Posted by Barbara Glass | 734 Comments
Men of Style: An Interview with Designer Adam Lippes
BG: What is your definition of style?
AL: Confidence.
BG: How would you define confidence?
AL: Having an air of strength about oneself.
BG: What is a perfect outfit for you?
AL: A white v-neck T-shirt, a pair jeans, a great belt, great shoes, and a great watch (he really likes Cartier).
BG: What is your fixation/obsession with the white T-shirt?
AL: The T-shirt is the foundation of my brand, and a white shirt and jeans is the foundation of American Sportswear. I walked into my first meeting with Oscar wearing a white v-neck T-shirt, a pair of dark skinny jeans, a great belt, great shoes, and a great watch. I didn’t know. I was just a kid. Oscar turned, looked at me and said, ‘Can everyone look at this new young man? He looks rich.’”
BG: What trend would you like to see disappear?
AL: I don’t like hard-edged clothes on women–the biker tough/rocker look–I like refinement.
AH: What was the biggest lesson you learned from Oscar de la Renta?
AL: To pay attention to how a woman feels in the garments I create. He refined my use of color, quality and my eye for style. He also taught me to give a garment a second chance. Not to hate it immediately, but to give it time. Don’t judge a piece at the first look.
AH: What was the biggest lesson you learned from Ralph Lauren?
AL: To do it right–period. He also taught me the beauty of marketing.
BG: How has the current economic situation affected your designs?
AL: I know the recession has hurt a lot of Americans, but our brand hasn’t been greatly affected. Our spring bookings are up 48% from last year. I think that the styles have been affected. Fashion has been the same for too long and I believe that now is a time of creativity. Designers are trying new things that have haven’t been seen or done before.
BG: Why have you decided to add the sizes 14 and 16 to your Spring 2010 collection?
AL: When I began my career in design, I wanted to recreate American sportswear. I love that it has a certain ‘sporty chic-ness’ and allows the customer the ability to mix and max the pieces. American Sportswear offers a certain wearability and fit–sizing is a huge aspect of this. There’s nothing worse than a woman who can’t wear something she loves because of sizing.
BG: I know you have a passion for philanthropy. Tell me about the organizations you are involved in.
AL: Art is my passion. I’m the co-chair of the Whitney Museum of American Art and a partner of the New York Humane Society- I have a love for animals. I own two labradoodles from Australia. I am also active in fundraising for the Sandra F. Lippes Foundation at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in honor of my late mother.
RB: If you could have lunch with anyone, alive or deceased, who would be sitting across the table from you?
AL: My Mother. She inspired my style and Oscar refined it.
BG: What is your single biggest fashion influence?
AL: Art- mid-century American artists; and people on the streets.
BG: If you could move fashion in a certain direction, where would you like to see it go?
AL: I’d like to see the whole fashion schedule turned upside down- have shows for consumers instead [of buyers and editors] and buy during the same season they are shown.
BG: Tell me something about yourself that would surprise me.
AL: I have a farm upstate where I love to escape to in the Berkshires.

