Andre Yao, 22, and Emma Shaba, 3 1/2, from Crenshaw by way of Senegal. Andre’s style is “Afro American-centric,” while he says Emma prefers to “freestyle.”
“Fashionista” Konstantine Antoniou, 28, of downtown L.A., wears “mostly high fashion.” He usually wears something “spontaneous and creative and instinctive and impulsive,” but today’s outfit is “more trendy than usual for the art walk.”
Jaime Wong, 32, of downtown L.A., is “ ‘70s all the way” with “casual everyday wear.” She wears a “ ‘70s tweed ‘Almost Famous’[-style] coat” in front of her Raggedy Threads Vintage Shop.
Deborah Vogt, 32, of downtown L.A., hits the “indie-designer-based sample sales” for a look that’s “earthy, funky, but modern off the beaten path.” She likes to “mix vintage with newer stuff.”
“I’ve been modeling since I was 7,” says Alex LiMandri of downtown L.A. He’s wearing a Zara shirt and an H&M jacket. “I’m French and my parents are Italian, so fashion is in my blood. I like to mix H&M and Gucci and Prada. There is no definition of style; style is yourself.”
Cornelius Edwards, 35, and Marie Francisco, 30, both of Los Angeles, say their looks are “urban classic.” He’s wearing an “old-school flimsy Kangol and vintage peacoat.”
“I always like the same stuff,” says Jennifer Ogren-Ngyen. “Pieces from college mixed with pieces I bought last week. Life is too short not to get excited.”
Sonny Valenzuela, who is the designer for both the artwork in the background and for the clothing label Loaded Clothing, stands with Anje Little. Anje is wearing Sonny’s label because “I love how it hangs.” Sonny’s look is “Gang glam.”
Ping Ping Chen, 30, of downtown L.A. is “pretty much girly.” She likes to mix up “fabrics, layers and textures” so that she’s “sparkly disco.” She is pictured in front of her artwork.
“[Today] it’s cold, going for the lumberjack look,” says Rabbit Strawfedora, 25, of downtown L.A., who poses in front of his artwork. Usually, it’s “out-of-hand, controlled chaos.”
“I wear things that affect me,” says Christopher McDonald, of the Old Bank District. “I’m wearing my dad’s jacket that was made for him. Since he passed away, I’m wearing a piece of him.”
On his own style: “Comfortable, dark with a splash of color. That’s kind of like how life is.”
“I make my own fashion,” says Berceste Yener, 34, from Turkey but now in Orange County. “I don’t follow mainstream.” She’s wearing Bebe and clothes from Turkey.