New York Fashion Week

NYFW: Lady Sings the Blues Nicole Miller Fall 2011

By  | 
Pictured: A classic Nicole Miller dress with blue shimmer and white triangle outline. (Photo credit:
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Mercedes Benz Fashion Week.)

There were plenty of blues at Nicole Miller’s Fall 2011 runway show, but not the kind Bessie Smith used to sing about.  The designer’s Fall 2011 show was full of baby blues, deep midnight blues and sparkling night sky blues. Indeed, the many blue pieces were the first thing that struck me about this runway show. I counted six pieces in the collection featuring various shades of blue. There were also many charcoals, grays and blacks backing those blues.

Pictured: Nicole Miller’s Rhapsody in Blue. (Photo credit:
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Mercedes Benz Fashion Week.)

I had the pleasure of interviewing Nicole Miller in 2010 about her very fashion forward style last year. With her Fall 2011 collection she’s still offering new takes on traditional styles like the little black dress.  For Fall 2011, the designer showed a collection full of her trademark touches: dresses with geometric shapes, gun metal/metallic tops , figure hugging skirts, and tunic style dresses over tights or pants.  One of my favorites from the collection was a belted black dress with a stunning asymmetrical neckline.  It looked like a futuristic take on Audrey Hepburn style.

Pictured: Nicole Miller’s new age take on the traditional “little black dress ” (Photo credit:
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Mercedes Benz Fashion Week.)

A futuristic flair seems to have been the intent in the collection, there was a definite fast forward fashion feel to Ms. Miller’s Fall Collection.  The designer’s show notes called the collection “angles over curves with a menswear influence” and that was very apparent.  The silhouettes were not  nearly as body conscious as previous Nicole Miller styles.  Women might actually be able to wear some of these styles without the “de riguer” body slimming foundations usually required.  The many “quadrilaterals and triangles” printed on the garments were more characteristic of Ms. Miller’s previous shows. Those shapes were seen on both the gray and red dresses in the collection, and the blue and black dresses. More subdued were the white and black separates from the collection in the form of  vests, pants and cardigans.  There was nothing fashion forward about the white and black pieces, but they were chic and definitely timeless.   You can never go wrong with a black and white pairing, especially for Fall. I was just surprised to see it in the Ms. Miller’s runway line-up along with the more stunning and attention getting blues.

Pictured: This Nicole Miller classic menswear inspired simple black and white look surprised me. (Photo credit:
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Mercedes Benz Fashion Week.)

It was interesting that the surprise Nicole Miller delivered this Fashion Week was to go a little more traditional, showing black and white separates and looser garments.  There were not as many sheath styles or techno metal dresses and skirts,  but there were still plenty of the Ms. Miller’s trademark geometric patterns and shapes walking down the Lincoln Center runway.  It will be interesting to see if any of what was shown makes its way into her lower priced collection at J.C. Penney.

If you’re a Nicole Miller fan, be sure to check out the Ideeli sale on her designs this week.  Click here to use my invite to join and shop. In the interest of full disclosure, I do earn a referral fee on Ideeli if you buy.  You also earn a referral if you invite friends, and they buy.

Share

Since 2008, Mary Hall has been the author of The Recessionista Blog, which is read by thousands of regular readers in over 160 countries. An internationally recognized expert on the art of the living the good life for less, she has been a commentator on local, national, and international radio and TV shows. Her advice has been featured in over 2,000 media outlets, including The New York Times, Reuters, Life & Style magazine, ABC News, NBC News and now The Huffington Post, among many others.