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Accorda Is Making Glamorous Clothes You Can Wear on the Subway

Accorda Is Making Glamorous Clothes You Can Wear on the Subway

Growing up in Richmond, Va., Alex McEachin fell in love with clothes via movie costumes, specifically Cecil Beaton’s for “My Fair Lady” (1964) and “Gigi” (1958) and the tartan ensembles worn by Alicia Silverstone in “Clueless” (1995). For a time, she considered a career in costume design, but after working on a few school productions, she realized she was less interested in interpreting a director’s concept than in coming up with her own. To that end, she moved to New York, where, in 2017, she earned a degree from the Parsons School of Design and landed a job in product development at the fashion brand Proenza Schouler. There, for seven years, she acted as a liaison between designers and producers, shepherding ideas into finished pieces and acquiring, she says, an “almost doctoral level of education in fashion.” Now she’s applying that knowledge to her own creative vision: Accorda, an artistic yet deeply wearable fashion line that launched in February.

McEachin, who is 30 and lives in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood, took the name of her brand from an Italian word that translates roughly to “harmony.” It’s a fitting moniker for a line that gracefully balances disparate aesthetics. Streamlined silhouettes including slim-cut dresses and tailored jumpsuits are imbued with dramatic flourishes like a wide, wavy collar and pleats that fan out from a side seam. Sporty and workwear-inspired details show up in party-ready clothes, including a currant-colored viscose dress with a front zipper and gathered neckline that channels a hoodie; a floor-length black Lurex dress with exaggerated armholes that brings to mind a muscle tee; and a strapless black tweed jumpsuit with oval cutouts that recalls a pair of overalls.

  1. Left: a silk dress with exaggerated shoulders. Le Monde Béryl shoes, $625. Right: a cropped wool jacket, an oversize halter top and a silk bias-cut skirt. Le Monde Béryl shoes.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira
  2. A strapless tweed jumpsuit with cutouts. Jimmy Choo shoes, $975, jimmychoo.com.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira
  3. A sculptural wool vest worn over a strapless wool jumpsuit with cutouts.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira
  4. A crepe slit dress with a gathered neckline.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira
  5. A Lurex dress with exaggerated shoulders and a front zipper.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira
  6. A Lurex knit jacket with a two-way zipper and a pleated side-seam skirt. Le Monde Béryl shoes, $595.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira
  7. The designer Alex McEachin.
    Photograph by Philip Dunlop. Styled by Ben Perreira

Though McEachin avoids stretchy fabrics, considering them “too easy,” her fluid clothes encourage movement — tellingly, the dancer-choreographers Gregory Hines and Trisha Brown influenced her senior thesis collection at Parsons. Imbued with what she calls “informal glamour,” her pieces are also built for city life. As McEachin says, “there’s nothing you can’t take the train in.” She titled her first offering the Dinner Party because, she says, she imagines her friends wearing the clothes to such a gathering, with her acting as host in jeans and the collection’s black Lurex bomber. “You walk in and there’s an immediate reaction,” she says of the textured, light-catching jacket. “Everyone wants to touch it or try it on, but it’s not delicate in any way.”

The New York Times

The New York Times

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