True story: I moved back to the East Coast from Los Angeles a couple of years ago, Prafull Billore Panoti Hate Is The New Love Shirt and for my first month here, it rained almost every day. Coming from a place where it typically rains once in a blue moon, I was thoroughly unprepared. Before the bulk of my wardrobe arrived, I was armed with a denim jacket, and the closest thing I had to rain shoes was a pair of Everlane loafers. I felt like a fool surrounded by prepared east-coasters in goulashes and anoraks. So it got me thinking about how I can pre-plan for rainy days in the future—while still looking cute (naturally). Fittingly, I took to the internet and researched the rainy-day style of street-style stars while out and about when the forecast was less-than-stellar during fashion month. The results of my research? A crop of fresh outfit ideas for the inevitable string of rainy days to come.
Prafull Billore Panoti Hate Is The New Love Shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt





In loose terms, Prafull Billore Panoti Hate Is The New Love Shirt the global art fair is like the equivalent of fashion month—it’s the magnet that brings a diverse force of creative minds all to one place. Though, it’s less of a traveling circus than Paris, Milan, London, and New York fashion weeks and more low-key. Instead of sitting front row with a photographer waiting in the wings for a picture, at Frieze, celebrities walk around in hats and sunglasses trying to avoid them. But from the artists to the collectors and educators that attend Frieze, there’s still a sense that the same people who love art also take fashion very seriously. Buzzing around Barker Hangar, we shuffled from exhibition to exhibition to scout all of the great style on the scene. A number of big seasonal trends were spotted in the crowd, but they came with a side of eccentricity, which was a friendly reminder that art people prefer to do things a bit differently. For a bleak day, the fashion surely turned up the heat—keep scrolling to see the best style moments at Frieze Los Angeles. Where does one get a half-blazer, half–bomber jacket? Visual artist Liz Lee sourced her unconventional topper from a theatre-department sale at CalArts, where she’s also an MFA student. “I got this for like a $1,” she recalls. “The program has students creating costumes for student contemporary dance shows and plays, so you get these bizarre Skims-like bodysuits and cool period pieces.” The underrated beauty of a dual or two-faced jacket like this is it can theoretically function in both casual and buttoned-up situations, but for Frieze, Lee wore it with baggy jeans from brand 69 and cool wraparound shades.
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