Designer comes back to the beach
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Alicia Robinson
In 20 years, Patrick Robinson has gone from creating wildly colored
surf shorts with self-taught sewing skills to reviving the renowned
designer label Perry Ellis.
This weekend, the Orange County native is back in Newport Beach,
where he used to surf every day wearing the shorts he made. He’s
making his sole personal appearance to promote his latest collections
for Perry Ellis on Saturday at Fashion Island’s Bloomingdale’s store.
“This is home, and I really haven’t been back since I moved to New
York,” Robinson said.
Such a visit is a rarity for Bloomingdale’s in Newport Beach, and
about 150 customers are expected to turn out for the event, store
spokeswoman Erin Bianchi said.
“Most of the time, designers of his caliber will go to our New
York store or our L.A. store,” she said. “He said he wanted to go
home to Newport Beach.”
Describing himself as “an artistic kid” who liked to create
clothes and furniture, Robinson said when he was a teenager he and
his friends wanted more exciting surf shorts, so he just plunged in
and made them even though he didn’t really know how.
“There was no logical reason for it,” he said. “It was just an
impulse, and I did it.”
That same sort of haphazard ambition propelled him quickly to the
top of a career in design -- after his father talked him out of
becoming a doctor. Robinson attended New York’s Parsons School of
Design and its Paris branch, where he worked for design houses
Givenchy and Patrick Kelly. At the age of 24, he landed a job as
worldwide design director for Giorgio Armani.
After a stint at Anne Klein, he started his own company and
operated it for five years, but he found it too difficult to run both
the business and creative ends and he never found the right partner
to share the work, he said.
“I was poor because I put every cent I made back into the
business, and it was a constant struggle to make ends meet,” he said.
He had just closed that business and started designing furniture
when he was recruited to be creative director for Perry Ellis, a
dream job for him.
The company was basically rudderless after founder Perry Ellis
died, Robinson said, and his job was to steer it back to success.
And he thinks he’s done that, especially with his last two
collections, which have brought him a flurry of media attention.
Robinson was just named one of America’s favorite designers by
Harper’s Bazaar and People magazine called him someone to watch,
Bianchi said.
Robinson said his latest collection reflects the essence of the
Perry Ellis label -- chic, charming and optimistic. The clothes
incorporate his California background, with spring colors such as
lilac and pistachio, and his New York design sensibilities, with
trench coats, wide-legged trousers and ruffled skirts.
“I think it’s just a great exposure to a line, and if you have a
passion for fashion, it’s always great to see the face behind the
creation,” Bianchi said.
Patrick Robinson will be at Bloomingdale’s, 701 Newport Drive, from 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday. To attend the event, call (949)729-6626.
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