Fashion Week: Street vibe at True Religion, Givenchy in NYC
Attention fellas: NBA star and fashion trendsetter Russell Westbrook wants to help you get dressed for the holidays.
Pieces from the line included a trendy leather jacket, washed out denim shirts and oversized T-shirts.
Fans stood outside the New York store waiting for the celebrity — who has attended shows during Fashion Week — and cheered once he arrived.
Outside of sports, Westbrook's colorful style has made headlines, and he's become a staple on the fashion scene, visiting fashion week in Paris and Milan.
The show certainly had an intense feel as models of all sizes strutted the catwalk in the line's signature pieces which include bikinis, dresses, sportswear and structured cages.
Black, red, blue and white dominated the collection which also featured pieces that used Intel technology to change the shape of the garment depending on various elements such as the body temperature.
On a dystopian set with One World Trade Center beaming its blue light into the night sky this Sept. 11, Givenchy took Manhattan on a pier before a star-studded crowd, remembering tragedy and celebrating fashion at the same time.
Riccardo Tisci, the French fashion house's creative director, worked with performance artist Marina Abramovic on the storied brand's first New York City show, constructing a Waterworld-esque set of walls out of recycled metal and wood scraps and seating his huge crowd on stacked wood pallets and benches as models walked in looks of mostly black and white.
Models navigated the winding, open-air runway in treacherous heeled mules, including several steps up and down stacked wood pallets.
Fashion designers Levi and Reuben Uwi, survivors of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, said they looked to Africa for inspiration for their latest collection, which debuted Friday at New York Fashion Week.
The brothers, 27 and known as The Uwi Twins, unveiled "I Left My Heart In Africa!" at Gotham Hall and said they returned