SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Watch
  • 2024 Event
    • General Info
    • Presenters & Speakers
    • Tickets
    • Get in Touch
    • FAQ
  • Shop
  • TOPICS
        • CONCERNS

          • Frizz
          • Hair Growth
          • Hair Loss
          • Regimen
          • Scalp Care
        • CURL CARE

          • Braids & Protective Styles
          • Color
          • Haircuts
          • Hairstyles
          • Locs
          • Straightening
          • For Kids
          • For Men
        • LIFESTYLE

          • Business
          • Celebrities
          • Trends
  • PRODUCTS
    • Top Products
    • Cleansing
    • Ingredients
    • DIY Products
    • Hair Tools
    • Moisturizing
  • TEXTURE
        • FINE (1A-1C)
          Straight with minor waves.
        • WAVY (2A-2C)
          Forms a loose “S” very easily straightened
        • CURLY (3A-3C)
          Forms a definite “S” shaped like a corkscrew
        • COILY (4A-4C)
          Very tight curl when stretched creates an “S”
        • LOCS
          Hair intentionally matted to form "ropes"
        • QUIZ
          Take our quiz to learn your curl pattern
      • 1a
        1b
        1c
        2a
        2b
        2c
        3a
        3b
        3c
        4a
        4b
        4c
        Locs
        Discover your curl pattern, the best hairstyles and products just for you!
        Take the quiz now
  • TEXTURE TALES
  • TEXTURE ON THE RUNWAY
  • LEADERS IN CURL
  • BEST OF THE BEST 2024
  • ASK A CURL EXPERT
  • GET INVOLVED
Home • Trends

Fashion Week Wrapup

Share this Article
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
Fashion Week Wrapup
By · Updated February 22, 2010

When Ralph Lauren—known for models with the blondest, straightest, most conservative hair—has an exotic model with wild curls, you know something big is brewing. We’ve become accustomed to seeing wild, tousled looks on the models at collections by designers like Betsy Johnson, a designer known for her whimsy. But at the Fall 2010 Collections, texture appeared in a wide array of shows, from Perry Ellis’ men’s collection to Diane von Furstenberg. It may not have been on every model, but waves, curls and kinks made an appearance.

I’d like to think that the trend is not a trend at all, but a new reality. I hope it means that diversity is being embraced as a part of fashion, and that designers have come to see texture as something to be embraced because it is a reflection of many of the people who wear these clothes. A number of stylists, models and onlookers told me “Texture is big this season.” I told them it’s never been out.

— Michelle Breyer