Looks from the Hermès Festival Des Metiers Party

I’ve been so busy with various projects relating to this website that I never had a chance to post my favorite photos from the Hermès Festival Des Metiers opening party. Chicago’s elite fashion crowd came out for the celebration, as you can see in images below:

Chicago Fashion Incubator Pop-Up Shop

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The Chicago Fashion Incubator is a program housed at Macy’s on State Street that helps budding Chicago designers develop their collections into full-fledged brands. Designers compete for the prestigious workspace at the CFI, where participants are given the tools and taught the skills necessary to make their lines successful. Every October the designers present their collections at Chicago Fashion Week in Millennium Park.

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Inside the Pop-up Shop

To make it easier to buy clothing designed by local designers, the CFI partnered up with 900 North Michigan to design a temporary pop-up shop in the luxury shopping center on the fifth floor. The store will be open for five weeks, so make sure to head over sooner rather than later!

Last night the CFI partnered with Gilt City Chicago to host an opening party to celebrate the first day of the pop-up shop. Guests drank and socialized, and the hot topic of the evening was the rising strength of Chicago’s fashion scene. Many of Chicago’s most important fashion figures were in attendance, as were magazine editors and bloggers. Click the link below to see party photographs from the event!

More of my photos from last night’s opening party:

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Visit Your Trendy for much better photographs from last evening.

Hermès Festival des Metiers: Silk Scarves

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Hermes scarves on display

It is no surprise that Hermès is one of my favorite brands to feature on Chicago Streetstyle Scene. So imagine my delight when I heard about the Festival des Metiers (Festival of Crafts) to be held at the Oak Street boutique. I was beyond overjoyed at the chance to see how my favorite luxury goods are made. Even better, I was invited to the private VIP opening party on Thursday night to celebrate the event. Personally, I own two Hermès items – the limited-edition Chicago scarf in fuchsia and a light blue twilly.

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My limited-edition Chicago scarf

I am obsessed with Hermès textiles so I spent most of my time at the Hermès private opening party watching the expert silk screener create a scarf from start to finish. Below are photos from each step of the process. This was definitely the most popular presentation of the evening.

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Attendees watching the scarf demonstration

1. Step one: the artist creates the scarf design.

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2. A second artist uses ink to draw each color on a different transparent sheet. Through a translator, she explained how difficult it is to take a multicolored design and think in terms of gray. The way the silk screening process works is that each color is laid down separately. The metal screens are created using these stencils.
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3. When the scarves are ready to be printed, the first metal plate is laid down on a moving rail. Up to 50 scarves are printed in one single line like this. 
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4. The screener moves from each silk square one-by-one, using a squeegee to transfer the dye through the plate onto the silk.

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5. The scarf outline is always the first design laid down in black dye.
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6. The darkest colors are laid down first. This is a burgundy purple dye for the third layer. The second run was actually the Hermes copyright, which is done separately because the accent mark requires a different consistency of ink)
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7. Pushing the dye through the screen in one fell swoop.
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8. The scarf after three runs.
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9. Explaining how the silk is gathered from the silkworm cocoon.
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10. The finished product after over twenty dyes are applied to the silk.

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