Wednesday, January 19, 2022

Brown Is The Underrated Color You Should Be Wearing

Very Peri may be Pantone’s color of 2022 but this season we’re all about the versatile and underrated power of brown. And you don’t have to take our complete word for it — the brown color trend has already been reported by the likes of Vogue, Vox, In Style, and The Zoe Report for its calming groundedness and neutrality when it’s worn with buzzier, brighter, or more out-there fashion pieces. Tyler, The Creator in an interview with style newsletter Blackbird Spyplane also praised the color, saying, “Brown really goes with almost every color. I wear a lot of pastels, and it’s a great base for that,” when speaking of his beloved honey-caramel Gucci pants. (Which is to say, if you’re looking forward to copping some Very Peri pieces this year, you may want to consider pairing it with brown for a chef’s kiss of a color block.)

Brown coats

When you break down brown’s status as a neutral, it absolutely makes sense why the woodsy color lends well to almost any kind of outfit scheme. As the “shades of brown” Wikipedia page says, brown is a composite color that’s “produced by combining red, yellow, and black pigments, or by a combination of orange and black.” The painter’s resource website Art in Context takes it even further: “Orange and blue can make brown, and red and green can also make brown. The secondary colors can also be used to add variations to the brown shade created by the three primary colors [red, blue, and yellow]. For example, you can make a brown with underlying purple colors.” While there’s no one way to create brown from the color wheel, it’s clear that it takes a village of colors to achieve certain brown-al tones. It’s no wonder why brown so beautifully pairs with nearly the entire ROYGBIV spectrum. In other words, a brown coat is a no-brainer grab-and-go-with-any-outfit buy you won’t regret.

Brown sweaters

“From earthy to rich and luxurious, brown feels more indulgent than black, and there is a shade to flatter every skin tone, from Dark Chocolate to Adobe,” color expert Kate Smith, Chief Color Maven at Sensational Color Consultancy tells Refinery29 over email. When asked about brown’s recent popularity, Smith suggests that pandemic life may have a hand in its uptick.

“Brown is nostalgic for those who wore it in the ’90s when it was last trendy, but the shades are more complex and exciting this year. It is a color related to reliability and stability, which most people seek after living with uncertainty for long,” she says. And there’s science-backed data as to why brown is so closely related to comfort, too. “Brown is a relaxing color because it increases tryptophan (related to sleep and our immune systems) and serotonin (linked to mood). Brown typically gives us warm, settled feelings, reminding us of connections to earth, home, and family,” Smith continues.

Brown pants

Personally speaking, when I think of the color brown, I’m too reminded of all things cozy or sentimental: log cabins, 1970s fashion, warm coffee with toast, nature. It also seems like brown, perhaps by default, has always been destined to be the ultimate neutral based on the sheer fact that so many people are living the brown life daily just by being brunette.

“Luscious brown worn head to toe is striking, or brown can function as a warm neutral, providing an earthy balance for more vibrant tones like green quartz, Ibiza blue, or fuchsia,” Smith says of eye-catching color pairings. “Black worked in the past, but now it doesn’t feel authentic. Brown is an alternative with an approachable, grounded personality.”

Brown dresses

As for incorporating more brown into your wardrobe, the task isn’t difficult to accomplish as we’re seeing plenty of browns, ranging from milky latte camels to bitter dark chocolates. You can go the outerwear route of taking the classic camel coat a few shades darker. Or swap in a pair of corduroy or Carhartt workwear-style pants for your regular pair of blue jeans. The next time you shop for a sweater, opt for an earthy-brown winter knit as your new go-to that can be worn in a number of ways, like with cream-white or olive green trousers, draped over a pastel slip dress, or even with another brown pant. And as for dressing up for a fancy event, stand out in a sea of jewel tones by wearing lush velvet or satin chestnut instead. No matter your flavor, there’s a brown that’s sure to satisfy your palette (and palate).

At Refinery29, we’re here to help you navigate this overwhelming world of stuff. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy something we link to on our site, Refinery29 may earn commission.

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Why André Leon Talley’s Personal Style Was Revolutionary

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Seth Wenig/AP/Shutterstock (12766399a) André Leon Talley, a former editor at large for Vogue magazine, speaks to a reporter at the opening of the “Black Fashion Designers” exhibit at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York, . Talley, the towering former creative director and editor at large of Vogue magazine, has died. He was 73. Talley’s literary agent confirmed Talley’s death to USA Today late Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2022 Obit Andre Leon Talley, New York, United States – 06 Dec 2016

Not all heroes wear capes. But André Leon Talley did. His signature look, one he adopted early in his life while growing up in Jim Crow-era North Carolina, was reflective of the glamour the former Vogue editor-at-large, who died on Tuesday, saw in his everyday life. Granted, later on, his days were anything but mundane, jet-setting from New York to Paris with the world’s most elite designers, models, editors, and socialites for publications like Women’s Wear Daily, Ebony, and Vogue. But even in his final years, sitting on the porch of his house in White Plains, New York, Talley wore his cape to proclaim just how powerful fashion can be when used as a tool for self-expression.

“​​No one saw the world in a more elegant and glamorous way than you did,” designer and friend Diane von Fürstenberg wrote in a tribute to Talley on Instagram

It can’t be underestimated the impact that Talley had by breaking barriers as a fashion journalist, who was often was the only Black man seated in the front row of runway shows and appearing on magazine mastheads. Along the way, Talley opened doors for others, both through his journalism, by uplifting emerging talent — designer Rick Owens shared on Instagram that he got his start after the late editor called him “out of the blue” to meet Anna Wintour after seeing his designs in the window of Henri Bendel in 2000 — and through his work as a member of the Board of Trustees at the Savannah College of Art and Design. 

For those who weren’t part of the fashion industry though, he was proof that personal style is the best currency. “You have to be yourself; they will accept you if they see who you are is authentic,” he told Garage. Even though Talley had worn capes throughout his youth, he said it first caused a stir in the industry after Karl Lagerfeld lent him a dressing gown to cover a last-minute dinner for Women’s Wear Daily. “Here comes a Black man representing Women’s Wear Daily in a black dressing gown for a black-tie dinner… I had the upper hand” he said in the video for Garage Magazine, referring to the incident as a “scandal.” 

Work aside, Talley had little care for trends. Instead, he embraced the ways elegance and beauty could be attained through very little resources, a lesson he credited to his grandmother, Bennie Frances Davis, who raised him. “We had nothing but we had everything because we had love,” Talley said in an address at Oxford Union in 2013. “We didn’t talk about style. For me, she was style.”

Talley believed in the power fashion had, particularly in his own life. “Clothes were my armor of warfare,” he said in an interview for his 2020 memoir The Chiffon Trenches. “That’s how I got through life. I had to represent. I couldn’t fail. Failure was not an option.” In turn, he inspired others to be unapologetically themselves. “André Leon Talley made it possible for so many Black queer boys and men to express ourselves out loud. No reservations,” wrote Preston Mitchum, director of advocacy at the non-profit organization The Trevor Project, in a tribute on Twitter

But we will also cherish him for reminding the world that fashion is a means of creating our own fantasies of what life can be, no matter where you come from or what you look like. The best way we can dissuade a “famine of beauty,” as he famously said in the 2009 documentary The September Issue, after his passing is by wearing whatever makes us feel like the best version of ourselves.

 Today, though, we honor him by wearing a cape.

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Fashion Legend André Leon Talley Dead At 73

Style Icon & Trailblazer André Leon Talley Dead At 73

Just days into the new year, the fashion industry is mourning the loss of André Leon Talley. The world famous editor, creative director, journalist, and fashion authority died on Tuesday, January 18, at a White Plains hospital. He was 73 years old.

Though he was known for living and working among industry elites throughout his professional career, Talley’s roots trace back to Jim Crow-era North Carolina, where he was raised by his grandmother. While living through the harsh realities of the widespread culture of anti-Blackness and government-enforced poverty, Talley was able to prioritize his education; he went on to graduate with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in French literature in the 1970s. 

After graduating, Talley made a pivot to fashion, and an unpaid internship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened the door to other major opportunities in fashion journalism. Through his work at Interview Magazine, Women’s Wear Daily, The New York Times, W Magazine, and American Vogue, Talley quickly became a respected voice in the industry. In addition to his impressive bylines, Talley’s other notable jobs included serving as a judge on America’s Top Model, styling celebrities (including former First Lady Michelle Obama and supermodel Naomi Campbell), working as a consultant for will.I.am, and being heavily involved in his local church and as a board member for the Savannah College of Art and Design


Talley’s very existence as a six-foot-six gay Black man from the South in itself was a challenge to the Eurocentric, very white norms of a space that had famously (and still does, in many respects) boxed people like him out. He wasn’t supposed to fit into that world, but he did — and he made it his own.

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News of Talley’s passing broke late Tuesday evening and was later confirmed by his circle of close personal friends. Ford Foundation president and longtime pal Darren Walker wrote poignant words about Talley on Instagram, praising the late maverick’s “a deep academic understanding of fashion and design.” Designer Diane von Furstenberg also penned a moving tribute to her friend in which she recalled the joys of their almost 50 years as friends. All across social media, fans and followers are mourning the loss of Talley, who played a major role in modern culture’s understanding and discussion of fashion. 

“​​Andre Leon Talley was unapologetic about embracing his identity,” tweeted one fan. “In an industry that champions standards which he did not fit, he refused to go unnoticed and the world is better for it. We have lost a trailblazer, an icon and an overall remarkable human.”

From the successful career that spans decades to the loving testimonials of his friends, co-workers, and the countless people that he inspired, it’s obvious that what made Talley special wasn’t just the fact that he had a demonstrably superior eye for fashion. Talley’s very existence as a six-foot-six gay Black man from the South in itself was a challenge to the Eurocentric, very white norms of a space that had famously (and still does, in many respects) boxed people like him out. He wasn’t supposed to fit into that world, but he did — and he made it his own. 

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