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How Khymanyo Studio Lights Up The Runway Straight From Beekman Street

“Snarky and then a wink.” If someone asked me to describe my sense of humor, that would be a very apt description. So when I asked prolific Saratoga Springs fashion designer Kim Vanyo how her personality informs her vast array of eye-popping creations, and that is how she answered, I was delighted: I’d found a kindred spirit.

“There’s always a sense of fun in my designs,” says Vanyo, who’s owned and operated Khymanyo Studio on Beekman Street, in Saratoga’s Arts District, for more than three decades. “It’s like the garment is winking at you.”

Vanyo says her enduring passion for fashion—and preference for high-end fabrics such as silks and wools—has also been fueled by the simple joy of creating something beautiful: “When I come up with just the right fabric combination, I get that same euphoric feeling as when something’s hilarious.”

Khymanyo Studio
(Francesco D’Amico)

Whether it’s costuming for the Skidmore College dance department or creating custom designs for private clients, Vanyo’s vibrant creativity and artistic stamp loom large over Saratoga’s arts community. She estimates that Skidmore’s dance department has “15 closets full of my work,” which could tally up to 3000 costumes she’s built specifically for the liberal arts college in the past 20-plus years. When I ask her if she has any idea of the total number of her creations—including her custom evening, bridal and special occasion designs—she goes silent. I throw out a number: 50,000? “Could be!” she answers, without hesitation. “I’m prolific,” she adds. “I don’t like to sit still. I’m constantly creating things.”

One such creation is her own label, “Kimism”—a ready-to-wear collection of well-crafted separates with an artistic edge—available in her studio and small boutiques. “When I wear my own designs, people often stop me and ask where I got them,” she says.

While she doesn’t expect to drastically alter the classic, traditional style sensibilities of Saratoga, Vanyo admits she often finds herself encouraging clients to “be brave enough to wear something with a little artistic twist to it,” without dramatically changing their personal style. “I do have a sense of what’s going too far, but I try to encourage some little twist that makes them feel like, ‘Wow, I’ve never seen anything like this,’” says Vanyo.

Given her impressive, overwhelming body of work, I wondered if Vanyo ever imagined how her career would have fared had she entrenched herself in the New York City fashion scene. “No matter where you are, you could’ve made different decisions,” she says. “You can’t let that take you over.” But for Vanyo, keeping all doors open is part of the plan going forward. “I’ve been going to the city a lot in the last few years,” she says, explaining that she’s been taking classes at the Fashion Institute Of Technology (her alma mater) to keep up with her ever-evolving industry. “I’m meeting people who are my age in the city, and they’re kinda burned out and ready to leave,” she says. “I’m certainly not burned out, but I wanna make sure I’m not missing anything. I’m not that far from New York, so if something came up, I could be in both places.”

“I’ve been making beautiful things for 30 years,” she says, “so I can feel good about that.” And she’s been doing it in Saratoga, so we can feel good about it, too.

Trend City: Saratoga’s Obsession With Succulents

Move over, avocado toast—it’s all about succulents now! The latest trend among millennials—and anyone who wants to think they have a green thumb, really—is those petite, cactus-like plants you can find in homes, at garden conventions and particularly, on countless Instagram feeds and YouTube channels. Succulents have certainly taken root worldwide.

What separates succulents from the standard houseplant? For one, they’re perfect for anyone who wants to feel like they’re taking care of something, while not actually having to do much work.. Succulents’ drought-resistant properties have piqued the interest of 18-34 year olds, who, in 2016, accounted for 5 million of the 6 million Americans who took up gardening that year. As of last year, millennials accounted for 29 percent of all home gardeners, largely thanks to the trendiness of indoor gardening.

As with most trends, Saratoga Springs and the Capital Region have taken notice. Demecia Lloyd, Co-Creator of Revibe, an alternative and holistic health center in Schuylerville, has seen an increase in succulent purchases in her shop “for everything from wedding favors and wreaths, to terrariums and planters.” Deb Converse, Wedding Consultant for Dehn’s Flowers and Gifts of Saratoga, agrees. “We’ve definitely experienced an increase in sales,” she says. “Succulents are fun and easy to grow and care for. That translates into using them for different events. Favors, displays, indoor gardens and more all are front-and-center now.” Even Saratoga Paint & Sip Studio is getting in on the fun with “Plant Nights,” at which guests can create their very own DIY succulent terrarium. It’s safe to say succulents are here to stay; after all, it is nearly impossible to kill them.

Downtown Saratoga To Host Inaugural Spring Shopping Spree To Benefit Wellspring

Attention Saratoga shoppers! On April 11th, the Saratoga Downtown Business Association’s inaugural Spring Shopping Spree will take place in Downtown Saratoga Springs, with 30 local businesses offering deals, discounts and prizes from 4-8pm, all while collecting donations for Wellspring, Saratoga’s resource for victims of domestic violence and sexual abuse. The event’s goals are twofold: encouraging locals to shop at small businesses and to support the mission of Wellspring.

Varying discounts will be offered at participating businesses, including 20 percent off the Accessory Boutique at Something Bleu Bridal, 15 percent off at Northshire Bookstore and 20 percent off everything at Lucia. The 30 stores will be giving away swag bags to the first 300 customers and will host in-store raffles for additional prizes. Though all the day’s proceeds go to Wellspring, each shop will be collecting donations in its own way. For example, at Lucia, a donation to Wellspring enters you into the boutique’s raffle for a $50 gift card, and at Northshire, you can round up your purchase (on the day of the spree and for the whole month of April) to the nearest dollar, with the change going directly to Wellspring.

All sales will end at 8pm, when shoppers are invited to attend a dinner at Wheatfields. Exclusive food and drink specials will be available there, and at dinner, the winners of the in-store raffles will be announced, followed by a chance for shoppers to win a parking space Downtown for the months of May, June and July, as well as a one-night stay at The Adelphi Hotel.

The Spring Shopping Spree is a collaboration between local businesses and organizations to give back to the Saratoga community. “The event is a perfect way to encourage our local community to shop Downtown, support our locally owned businesses and support a great cause such as Wellspring,” says Lucia Owner Lucy Moran. It also has the potential to expand the customer base of independently owned Downtown stores, adds Something Bleu Bridal Co-Owner Kathryn Metzler. “I think it’s important for everyone to be involved in these types of events so that we can all support each other,” says Metzler.

For more information and for a complete list of participating stores, click here.

Boats By George Providing Upstate With The Best New And Pre-Owned Boats For Nearly 40 years

Founded by George Pensel in 1982, Boats by George is a second-generation, family-run boat business based in the Lake George area. Whether it be new or pre-owned, Boats by George has helped boat enthusiasts and first-time buyers find the boat of their dreams, servicing Lake George, Lake Champlain, Saratoga Lake, Lake Placid, Schroon Lake and all of the Adirondacks. With its showroom located conveniently off of exit 20 of I-87 and two marinas on the pristine shores of Lake George, plus a service center in Fort Ann, there’s no boating service or need that Boats By George can’t fulfill. saratoga living recently spoke with Boats By George’s Adam Pensel about what makes his family business so special.

Tell me about this big Ice Out Party coming up on May 4 and 5.
The Ice Out Party and Demo Days event is an opportunity for us and our customers to celebrate the arrival of boating season, while also giving prospective boaters a chance to tour our Lake George facilities, and get behind the wheel of a wide range of boats, back-to-back, for direct comparisons. Think of it as this: a lakeside cookout with some live music and boat rides.

What makes Boats By George different from other similar businesses?
It starts with my father, George. He has such a passion for taking care of people the right way, and I think everyone in the company just feeds off of it. He’s there, greeting customers and sometimes jumping right into their boats with a screwdriver to fix things on the fly. I’ve been to a lot of boat companies around the country, and I can tell you first hand that very few owners are still getting their hands dirty.

Who’s your ideal customer?
We have a wide range of people from all over, but generally speaking, it’s families, young and old, looking to make memories on the water. We have something for everyone here: Malibu, Axis Wake Research, Cobalt, and Chris Craft. Each brand fills a niche and provides our customers with a diverse selection.

How do you help clients and customers select what they want?
We like to sit down with new clients before they even look at boats to ask them a series of questions about their specific needs. Sometimes, I’ve had customers come in thinking they wanted something specific and ended up with an entirely different boat, because they’ve never had anyone ask these questions before. But they’re important; we want to help our customers get it right the first time.

How To Change Your Home’s Design From Ho-Hum To Home Run

Early on in my career, I came to the conclusion that, despite one’s best intentions and talents, “good taste” could become boring unless there was an element of the unexpected involved. This belief has defined much of who I am as a designer and has been inherent in everything I’ve done ever since (and not just in the design realm). Mixing it up a bit comes naturally to me and has, in fact, become the core of my signature style. Here are five examples that illustrate how to bring your home from the expected to the spectacular.

1. An otherwise ho-hum black-and-white family photo gallery gets a shot of fun and whimsy with colorful, custom-framed and -matted wrapping paper prints. Alternatively, you can frame kids’ art, meaningful quotes or small paintings. It’s the perfect way to personalize your space and bring special photos to life with color, pattern and, well, joy.

2. A traditional room gets new life with the sparkle of a modern crystal chandelier, a fab polished-nickel tray and the straight lines of a transitional take on the timeworn wing chair. When combined with stately silk drapery, crisp white trim and dark-stained hardwood floors, this room boasts the tried and true as well as a bit of the unexpected, while breaking all the rules.

3. A home office gets a pop of excitement with a new take on color and pattern. A flat weave rug with an exaggerated herringbone pattern and bright colors makes an out-of-left-field cameo in this traditional room alongside a mod-houndstooth-inspired ottoman and fur pillow. Positioned beside classic linen flat-Roman shades and plush moldings, these fun furnishings inspire creativity and happy thoughts.

4. A traditional dining room gets a new look with the addition of a postmodern, polished-nickel bar cart, complete with unusual bottles, crystal barware and cocktail accoutrements. Graced with lovely moldings from the early 1900s, this room’s elegance is only enhanced by its fanciful air.

5. A large contemporary painting makes an unanticipated appearance in this traditional room, beside black-and-white wedding photos and atop a silver velvet transitional chair piped with tan silk. Classic tailored drapery, pen-shell nesting tables and a modern wool rug complete the juxtaposition of old and new, to make the room delightfully stylish yet undeniably classic. In a word, perfect.

Hit HBO Series ‘Succession’ Seeking Extras For Lake George and Lake Placid Shoots

Fans of the HBO series Succession may just get a chance to snag a little screen time in the hit show. The series, about an aging head of an international media empire, is currently seeking extras to appear in scenes that will be shot around Lake George, Lake Placid and Queensbury. The show will conduct two shoots in Upstate New York that require extras: one April 23-April 30 in Lake Placid and one May 2-3 at various locations around Lake George. The series will also record scenes at the The Great Escape theme park in Queensbury.

“The location manager for Succession was familiar with this area because he’d worked on a shoot up here for Escape at Dannemora, the Showtime mini-series directed by Ben Stiller,” says Adirondack Film Commissioner Andrew Meader. Though officially founded in 2018, the Adirondack Film Commission is an independent non-profit that has been attracting more film and TV production crews to the Greater Glens Falls area since 2016. Meader says that the commission has recently been in talks with other big-name networks such as the Travel Channel, Amazon and the History Channel. “I was in New York City earlier this week talking to some producers and showing them photos of different places up here,” Meader says. “It’s a real influx of spending when these film crews come because they rent hotel rooms and hire local talent and use local caterers and eat at our restaurants.”

Now in its second season, Succession follows members of the Roy family as they vie for control over the media and entertainment conglomerate built by their aging father, Logan Roy. Just imagine if Shakespeare’s King Lear ran a media empire—that’s Succession. The show features Emmy-winning Scottish actor Brian Cox as the ruthless patriarch and Golden Globe nominee Kieran Culkin as one of his sons.

Those interested in being cast as an extra for the Lake George and Lake Placid shoots can send an email to [email protected]. Include a current headshot and contact information. More information about applying can be found here.

EXCLUSIVE Q&A: Grammy-Nominated Musician Anoushka Shankar On Performing At SPAC And Her Incredible Career

Every so often a musician comes along who redefines not just the instrument they play, but also the music and style that come along with that instrument. For the sitar, the stringed Indian instrument that looks (sort of) like a big guitar, that performer is Anoushka Shankar.

A composer and sitarist, Shankar is the heiress to the rich world music tradition left behind by her father, Ravi Shankar. In addition to collaborating with Beatles guitarist George Harrison (and teaching him how to play the sitar), Ravi brought his instrument to the world stage in the 1950s and ’60s, even performing at the original ’69 Woodstock concert. Anoushka began studying the sitar with her father at the age of seven and has carried on his tradition of musical multiculturalism, performing with an incredibly eclectic array of artists from nine-time Grammy-winner (and half-sister) Norah Jones to English-Sri Lankan Rapper M.I.A. to minimalist American composer Philip Glass. From jazz to pop to contemporary classical music, both Western and Indian, there are few other artists at the center of so many different musical worlds. With her sitar and an ever-changing lineup of top-notch collaborators, Shankar has seamlessly intertwined all these genres into a sound that is at once poly-cultural and yet deeply personal and idiosyncratic as well. Since 1998, she’s earned six Grammy nominations and recorded eight studio albums, including the hit 2013 album Traces of You with Norah Jones, who’s coming to SPAC this summer for Jazz Fest 2019.

Anoushka Shankar
The cover of Anoushka Shankar’s new compilation album, ‘Reflections.’

So far, 2019 is already shaping up to be a big year for the London-based sitarist. In March, Shankar released her new compilation album, Reflections, which features 15 songs spanning her 2-decade career, and in May she will play her father’s album, Passages, live with Philip Glass to a sold-out crowd at the Philharmonie de Paris. The Spa City, too, will soon get to hear Shankar’s sound; the sitarist is coming to the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) on Wednesday, June 19 for a “SPAC on Stage” performance of her 2016 album Land of Gold. saratoga living recently got to chat with Shankar about her summer show at SPAC and her life in music.

This will be your SPAC debut. Have you been to Saratoga before?
No, but I’ve been hearing about how beautiful it is. So I’m looking forward to it. I’ve been in the area though. I played at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall [in 2005]. So I’ve sort of been there.

Talk about your decision to play the whole album Land of Gold at SPAC. I imagine that’s got to be quite a challenge.
Land of Gold is a real highlight for me. I feel like the album is really close to my heart, of course, but I also feel particularly proud of the live translation we were able to achieve from album to stage. I feel like it’s my favorite translation of an album I’ve managed to do. I’m also very lucky to get to work with incredible people. I wouldn’t be able to do it without them. The three musicians I’m touring with now are incredibly versatile across style and really good at what they do. So with them, we can really achieve so much on stage.


You’ve known and worked with some truly legendary artists. How did you come together with M.I.A. to write the powerful yet catchy song, “Jump In (Cross The Line)?”
We come from very different musical backgrounds, but in an odd way, culturally, we have more in common now than you would think on the surface because we live around the corner here in London. And we have kids similar ages. So we actually met as moms—we did a few playdates with our kids together. But I was talking to her about my album, and obviously, she has always been so incredibly vocal about refugee crises [which is the theme of Land of Gold]. She said she was working on some lyrics [on the same topic] and came over, and it happened from there in a lovely, organic way—not with a record label and date-booking and all that stuff.

How about working with your sister Norah Jones? What kind of musical synergy exists between you two?
I don’t feel like I’ve had that many experiences of being so close to someone for such a prolonged period of time before working with them. My only similar example would be my father, who I kind of grew up working with from the beginning. So by the time she and I sat down to work together, there was already an incredible amount of ease and trust that was there. It felt like a very organic process.

Your father was also very close to one of The Beatles. Do you have any George Harrison stories?
He used to come over very frequently. He’d check in on my practice, and I’d play for him all my new pieces. I adored it when he did that because he was really hilarious—he was very protective of me but in a kind of opposite way. Everyone wanted to be like, “This is great!” And he’d be like, “Are you enjoying this? Are you able to get away from Ravi? Because I know what [kind of] teacher he is.” It was really nice. He was a super caring and loving uncle figure.

Your new compilation album Reflections is looking back on an incredibly diverse careerDid you consciously set out to create such a global kind of sound?
I think it’s been more an exploration than a journey with a destination in mind. For me, music has been a medium through which I learn and explore, and therefore I’m often very excited to try new things and immerse myself in new things. Also, it’s been a way to try to express who I am in a cultural sense. So I grew up playing this incredibly beautiful classical art form, but I also grew up across three continents in a very multi-cultural, almost multi-time period kind of a family. So I wanted to make music that represented me.

What’s it going to be like playing with iconic composer Philip Glass in May?
It’s amazing. He’s obviously someone I respect hugely, and someone I have a lot of love for because he was incredibly close to my father. He and my dad had a long relationship and did a collaboration album together called Passages, which is one of my favorite examples not just of cross-culturalism but of collaboration in general. They did that album when I was a kid, so I have really distinct memories of being in the studio and watching their music be recorded. This music was never performed live at the time, and it’s been put together as a live show. We had our world premiere two summers ago here in London, and now we’re getting to play it again in Paris. So it’s really brilliant bringing something to life that I’ve heard my whole life and loved so dearly.

EXCLUSIVE Q&A: Red-Hot Questions For Atlanta Rookie Phenom Kevin Huerter 

Only three years ago, Kevin Huerter’s opponents on the basketball court were high- schoolers from Saratoga Springs, Colonie and Bethlehem. These days, he’s facing the likes of LeBron James, Kevin Durant and Stephen Curry in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Huerter, a 6’7″ guard who grew up in Clifton Park and led Shenendehowa High School to a state championship as a junior, has shined in his rookie season with the Eastern Conference’s Atlanta Hawks.

I covered a few of Huerter’s high-school games back in the day and was impressed with his all-around skillset: He could shoot, handle the ball, get to the rim and set up teammates with precision passing. What stood out to me the most, though, was his cerebral approach to the game. And I assumed he’d bring those skills with him to the University of Maryland, where he’d flourish at the collegiate level. What I never imagined was that he’d leave college after just two years, get drafted in the first round of the NBA Draft and immediately become one of the top rookies in the league.

The 20-year-old star-in-the-making has already secured a spot in Atlanta’s starting lineup and scored in double figures 26 times in 54 games, including a 29-point effort in a victory against the Philadelphia 76ers. I recently caught up with Huerter to talk about his budding career and this year’s Hawks team.

 

When did you realize that you had a chance of playing in the NBA? After all, it’s only been a very short period of time since you were a high school and college student.
I started thinking it was possible after my freshman year in college, but I wasn’t thinking I would leave after two years. I haven’t had a lot of time to think about it, but yeah, it has been a lot of change in a short time. I still follow my high-school team when I can, and it’s crazy to think the players on it are not that much younger than I am.

When you initially declared for the NBA draft, you held off on hiring an agent and tested the waters at the draft combine before turning pro. Was it a difficult decision to leave college early, or had you already made up your mind that it was the right choice?
It was the hardest decision of my life, and I went back and forth on it a lot. When I made the decision, I was confident it was the right one. After being drafted in the first round, I certainly have no regrets.

You’re almost 60 games into your first NBA season. How’s your body holding up to the physical demands of the job?
The coaches and veteran guys just stressed to me that it would be a long year and that it was important to take care of my body. You have to make
the most of your days off from a recovery standpoint and do the right things for the long haul. It’s tough, but
I feel good physically.

The Hawks’ roster features ten player age 25 or younger. After a tough start to the season, you guys have shown some dramatic improvement. What’s the excitement level in the organization with all the young and developing talent?
We definitely see it as a long road ahead, because we’re so young. But we’re getting better and developing, and even though we’re losing more than we’d like to, we are learning and moving forward. There’s definitely a lot of excitement for the future.

Your teammate Vince Carter was the NBA Rookie of the Year the year you were born, 1998. What’s it been like to have a potential futureHall of Famer on the roster for such a young team?
It’s definitely beneficial to have a guy like that around. He teaches us little things every day. He’s been through it all, and you try to learn as much as you can, because he’s been so successful. It’s cool to have him in our locker room.

What’s been your favorite moment so far this season?
For me personally, the game where I scored 29 points in Philadelphia was my best as a pro so far, and it was a big road win. We had a pretty good two-week stretch there, where we grinded out some big road wins.

Your red hair has led to some interesting nicknames: “Red Mamba,” “Red Dot,” for your shooting precision, and even “Red Velvet.” Do you have a favorite nickname?
I’m just kind of waiting for one of them to stick, but it doesn’t really matter to me. I’m happy with whatever the fans come up with. I’m just having fun with it all.

The Brook Tavern Serves Up ‘The Yaddo’ For Its ‘Next Great Saratoga Cocktail’ Entry

I wanted to add to the conversation about the “Next Great Saratoga Cocktail” with a crisp, subtly bold cocktail that pays homage to Saratoga Springs and our surrounding region. This inspired “The Yaddo”—a nod to the equally bold artists who stay at Saratoga’s famed artists’ retreat. Also, I think we can all appreciate the vast variety of apples and honey found in our region, so I created my own apple and spiced bitters and apple-honey simple syrup to give this cocktail the sweetness it deserved.

Mixologist: Damian D’Arpino
Bar: The Brook Tavern
Cocktail: The Yaddo

The Yaddo

Ingredients

2oz. Barr Hill Vodka (or any floral gin)
1/2 oz. Elderflower liqueur
3-4 dashes Apple and spiced bitters*
1 oz. Apple-honey simple syrup**
1/2 oz. Fresh lemon juice

Instructions

Combine vodka, elderflower liqueur, bitters, simple syrup and lemon juice in a shaker glass with ice. Shake and strain in a chilled stem glass of your choice. Garnish with a lemon twist and enjoy!

*The Brook Tavern’s apple and spiced bitters recipe:

8 oz. 100-proof vodka of choice
6 Apple peels
1 Cinnamon stick
4 Cloves
1 Lemon peel

Let sit for 8-10 days. Then drain into a good reusable, sealable container.

**The Brook Tavern’s apple-honey simple syrup recipe:

1 Lemon peel
1 c. Local organic honey
1 c. Saratoga Natural Spring Water (flat)
4 oz. Organic apple concentrate

Simmer to half volume.

Legendary Fashion Innovator Cristóbal Balenciaga Proves Black Is Anything But Basic

If you’re looking for the perfect frock to make a dramatic entrance in at this year’s American Cancer Society Gala of Hope in Saratoga Springs, Balenciaga’s the way to go.

Now, I’m not suggesting you whip out the platinum card and order up one of the ’80s-inspired, broad-shouldered jacket-dresses Balenciaga Creative Director Demna Gvasalia showed for Spring/Summer 2019 (although one of those would certainly do in a pinch). Instead, look to Cristóbal Balenciaga himself, the late founder of the legendary Parisian house in 1937, for your red-carpet inspiration.

Balenciaga In Black
“Evening coat in black faille, summer 1955.”

Often called “the couturier’s couturier,” the Basque designer was revered by his peers for his sculptural shapes, boundless creativity and, above all else, impeccable workmanship. Speaking of Balenciaga, Coco Chanel once declared, “Only he is capable of cutting material, assembling a creation and sewing it by hand. The others are simply fashion designers.”

A fashion house will often have a signature hue—shocking pink for Schiaparelli, Valentino’s trademark red—and Balenciaga’s was no exception. But the master’s preferred “color” was no color at all. Describing a visit to his atelier on Avenue George V in August 1938, Harper’s Bazaar took note: “At [Balenciaga], the black is so black that it hits you like a blow. Thick Spanish black, almost velvety, a night without stars, which makes the ordinary black seem almost gray.” What attracted Balenciaga to this extraordinary shade? As Bazaar hinted, the root of his affinity was cultural. Balenciaga collected late 19th-century robes and collars for inspiration, and black had a long and deep association with Spain, from Catholic piety and traditional Spanish folk dress to the sober black finery favored by Spain’s Habsburg rulers (and, thus, the entire court) since Charles V ascended the throne in 1516. It’s no coincidence that black dominates the canvases of Spain’s Old Masters, Zurbarán, Velásquez and Goya.

It also provided the perfect palette for Balenciaga’s own unique artistry. Without the distraction of color, a Balenciaga design in black—whether an impeccably tailored bouclé suit, a baby-doll dress or a dazzling evening gown—first impresses with its architectural silhouette. Then, upon closer inspection, the eye is seduced by the rich, often contrasting textures and exquisite detail.

Balenciaga In Black
The cover of ‘Balenciaga In Black,’ featuring “Suit in black cloqué, 1951.”

The master’s longstanding romance with the most elegant of shades is plumbed in Balenciaga In Black (Rizzoli Electa), the stunning book inspired by the museum exhibition that debuted at Paris’ Musée Bourdelle in 2017 and just finished a run at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, TX, earlier this year. The book boasts contemporary photography by fashion’s heavy-hitters, including Irving Penn, Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Gordon Parks and Richard Avedon, as well as a wealth of material from the couture house’s archives.

Balenciaga’s technical wizardry is unmistakable in sketches that are not mere fashion illustrations but rather exactingly detailed blueprints for his designs. He would specify not just fabrics, but also the direction of the weave (or knit) of each piece, detailing each seam, dart and pleat: the type of stitch to be used and thread colors. Frequently, Balenciaga would even name both the seamstress he wanted to do the work and the fitting model.

The stunning results of all that attention to detail could be seen in the 100 Balenciaga pieces included in the traveling exhibition, 50 of which are featured in the book, gorgeously photographed on black mannequins against black backgrounds by Pierre Even. The photographer is best known for his black-and-white portraiture; he captures the exquisite detail of each dress, gown, jacket, suit, coat, cape, stole, hood, ruff, hat and necklace. Each is a symphony of black on black on black, highlighting contrasts in texture, layers of transparency and the sumptuous detail of lace, jet beading, paillettes, embroidery, brocade and quilted leather.

Whether black is your “signature” color or not, you’re sure to find plenty of fashion inspiration inside Balenciaga In Black. How can you not?.