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‘Resort’ clothes hit the open road

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This undated product image released by Gucci shows a model wearing a floral print dress from the Gucci Cruise collection. (Photo provided)

NEW YORK – They may conjure up an image of a tropical paradise, but resort collections shown by designers may work harder than the rest of the closet.

The clothes need to be all things to all people: a holiday party frock here, a comfortable traveling T-shirt dress there. The first pieces arrive on racks in November and last through February.

Consumers don’t usually “shop a wardrobe” then, but they often end up buying more separate pieces than they do in the big markets of spring and fall, when there might be some head-to-toe outfits, designer Diane von Furstenberg said.

“It’s for everybody,” she says. “It’s for holiday parties, for Aspen, for Vermont, for St. Bart’s and Miami, and everywhere else, even if you are staying home in New York.”

Resort has to be clothes for “real people,” agrees Carolina Herrera, who says she also likes the more informal showroom presentations where she gets feedback from retailers, stylists and editors versus the fashion week runway shows that require some over-the-top drama.

“I love the idea of resort,” Herrera said. “You have to find the details for each dress that make sense.”

Von Furstenberg’s creative director Yvan Mispelaere says the word “resort” itself might be a little misleading. “That makes it sound like it’s just for the lucky ones.”

He mostly refers to it as “transition,” he explains.

Judging from some of the trends, however, you might call it “continuation”: colorblocking, playful prints and rich textures, especially leather and lace, all popular this summer and headed into fall.

Carolina Herrera

Carolina Herrera says she likes to do a little experimenting in her resort collection, especially with prints. “Fashion is sometimes starved for color and amusement, but not here.”

She created a fanciful print featuring abstract lovers and another one with bunnies. A lace print on gazar is a twist on a classic.

“I love the printed lace. I am a bit tired of lace. This is light and graphic – it’s a new idea.”

The print is featured on a skirt with a ruffled hem and a halter gown with a plunging V down the back.

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