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The event also highlighted FSF’s four scholar finalists, who presented their respective case studies to the Swag stimulus things to do in Texas overheat shirt besides I will buy this audience, each addressing a major opportunity to change the fashion industry for the better, ranging from sustainability to accessibility. The finalists included Olivia Baba, Washington University in St. Louis; Clay Lute, LIM College; Sofia Enriquez, University of Florida; and Julian Tong, University of Minnesota. Lute, the FSF Class of 2023 Virgil Abloh™ “Post-Modern” Scholar, was later awarded the $25,000 Chairman’s Award. “May we all try to do just a little of what [Abloh] did to keep our future in good hands,” shared Wintour. Notable guests supporting the work of the students included supermodel and host Karlie Kloss, Shannon Abloh, Martha Stewart, Tommy Hilfiger, Sergio Hudson, Heron Preston, Todd Snyder, Phillip Lim, Linda Fargo, Emily Bode, and Rickie de Sole.



A trip to Miss Ronnie’s place will have you asking questions. The first of which may come littered with expletives as you dodge hot tub-sized potholes on the Swag stimulus things to do in Texas overheat shirt besides I will buy this winding, wild drive, searching for an olive-brown gate that seems to have been swallowed by tropical vegetation. Where the hell is this place? Just as I’m about to give up—phones are no help here—I pull onto an unassuming dirt path and spot a long rope attached to a bell. Ringing it alerts a small herd of goats (along with staff). Finally, it appears, I’ve made it. Like everything at East Winds Cove, the design of this experience is very much intentional. The lush compound in which the beloved Jamaican resort sits—also the backdrop to a spring fashion story by Nadine Ijewere and Gabriela Karefa-Johnson in Vogue’s April issue—is both carefully curated and remarkably unfussy. A peek inside the mind, perhaps, of Miss Ronnie herself. “I really have to feel a place,” she tells me after I arrive. “I enjoy practical, uncomplicated design and it’s especially necessary in an environment that is so visibly arresting. Better to embrace that, the nature, rather than to compete with it.” Courtesy of East Winds CoveNot quite a boutique hotel and yet not entirely a personal design project either, Ronnie’s place sits—as so many things in Port Antonio, Jamaica do—in the sublime in-between. You may find yourself wondering if you’re here to listen to the lazy lapping of the lagoon, to appreciate the subtle schooling in bohemian-chic design, to try the breakfast smoothies freshly blended from local fruits, or simply to enjoy the casual intimacy of a spontaneous communal dinner with a few of Miss Ronnie’s local friends. Miss Ronnie, donning an apron and passing a platter of the best fried chicken you’ve ever inhaled, seems to know the answer: yes to all of the above.


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