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De Plane! De Plane! Seaplane has landed in Southeast Portland. |

COLUMN
TAKE ME HIGHER:AIRLINE CHIC
Forget
PDX. If you want that friendly-skies feeling, check out Southeast's
landing strip for the terminally hip.
by
ELIZABETH DYE
243-2122 ext. 335
A phrase like
"the golden age of travel" hardly conjures a cramped commuter flight
on an MD-80. I know when I get the wanderlust, my imagination tends
to summon methods of conveyance that have long since gone the way
of the dodo. I begin to dream of stately transatlantic steamers
positively packed with handsome strangers (Scotty Fitzgerald stuff)
or a Model T motor cruise along the Columbia Gorge Highway (that's
what the formidable Sam Hill built it for, y'know). Better yet a
Pullman car on the Empire Builder chugging to Chicago on a cool
spring night (ever read Mary McCarthy's "The Man in the Brooks Brothers
Shirt?").
Luxury, leisure
and love affairs weren't the only benefits of such romantic transit.
Think of all the fashion opportunities now vanished--the serge traveling
suit, the duster, kid gloves and goggles, the matched calfskin luggage
sprayed with decals from exotic ports of call. Certainly, travelers
used to look better. Now we wear sneakers to prevent discomfort
when our feet swell in flight.
Neat.
Yet, somehow
air travel has a half-baked glamour all its own, as evidenced by
Keith Lovegrove's remarkable book Airline: Identity, Design and
Culture. Pound for pound, this coffee-table honey is nothing
less than a paean to flotation cushions and the Mile-High Club.
Jammed with fantastic photos of plane interiors, airline flatware
and stewardess couture of yore (who knew that '60s carrier Braniff
had Emilio Pucci stewardess dresses and Alexander Calder designs
on plane exteriors?), it makes you want to return your tray table
to its full upright and locked position.
So what made
20th century airlines so aesthetically ambitious? By the time commercial
air travel gathered speed in the late 1950s, carriers competing
for customers had to be inventive to get people on their planes.
Rather than, say, improving the cuisine or the on-time record, airlines
used design (and the sweet young things wearing the stylish designs)
to differentiate themselves. Looking forward from 1940, the evolution
of cabin crew clothing reflects trends on the ground, as well as
shifting passenger attitudes toward flight. Early uniforms were
stern and militaristic ("We are efficient! We will not crash!").
Fast forward to Pucci's psychedelic designs, which winked at '60s
drug culture, and the Southwest Airlines hot pants and go-go boots
of the early '70s ("don't sweat it, baby, enjoy the ride"). Even
nomenclature--"air hostess," "stewardess," "flight attendant"--changes
in direct ratio to hem length.
But that's all
academic. We can't find much to inspire us in current cabin crew
styles, which tend to reflect the corporate conservatism overtaking
all aspects of the industry (and--duh!--the sexual harassment and
discrimination lawsuits of the '80s might have had something to
do with the disappearance of hot pants). But for leisure, the in-flight
look is hot. Think tall boots (stabilizers), structured frocks and
tunics in primary colors (with clearly marked exits), ripstop fabrics
(in case of turbulence), and sporty arrows reminiscent of runway
markers and safety diagrams.
For a dose of
high-altitude chic in your own hometown, take ground transportation
over to Seaplane, the fashion atelier and showroom recently launched
by Kate Towers and Holly Stalder. This more than worthy inheritrix
of the Kitty Princess space (next to the Aalto Lounge) takes inspiration
from those waterborne miracles of engineering you may remember ferrying
cocaine on Miami Vice episodes. The store strives for a spartan,
space-race aesthetic--molded plastic chairs in serene sherbet shades,
racing stripes on the wall, the current issue of Wallpaper mag
on the coffee table. The all-white dressing room is a onetime meat
locker decorated with original paintings and backlit bubble wrap.
Kate and Holly
feature their own designs, as well as clothing and art by like-minded
locals. Half-finished pieces dress the mannequins in the window,
including a fetching coat made of lushly tactile whorled wool (I'm
sure it will soon have sleeves). Seaplane's clothes are, in Kate's
words, "totally amateur," which means that a unique designer piece
can be yours for a reasonable price, provided you can tolerate a
slightly slanted hem or the occasional raw edge. Seaplane is a store
in progress, but its proprietors are sure of its direction. "I have
grand visions for what this place should look like," says Kate,
after peeling back the turquoise-print curtain to show me some half-done
works hanging in the workroom (if she ever finishes that olive-green
cotton shift with the flounce of asymmetrical decorative stitching,
you should buy it). Meanwhile, there's plenty to delight the flight-minded,
like squared-off mesh shell tops and nylon-strap leather cuffs with
quick-release plastic buckles. You are now free to move about the
aircraft.
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