Keller Crafts Downtown-Cool Basics and Boots for Fall
Photo: Courtesy of Keller
With October upon us, it's no use denying the onslaught of the fall any longer — there's also no reason to deny ourselves the perfect season-spanning pair of boots. Enter Greenpoint-based designer Kelly Clark of Keller, whose leather cutout Oxfords and lace-up boots have been earning raves since she launched her clothing line along with a few pairs in spring 2008. They're produced at a dance-shoe factory in California, creating foot-forming comfort for pounding the city streets. Clark’s sculptural, simplified approach to design is a testament to her training as an artist. She originally set out to be a fashion photographer, studying photography, drawing, and sculpture at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art, and worked a stint as an art handler before enrolling at F.I.T. to study fashion. Post-graduation, she landed a job as a design assistant at indie label (and Nolita boutique) Unis, which led to a position as a production manager at fashion consulting firm David Wolfson, working with labels like Marc by Marc Jacobs, Tommy Hilfiger, and Zero + Maria Cornejo. She launched Keller last year with a small assortment of wear-anywhere basics and cutout Oxfords (picked up by In God We Trust), and the fall 2009 line presents a more refined version of her downtown-cool aesthetic. “I try to make pieces that will become staples in a person’s wardrobe, things you want to invest in,” she says. “I want to create smart pieces that last." For fall, that means a perfectly proportioned cotton blazer, vintage-tinged lace-up boots, slim stretch-cotton trousers, and handmade printed scarves. The collection is carried at Duo and Steven Alan, and Clark is launching her e-commerce site later this month. She's also a featured designer on FadMashion.com. Check out some of her pieces after the jump.
The Twi Style Evolution: Taylor Lautner
What Do Models Talk About Backstage at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show? Food, Mostly.
Babel Fair Brings Globally Sourced Sequins, Fur, Denim, and Leather to Soho
Openings Preview: First Look at Mile End
Can We Talk About This Newfangled McDonald’s for a Second?
Bad Lieutenant and Cinema’s Top Twelve Trippiest Drug Scenes
The Kubrick Masterpiece He Never Made
Bob Dylan, the New Bing Crosby
Edelstein on Brothers and
Up in the Air
Fela! Gets Broadway Audiences to Shake It