What Can I Be for Halloween Wearing All Black

As I was getting ready to meet friends at the new Paris-by-way-of-SoHo bistro, Le Coucou, I glanced at the hefty pile of clothing amassed on my bed. Why was nothing working for a fun night out? I tried my high-waisted skinny jeans with a white silk blouse. Too meh. I tried my dark blue flare jeans with a striped off-the-shoulder blouse. Too cliché. I tried a pair of wide-leg khakis with a crisp blue button down. Too daytime. Eventually, I settled on a black cotton scoop-neck tee and a pair of black jeans.

Perfection.

Head-to-toe black. It's effortless, chic, and efficient—and it's the calling card of New Yorkers everywhere. In a city filled with busy, highly stimulated people, black is the quickest way to look cool, slim, and polished without overthinking it. "Nobody has time for color," says Tome designer Ramon Martin. Out of sheer laziness, I often agree. Just look at stylish New Yorkers like Grace Coddington, Michael Kors, and Alexander Wang, who make every public appearance in black. Audrey Hepburn made a little black dress iconic in the classic New York film, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and let's not forget Lou Reed's sartorial contribution to the New York punk scene in a black leather jacket. But are New Yorkers starting to rethink basic black?

We are in the midst of a global Gucci renaissance, where designer Alessandro Michele is redefining what fashionable women want to wear. His answer for fall is pop-star pink fur, green sequin gowns, and turquoise button-down sheaths. Back stateside one of New York's hottest designers Rosie Assoulin is pushing our wardrobe palette with satin green one-pieces, voluminous yellow skirts, and violet dress coats. Not to mention the current street style craze, where favorites Giovanna Battaglia, Kate Foley, and Olivia Palermo graced Paris Fashion Week in technicolor looks like pineapple print skirts and mustard tops, or pink jackets over camouflage skirts. So, given our evolving fashion climate, is brighter better? Do New Yorkers even wear black these days?

In New York City, nobody has time for color.

On a recent Wednesday morning—in the fall, mind you, when whatever summer colors we dabbled with are already stashed beneath the bed—at the newly opened private club, Ludlow House on the Lower East Side, I saw guests chatting over coffee wearing vibrant floral blouses, red sweaters paired with denim, and boldly patterned blazers in jewel tones of coral and orange. There was also a fair share of black in the form of simple tees, black cashmere sweaters with black skinny jeans and classic black sheaths. A 50/50 split, I surmised.

For some more reconnaissance, I reached out to Beth Buccini, founder and owner of Kirna Zabete, a highly lauded boutique (and New York style staple) that carries brands like Céline, Chloé, Proenza Schouler, and Altuzarra. "New Yorkers very rarely wear head-to-toe black anymore," Buccini says. "In this new age of Gucci, where color mixing is so common, the average New York woman is far more daring than she used to be. That all-black Donna Karan vibe of the '90s is long over."

What Can I Be for Halloween Wearing All Black

Source: https://www.cntraveler.com/story/do-new-yorkers-still-wear-black

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