The clothes were bright and breezy; the waists were elastic, the bras were cashmere, the hats were big, and the sandals were flat.
He thumbed through his phone, looking for a video of one of the models walking down a rural tree-lined road that he’d been sent the day before. He approved the casting via text, and today she was here, he explained with some awe.
The models came and went, floating from their fittings to their Deborah Lippmann manicures in an adjacent room, which Wu called “the spa.” Jazz played from a speaker somewhere. There was still a lot to do, but nothing felt too intense.
“I think this might be my favorite show ever,” Wu said.
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