Exploring Imperfection: A Look at Khaiteâs Pre-Fall Collection
At 10:30 on a recent Sunday morning, Catherine Holstein was presiding over a pre-fall lookbook shoot. Her two young children were at home with her husband, but as with most new mothers, they werenât far from Holsteinâs mind. âMy bodyâs gone through so many changes over the last three years with two babies,â she started. âAs things werenât fitting anymore, but I still wanted to wear them, it led to this kind of questioning: Whatâs the right way to wear something? The right way for things to fit? Iâve kind of been embracing âbad fits.ââ She continued: âWhen I see something now, if itâs really sleek and standard, I kind of start messing with it, to break these boundaries Iâve put on myself for so many years.â
Take a look at this Khaite pre-fall collection and youâll notice that when fastened, a double-breasted jacket ripples and twists, rather than lays flat, the buttons and their accompanying buttonholes just off enough to create the pulling and tugging effect Holstein was going for. Similarly, a sheer organza blouse was assembled to drape asymmetrically, with the hem dipping lower on one hip than the other. And a knitted chiffon skirt was left unfinished with bits of chiffon peeking out like âa little girlâs pigtails.â
Call it a quest for imperfectionâit also shaped Khaiteâs new-season shoes. âTypically pumps are super-hard,â Holstein said, âbut I wanted to make them really soft, so I took all the lining out.â The shoes feel as supple as gloves and indeed scrunch up almost like gloves would thanks to thin metal rods inserted on either side of the soles. âWhat makes you pick up a shoe when youâre in the store?â she asked rhetorically, then answered her own question: âIâd pick these up because theyâre a little bit weird. Still,â she went on, âat the end of the day we are a business. I created this brand to serve women. The comfort, the functionalityâthose things are really important to me, but I want to challenge the aesthetic norms.â
The seasonâs ruched pink dresses, one in vintage washed silk charmeuse, the other in something called âlight veil silk,â donât so much challenge aesthetic norms as resurrect old ones. These were designed with âGirl With the Most Cakeâ-era Courtney Love in mind. As a child of the â90s, Holstein still prefers grunge over all other genres of music, and sheâs banking on emotional resonance. âWe find that our customers are really attracted to the emotional pieces.â So why not have some irreverent, playful, even weird fun?

