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Models on the runway for the finale of Ralph Lauren's New York Fashion Week show. Photo: AP

Ralph Lauren back at cutting edge of fashion after New York show

Designer creates cosy winter wonderland in which to give crowds a masterclass in sexy-but-warm elegance, reaffirming his place as the king of all-American cool

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Given that Kanye West last year told an interviewer “I am Warhol. I am the number one most impactful artist of our generation. I am Shakespeare in the flesh”, it seems fair to assume that the rapper is not easily starstruck.

But as Ralph Lauren greeted well-wishers at the end of his New York fashion week show on Thursday morning, West rose from his front row seat, approached the designer and handed a security guard his phone, gesturing to him to take a photo of the pair together. Lauren has a net worth currently estimated by Forbes at US$7.1 billion, is the only designer to have been awarded all four of the top honours given by the Council of Fashion Designers America - and Kanye West wants a selfie. Not bad going.

“It was just - wow,” said West, dressed for the show in a parka with a furry hood, of Lauren’s latest collection. “It was art."

The designer acknowledges the applause for his autumn/winter 2015 show. Photo: AP

The snowy-haired, 75-year-old Lauren, who belts his blue jeans with a cowboy-tough belt and spends his downtime riding horses on a Colorado ranch, might seem an unlikely role model for West - and for the young designer Alexander Wang, whose edgy collections teem with so-hip-it-hurts references, but who namechecks Lauren as the designer whose success he would most like to emulate.

It may be a long time since Ralph Lauren was at the cutting edge of fashion, but his gift for giving the American public what they want a season before they know they want it has made him an icon for a new generation of brand-savvy designers and entrepreneurs.

With this collection, Ralph Lauren once again showed how this is done. The show was staged in a cavernous studio backing onto the Hudson River, perhaps the coldest part of a city currently experiencing record-breakingly low temperatures.

A layered white look from Ralph Lauren. Photo: AFP

An audience who have been battling with the challenge of how to look fashion-week-appropriate in the freezing cold arrived, colder than ever, to find themselves in a room as warm as toast, with three chandeliers the size of cartwheels lending a soft, candlelit glow to the whitewashed wood catwalk. And onto the catwalk came a vision as cosy as it was glamorous. There was only muted colour, little sparkle, and the merest hint of bare flesh: nothing to distract from the central message of wrapped-up winter polish.

Fake fur was a feature of the Ralph Lauren show in icy New York. Photo: AFP

Furry trapper hats were worn with the first look onto the catwalk - a knitted two-piece of turtleneck cashmere sweater and midi skirt the colour of expensive wild mushrooms - and with the last, a beaded, burnished-copper evening gown. (There was an abundance of fur in the collection - at the cuffs of sweaters, at the collars of jackets, and in draped shawls - but it was all fake, since the label has a longstanding commitment not to use the real stuff.)

It was a masterclass in how to elevate cold-weather dressing from necessity into compelling commercial proposition. Tone-on-tone layering, as in a creamy beaded cashmere sweater over a cream suede skirt long enough to graze the top of camel suede boots, kept heavy layers looking sleek and streamlined.

Ralph Lauren. Photo: Reuters

Embroidered shawls, capes and ponchos wrapped on top of sumptuous turtleneck sweaters gave a free-spirit edge to the utilitarian schlepp of piling on extra layers. At Ralph Lauren, not even frostbite can spoil the American dream.

The Guardian

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