Fashion Flashback: Norma Kamali’s Parachute Collection

Image courtesy of Mark Seliger

Fashion Reverie looks back at Norma Kamali’s iconic parachute collection. Since the late 1960s Norma Kamali has pushed the proverbial fashion envelope, using such non-traditional fabrics as mud cloth, chenille bed spreads and tablecloth as the material for her cutting-edge collections.

In the mid-70s, Kamali explored the concept of garments made with parachute fabric.  “In the early 70s, Victor Hugo, assistant to Halston’s creative director, gave me a wonderful gift of an all-silk parachute,” Norma explains. “It was a vintage parachute from the Korean War … I promised I would make him a jumpsuit from the parachute and I did, but I also made skirts, jackets, gowns, big bags, pants, swimsuits, tops, and just about anything you can think of.”

Norma Kamail spring 2012

Over the past three decades, garments with a parachute aesthetic and made out of parachute fabric have become one of Norma Kamala’s biggest selling items. And for spring 2012, Kamali re-introduced her parachute aesthetic in a limited edition cult collection featuring frothy frocks, fishtail dresses and camisoles.

—Staff

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