Chris Roger Fashion Design Baton Rouge

Christopher John Rogers may work in the manner capital of New York as an associate knitwear designer for Diane von Furstenberg, but he's yet a local boy at centre.

Rogers, who grew upwards in Mid City, at present lives in trendy Brooklyn, only he however has a cell telephone with a Baton Rouge number. "That's not going anywhere," he says.

Christopher John Rogers. Photo by Morgan Maher.

A 2012 Baton Rouge Magnet High School graduate, the 23-year-erstwhile is an upward-and-coming way designer receiving national attending for the bold, glamorous designs he's creating both for DVF and for his own label.

Rogers says his creative vision was shaped by his formative years in Louisiana'due south Capital City. "The fine art scene in downtown Baton Rouge and the freewheeling style my friends dressed in middle and loftier school influenced my work," he says. "High heels with casual dresses, evening gowns truncated into blouses with jeans, gym shorts and tees with fancy cocktail bags … The sense of loftier and low actually had an impact on me."

Photo past Faisal Mohammed.

Rogers' luxurious designs were featured in a recent issue of Ebony magazine, and the rapper Eve was photographed wearing his cropped metallic jacket design on the luxury fashion and lifestyle website coveteur.com. Also taking notation of his work are several celebrity stylists who he says have contacted him for "custom work" for their famous clients. Rogers declines to identify these clients only said the involvement has had a positive effect on his designs. "That really kind of encouraged me to push forward with my ain work," he says.

Growing upwards in Baton Rouge, Rogers says he always had an interest in fine art and illustration. He became interested in blueprint after a friend pointed out that the comic book characters they loved e'er wore the aforementioned costumes. He began sketching basic designs for new costumes, making some stylish superhero changes: the tights became shorter and the wear colors switched. That led to his interest in manner and learning most the "transformative and narrative aspects that clothes can impart upon the wearer," Rogers says.

As seniors at Baton Rouge Magnet High Schoolhouse, Rogers and his friend Julie Liu partnered to create a drove of womenswear for the schoolhouse'south annual fashion evidence. The pair combined elements of vintage wearable and small pieces of fabric, all in shades of blackness and white, for their manus-sewn collection called "Loba," which was inspired past Colombian popular star Shakira's 2009 "She Wolf" song.

Rogers' collection bridges the gap betwixt eveningwear and more utilitarian article of clothing with fresh silhouettes including this play on the classic white button-downward shirt. Photo past Faisal Mohammed.

That parlayed into showing their collection at New Orleans Style Week in 2011, an experience Rogers remembers every bit "eye-opening." New Orleans Manner Calendar week helped him acquire nigh time management and piqued his involvement in color and proportion, and it besides helped him interpret "all the things I beloved about painting and illustration into clothes," he says.

Rogers moved on to pursue his passion for fashion at the renowned Savannah College of Art and Design, and while on school breaks, he interned with New York designers Bill Blass, Tanya Taylor and Rosie Assoulin.

Working for women really helped Rogers understand what women want in their wardrobes, he says. "You really have to brand clothes that people are going to desire to vesture and tin afford to wear," he says.

While still in school in 2015, Rogers entered a competition sponsored by Saga Furs where he designed a wardrobe utilizing fox and mink furs to create a capsule collection—a wardrobe fabricated up of a few essential items of clothing that never become out of style. He won the contest and was flown to Kingdom of denmark to learn more virtually progressive fur techniques and applications. He too won a sponsorship contest from Swarovski by creating style sketches featuring innovative uses of the crystals.

Rogers walks the runway subsequently showing his drove at the Savannah Higher of Art and Design's Fashion Weekend in 2016. Photo by Corey Brooks.

Rogers' senior thesis at SCAD included a article of clothing line inspired past midcentury art and indigenous cultures around the globe while reconciling the ideas of traditional haute couture and utilitarian clothing that people wear every mean solar day. Today, his ain eponymous clothing line is based on these same inspirations and his endeavors to join items that typically don't go together "in a garment to tell a story," he says.

His line is for anyone who gravitates towards the clothes, he says.

Rogers' future goals include designing more collections and becoming a fixture on the catwalks of New York Way Week. He hopes to take his collections at his favorite stores including Barneys New York and Fivestory.

Until and so, he enjoys honing his arts and crafts in the studios of legendary designer Diane von Furstenberg's namesake company. On any given day, he might search for inspiration for the latest drove, assist a stylist for a manner testify, or assistance with model casting.

"It's fun to get to work every day," says Rogers. "Everyone I work with is really supportive and encouraging and I'g learning a lot, which is of import."

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