https://showlowarizonafence.com/blogs/evie-lou-blog.atom Evie Lou - Evie Lou Blog 2024-09-17T05:35:58-04:00 Evie Lou https://showlowarizonafence.com/blogs/evie-lou-blog/prairie-underground-sustainable-fashion-and-a-cloak-hoodie 2018-06-01T03:31:00-04:00 2024-08-08T03:14:38-04:00 Prairie Underground: Sustainable Fashion And A Cloak Hoodie Sarah Cuiksa More

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Evie Lou still carries the iconic cloak hoodie that started it all.

Evie Lou traces its love for Prairie Underground back to a chilly summer day in Chicago, long before the boutique even opened.  

 

“I was in Chicago at a conference,” says Evie Lou owner Kim Crow. “It was freezing cold — I don’t know why, it was the middle of summer! — and I had only brought summery things to wear.”

During a break from judging a news contest at the heavily air-conditioned conference, Kim ran into a few stores in the city for a warm cover-up.

“I tried on this hoodie, and I absolutely loved it,” she says. “But it was $250. I’d never spent that much on an item of clothing before in my life. Since then, all hell’s broke loose, but at that point I was like, ‘I have to have this hoodie! The car payment can wait a couple weeks!’ ”

She split the purchase between two credit cards and returned to the conference.

Three days later, she went back and bought another one in a different color — the piece had resulted in countless “have you lost weight?”’ comments at the conference. Kim was hooked, and Prairie Underground became one of the brands the Evie Lou boutique opened with.

“In fact, one of the reasons I wanted to have the store was to carry as much of their line as I could,” Kim adds.

The Clothes

There’s no denying the luxurious feel of Prairie’s pieces. Super-soft and cozy knits are coupled with silhouettes and cuts flattering for all figures. It’s utilitarian, but still stylish. Comfy outfits still look feminine. “Everything feels great,” says Kim, adding that the fabrics that brand uses are what women respond to most. “That’s what keeps you coming back [to the brand],” she says. “Yes, it’s a cute style, but it just feels so good when you’re wearing it.”

And the clothes fit. The skinny denim girdles that suck you in in all the right places. Organic cotton tanks that stay tucked in because the length allows for it. Extra long cuffs that ensure tall women can cover their wrists, which are also easy to roll up and adjust on the run for those who are more petite. Pant inseams run the gamut, so no woman’s left behind. Regardless of height, width or even age, Prairie works.

 

These zip-front pants are a chic addition for a comfy outfit: dressier than a hosiery-style, more comfortable than a jegging.

 The Ethos

It’s easy to literally and figuratively feel good when you’re wearing Prairie because of the brand’s values. The designer-founders behind Seattle-born Prairie Underground place the highest standard on the textiles they source, favoring renewable crops like organic cotton and hemp, as well as a proprietary, plant-based material harvest from wood pulp called TENCEL, and REPREVE, a recycled fiber produced from salvaged materials that’s been melted into yard. Here, recycled plastic bottles find a home in fashion.

From the environmentally-friendly textiles they use to their manufacturing policies — the label’s ethos is based on the idea that ”creation itself should be a sustainable practice” —  sustainability is paramount.

Read more about the brand’s sustainable fashion in our Q&A with the founder.

“They’re very environmentally conscious and they manufacture in the US, which I really respect,” says Kim. Since the brand’s beginnings in 2005, all of their clothing has been produced within fifteen minutes of their Seattle warehouse.

 

Prairie Underground’s Davora Lindner and Camilla Eckersley. Photo via SeattleMet.

Prairie’s efforts to manufacture ethically and reduce waste in the fashion industry extend to consumption — they support integrating secondhand clothing into your wardrobe, provide suggestions on how to do so with Prairie pieces, and recently introduced vintage clothing into their collection, hoping to “tell a greater story about apparel design and manufacturing.”

In addition, the brand supports numerous women’s causes, donating a portion of proceeds yearly and collaborating with female artists on special prints for pieces.

 


Last chance! Our super-skinny, super-stretchy and very, very soft Slim Cords are almost sold out. Made from “deadstock,” the unused material leftover from other garment manufacturers and mills, it’s part of Prairie’s continued efforts to reduce waste in the fashion industry.

Our Picks

Besides clothes that do good, and the iconic cloak hoodie that started it all, check out some of our Prairie favorites made exclusively for Evie Lou (“because some things we can’t get enough of, and want more colors!”). Or, shop the rest of our Prairie Underground collection.

 

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https://showlowarizonafence.com/blogs/evie-lou-blog/10-minutes-with-denise-allen-robinson-neesh-by-d-a-r 2017-02-21T15:06:00-05:00 2019-01-20T18:48:15-05:00 10 Minutes with… Denise Allen Robinson, Neesh by D.A.R. Kim Crow More

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In her early days as a student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Denise Allen Robinson thought she wanted to be a sculptor.

But a perceptive teacher encouraged her to shift her focus. “I was working in the foundry with metals and welding and torches, and I was always trying to pleat or gather the metal,” she says, laughing. “My teacher suggested that maybe I should try a softer medium.”

Robinson took that advice and today, “Neeshies”—her biggest fans—return season after season for the whisper-soft fabrics, the beautiful vintage details and yes, the pleated and gathered elements that grace her feminine designs for her label, Neesh by D.A.R.

“We make clothes for the grown-up girl,” Robinson says from her Chicago studio and warehouse. “You can skip and jump and dance in our clothes.”

That’s just as true for Neesh favorites like the sheer layering tees, gauzy skirts and flowing, empire-waisted, long camis as it is for Robinson’s newest Neesh line, the menswear-inspired Formidable (from the French for “wonderful”). Robinson calls Formidable “almost bespoke” and says that the line is, indeed, very special, thanks to its handmade construction and vintage touches. With a nod to couture, each Formidable garment is just as lovely inside as it is on the outside. The designs are also remarkably versatile: For example, a button-down shirt can be worn as is or gently gathered to one side with a hidden tab.

“I love to marry a lot of different textures and details,” Robinson explains. “But I make them modern and I try to relate them to how we dress today, so that we don’t look like we’re dressed in costume.”

Neesh’s most successful marriage (and perhaps its biggest power couple) is the fusion of style and comfort. The line delivers what many women seek: forgiving designs blended with visually interesting textiles. That means Neesh skirts are typically pull-on, with French terry waistbands sewn to woven, layered fabrics. “We don’t make a lot of tight clothes and we’re not cut for a junior body,” Robinson says. (Her clothes are sized XSmall to XLarge.) “And all of our fabrics are shipped washed, so they have to be soft. The fabric has to look just as good crumpled as it does ironed.”

Robinson continues to find inspiration for Neesh by looking east. “Japanese designers so often create their textiles themselves before they even design their clothing. So they create the shape and the fabric,” she says.

She also keeps a close watch on couture designers. “Money is no object for them, so they can create at $10,000 gown. I could never dream to do that for my customers, but I can take one small element [of that design] and make it my own,” Robinson says.

Even after more than 25 years in the industry, the 62-year-old Robinson keeps Neesh fresh and current, thanks to her keen eye and her commitment to staying true to what appeals to her—texture, interesting textiles and vintage flair. “You know, I’m a feminist from way back,” Robinson says. “But I still want to feel pretty in my clothes.”

— Interview by Jennifer Kuhel
Special to showlowarizonafence.com

Photo borrowed with gratitude from Neesh’s blog, 
neeshbydar.com/blogs/news

 

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