Category: All Things

Caroline Hedaya show @ Cielo

Thursday, October 5th, 2006 | All Things, Events

Met M at the Belvedere Beautiful Life  event: the last in a series of runway shows and parties hosted by emerging fashion talents. Tonight’s show featured the designs of Caroline Hedaya at Cielo, whose sunken dance floor was our onetime Monday night hangout.

The Caroline Hedaya label is actually the result of a collaboration between New York-based duo Caroline Hedaya and Donna Baxter. (Poor Donna — I wonder how that came about.) The friends, who met as students at FIT, debuted their first collection during 2005’s Olympus Fashion Week shortly after graduating.

As usual, the event was about two hours of open (vodka) bar, followed by fifteen minutes of parading models.

Belvedere Beautiful Life

Unlike the last time, M and I stayed long enough to actually view the clothes — here, a couple of feminine, billowy frocks from Hedaya and Baxter’s Spring 2007 collection:

Hedaya Model

Hedaya Model

Backstage, the clothes rack awash in creams, beiges and blacks, and posted polaroids of the models in their ensembles.

Backstage Dress Rack

Backstage Polaroids

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Indian Summer night

Wednesday, October 4th, 2006 | All Things

Perhaps as penance for my day off, I had to put in some late hours at the office today, which forced me to miss my Russian class this evening.

Indian Summer” is defined by Merriam-Webster as “a period of warm or mild weather in late autumn or early winter.” The origin of the phrase is unclear, but it is generally understood to relate to the Native Americans of North America, and not to those of the Asian subcontinent.

Regardless of the etymology, I exited the subway two stops before my destination to walk the rest of the way uptown on this unseasonably warm evening. After taking a detour for dinner along the way, I passed through Worldwide Plaza’s mid-block paved and landscaped public space, which separates the commercial office tower at One Worldwide Plaza from the condominium buildings of Two and Three Worldwide Plaza. The complex was built in 1989 over the second site, and third incarnation, of Madison Square Garden (1925-1968).  The NYC Department of City Planning willingly granted the developers bonus space to create this public oasis, among the low-rent brick lowrises along then seedier Eighth Avenue.

In the plaza, the New World Grill, housed in its colorful, glass enclosed gazebo.

Worldwide Plaza

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Playing hooky

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006 | All Things, Books, Events, Film, Friends

SC, CS and I played hooky today, calling into our respective offices, for a much needed day off. And what better way to spend a girls day out than shopping?

At New York Magazine’s Best Bets event at The Metropolitan Pavilion at The Altman Building. The landmarked building was constructed in 1896 as the carriage house for (defunct since 1989) B. Altman’s Department Store. The space was restored in 1998 to its original grandeur with 17-foot vaulted arch brick ceilings and original Corinthian columns. It now serves as a venue for events like this, and the annual Chocolate Show (scheduled in 2006 for November 10-12.)

Our trio arrived just as doors opened at 11:00AM, queuing up behind the other (almost exclusively) women, who apparently weren’t expected to be in the office that sunny morning either.

The Altman Building

Alternate covers for New York Magazine‘s current Fall Design issue. The magazine features a photo spread of “Legends at Home,” including one of James Dean in his fifth floor apartment on my block. Dean called that place home for two years in the mid-1950s, during which he also did a photo shoot on the street in front, from which emerged one of his iconic images.

Design Issues

Jewelry, accessories, apparel, shoes, beauty products and home design objects… We wandered among the colorful, tempting stands, but only SC ended up buying anything (and that not even for herself.) Still, the fun is in the journey. And a percentage of the ticket sale proceeds went to the Fund for Public Schools.

Best Bets Shopping

We picked up our bright orange gift bags and set off for a leisurely lunch at tiny Tartine, my erstwhile Sunday brunch spot. From our sidewalk-side table facing the leafy green West Village block, the afternoon sun was bright and unseasonably warm on our faces, enhancing the lazy day feel.

West Village Dog

More shopping, and then SC left us to attend to some B-school business. CS and I took in some more sun on a stroll uptown and caught “The Last Kiss” at our neighborhood theater. I had read precious little about the film prior to seeing it — the screening time just happened to mesh with our schedules — and I probably will not be the only one to observe that the movie may as well have been titled “Garden State 2: Electric Boogaloo.” I was slightly surprised to note that the screenplay was written by Paul Haggis (and not in collaboration with Zach Braff), the same scribe that gave us “Crash” and “Million Dollar Baby.” Disaffected, emotionally-stunted protagonist pondering life’s direction and purpose, while being drawn to a petite, perky brunette, and supported by a cadre of quirky friends. Even the soundtrack was interchangeable: Coldplay, Snow Patrol, Remy Zero, Aimee Mann, Coldplay, Imogen Heap.

I do like the ethereal “Hide and Seek,” though I feel that the song has been overused of late.

Later in the evening, I attended a launch party at The W New York for Food Network‘s Dave Lieberman, whose second cookbook “Dave’s Dinners: A Fresh Approach to Home-Cooked Meals” was released this month by Hyperion. Philadelphia-native Lieberman began his television career as the star of his own public access cooking show, Campus Cuisine, while a student at Yale. He was named one of People magazine’s “50 Hottest Bachelors” in 2005. (Well, he is a man who can cook.)

W New York Lounge

No cooking demonstration, but Lieberman was there, signing copies of his new book. Though I’m not actually sure what this inscription says…

From Dave

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