
Indigenous fashion week in Santa Fe, New Mexico, explores heritage in silk and hides
A
fashion show
affiliated with the century-old Santa Fe Indian Market is collaborating this year with a counterpart from Vancouver, Canada, in a spirit of
Indigenous
solidarity and artistic freedom. A second, independent runway show at a rail yard district in the city has nearly doubled the bustle of models, makeup and final fittings.
Elements of Friday's collections from six Native designers ran the gamut from silk parasols to a quilted hoodie, knee-high fur boots and suede leather earrings that dangled to the waste. Models on the Santa Fe catwalks include professionals, dancers and Indigenous celebrities from TV and the political sphere.
Clothing and accessories rely on materials ranging from of wool trade cloth to animal hides, featuring traditional beadwork, ribbons and jewelry with some contemporary twists that include digitally rendered designs and urban Native American streetwear from Phoenix.
'Native fashion, it's telling a story about our understanding of who we are individually and then within our communities,' said Taos Pueblo fashion designer Patricia Michaels, of 'Project Runway' reality TV fame. 'You're getting designers from North America that are here to express a lot of what inspires them from their own heritage and culture.'
Santa Fe style
The stand-alone spring fashion week for
Indigenous design
is a recent outgrowth of haute couture at the summer Santa Fe Indian Market, where teeming crowds flock to outdoor displays by individual sculptors, potters, jewelers and painters.
Designer Sage Mountainflower remembers playing in the streets at Indian Market as a child in the 1980s while her artist parents sold paintings and beadwork. She forged a different career in environmental administration, but the world of high fashion called to her as she sewed tribal regalia for her children at home and, eventually, brought international recognition.
At age 50, Mountainflower on Friday presented her 'Taandi' collection — the Tewa word for 'Spring' — grounded in satin and chiffon fabric that includes embroidery patterns that invoke her personal and family heritage at the Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo in the Upper Rio Grande Valley.
'I pay attention to trends, but a lot of it's just what I like,' said Mountainflower, who also traces her heritage to Taos Pueblo and the Navajo Nation. 'This year it's actually just looking at springtime and how it's evolving. … It's going to be a colorful collection.'
More than 20 designers are presenting at the invitation of the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts.
Fashion plays a prominent part in Santa Fe's renowned arts ecosystem, with Native American vendors each day selling jewelry in the central plaza, while the Institute for American Indian Arts delivers fashion-related college degrees in May.
This week, a gala at the New Mexico governor's mansion welcomed fashion designers to town, along with social mixers at local galleries and bookstores and plans for pop-up fashion stores to sell clothes fresh off the fashion runway.
International vision
A full-scale collaboration with Vancouver Indigenous Fashion Week is bringing a northern, First Nations flair to the gathering this year with many designers crossing into the U.S. from Canada.
Secwépemc artist and fashion designer Randi Nelson traveled to Santa Fe from the city of Whitehorse in the Canadian Yukon to present collections forged from fur and traditionally cured hides — she uses primarily elk and caribou. The leather is tanned by hand without chemicals using inherited techniques and tools.
'We're all so different,' said Nelson, a member of the Bonaparte/St'uxwtéws First Nation who started her career in jewelry assembled from quills, shells and beads. 'There's not one pan-Indigenous theme or pan-Indigenous look. We're all taking from our individual nations, our individual teachings, the things from our family, but then also recreating them in a new and modern way.'
April Allen, an Inuk designer from the Nunatsiavut community on the Labrador coast of Canada, presented a mesh dress of blue water droplets. Her work delves into themes of nature and social advocacy for access to clean drinking water.
Vocal music accompanied the collection — layers of wordless, primal sound from musician and runway model Beatrice Deer, who is Inuit and Mohawk.
Urban Indian couture
Phoenix-based jeweler and designer Jeremy Donavan Arviso said the runway shows in Santa Fe are attempting to break out of the strictly Southwest fashion mold and become a global venue for Native design and collaboration. A panel discussion Thursday dwelled on the threat of new tariffs and prices for fashion supplies — and tensions between disposable fast fashion and Indigenous ideals.
Arviso is bringing a street-smart aesthetic to two shows at the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts runway and a warehouse venue organized by Amber-Dawn Bear Robe, from the Siksika Nation.
'My work is definitely contemporary, I don't choose a whole lot of ceremonial or ancestral practices in my work,' said Arviso, who is Diné, Hopi, Akimel O'odham and Tohono O'odham, and grew up in Phoenix. 'I didn't grow up like that. … I grew up on the streets.'
Arviso said his approach to fashion resembles music sampling by early rap musicians as he draws on themes from major fashion brands and elements of his own tribal cultures. He invited Toronto-based ballet dancer Madison Noon for a 'beautiful and biting' performance to introduce his collection titled Vision Quest.
Santa Fe runway models will include former U.S. Interior Secretary
Deb Haaland
of Laguna Pueblo, adorned with clothing from Michaels and jewelry by Zuni Pueblo silversmith Veronica Poblano.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Giant trolls built from trash want to save humans from themselves
WOODSIDE, Calif. (AP) — Nestled in forests around the world, a gentle army of giant wooden trolls want to show humans how to live better without destroying the planet. The Danish recycle artist Thomas Dambo and his team have created 170 troll sculptures from discarded materials such as wooden pallets, old furniture and wine barrels. Twelve years after he started the 'Trail of a Thousand Trolls' project, his sculptures can be found in more than 20 countries and 21 U.S. states. Each year Dambo and his team make about 25 new trolls, which stand up to 40 feet (12 meters) tall. 'I believe that we can make anything out of anything,' said Dambo, speaking from his farm outside Copenhagen. 'We are drowning in trash. But we also know that one man's trash is another man's treasure.' An installation of six sculptures called 'Trolls Save the Humans' is on display at Filoli, a historic estate with 650 acres of forests and gardens in Woodside, California, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of San Francisco. 'They bring us back to be connected to the earth and to nature,' said Jeannette Weederman, who was visiting Filoli with her son in July. Dambo's trolls each have their own personality and story. At Filoli, the troll Ibbi Pip builds birdhouses, Rosa Sunfinger plants flowers and Kamma Can makes jewelry from people's garbage. 'Each of them has a story to tell,' said Filoli CEO Kara Newport. 'It inspires people to think of their own stories, what kind of creatures might live in their woods and make that connection to living beings in nature.' Dambo's trolls don't like humans because they waste nature's resources and pollute the planet. The mythical creatures have a long-term perspective because they live for thousands of years and have witnessed the destructive force of human civilizations. But the six young trolls at Filoli have a more optimistic view of human nature. They believe they can teach people how to protect the environment. 'They want to save the humans. So they do this by teaching them how to be better humans — be humans that don't destroy nature,' said Dambo, 45, a poet and former hip hop artist. 'They hope to save them from being eaten by the older trolls.' Dambo's trolls are hidden in forests, mountains, jungles and grasslands throughout Europe and North America as well as countries such as Australia, Chile and South Korea. Most were built with local materials and assembled on-site by his team of craftsmen and artists with help from local volunteers. 'My exhibition now has four and a half million visitors a year globally, and it's all made out of trash together with volunteers,' said Dambo, a poet and former rap artist. 'That is such a huge proof of concept of why we should not throw things out, but why we should recycle it.'


San Francisco Chronicle
6 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
'The Osbournes' changed Ozzy's image from grisly to cuddly, and changed reality TV
LOS ANGELES (AP) — There was Ozzy before 'The Osbournes' and Ozzy after 'The Osbournes.' For much of his life, the Black Sabbath founder and legendary heavy metal frontman who died at 76 on Tuesday was known to much of the public as a dark purveyor of deeds ranging from decadent to downright Satanic. Wild stories followed him. Clergy condemned him. Parents sued him. But with the debut of his family reality show on MTV, the world learned what those who'd been paying closer attention already knew: Ozzy Osbourne was soft and fuzzy under the darkness. During its relatively short run from 2002 to 2005, 'The Osbournes' became a runaway hit and made stars of his wife Sharon and kids Jack and Kelly. But more than that, it made a star of the domesticated version of Ozzy Osbourne, and in the process changed reality TV. In 2025, when virtually every variety of celebrity has had a reality show, it's hard to see what a novelty the series was. MTV sold it as television's first 'reality sitcom." 'Just the idea of the Black Sabbath founder, who will forever be known for biting the head off a bat during a 1982 concert, as a family man seems strange,' Associated Press Media Writer David Bauder wrote on the eve of 'The Osbournes' premiere. But on the show, Osbourne was "sweetly funny — and under everything a lot like the put-upon dads you've been seeing in television sitcoms for generations.' Danny Deraney, a publicist who worked with Osbourne and was a lifelong fan, said of the show, "You saw some guy who was curious. You saw some guy who was being funny. You just saw pretty much the real thing.' 'He's not the guy that everyone associates with the 'Prince of Darkness' and all this craziness,' Deraney said. "And people loved him. He became so affable to so many people because of that show. As metal fans, we knew it. We knew that's who he was. But now everyone knew.' Reality shows at the time, especially the popular competition shows like 'Survivor,' thrived on heightened circumstances. For 'The Osbournes,' no stakes were too low. They sat on the couch. They ate dinner. The now-sober Ozzy sipped Diet Cokes, and urged his kids not to indulge in alcohol or drugs when they went out. He struggled to find the History Channel on his satellite TV. They feuded with the neighbors because, of all things, their loud music was driving the Osbournes crazy. 'You were seeing this really fascinating, appealing, bizarre tension between the public persona of a celebrity and their mundane experiences at home,' said Kathryn VanArendonk, a critic for Vulture and New York Magazine. The sitcom tone was apparent from its first moments. 'You turn on this show and you get this like little jazzy cover theme song of the song 'Crazy Train,' and there's all these bright colors and fancy editing, and we just got to see this like totally 180-degree different side of Ozzy which was just surprising and incredible to watch," said Nick Caruso, staff editor at TVLine. Like family sitcoms, the affection its leads clearly had for each other was essential to its appeal. 'For some reason, we kind of just fell in love with them the same way that we grew to love Ozzy and Sharon as like a marital unit," Caruso said. What was maybe strangest about the show was how not-strange it felt. The two Ozzies seemed seamless rather than contradictory. 'You're realizing that these things are personas and that all personas are these like elaborate complex mosaics of like who a person is,' VanArendonk said. 'The Osbournes' had both an immediate and a long-term affect on the genre. Both Caruso and VanArendonk said shows like 'Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica,' which followed then-pop stars Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey after they married, was clearly a descendant. And countless other shows felt its influence, from 'The Kardashians' to 'The Baldwins' — the recently debuted reality series on Alec Baldwin, his wife Hilaria and their seven kids. ''The Baldwins' as a reality show is explicitly modeled on 'The Osbournes,' VanArendonk said. 'It's like you have these famous people and now you get to see what their home lives are like, what they are like as parents, what they're eating, what they are taking on with them on vacation, who their pets are, and they are these sort of cuddly, warm, eccentric figures.'


New York Post
8 hours ago
- New York Post
How Ozzy Osbourne became the original King of reality TV with 'The Osbournes'
It was a crazy train. On Tuesday, Ozzy Osbourne died at age 76, five years after he announced his Parkinson's disease diagnosis in January 2020. He passed away, 'surrounded by love,' his family said in a statement to The Post. The rock star was the Prince of Darkness, the father of heavy metal, but perhaps the strangest Ozzy milestone is starring on one of the first reality TV shows – with the seminal series, 'The Osbournes,' which aired on MTV from 2002 to 2005. Sue Kolinsky, who worked as a producer on 'The Osbournes,' exclusively told The Post, 'We realized early on that anything Ozzy did was going to be funny. Like making a milkshake – we were gonna have [that be] three minutes of an episode. He was so funny, and he had no idea how funny he was.' 12 Ozzy, Sharon, Jack, and Kelly on 'The Osbournes' in 2003. AP She added, 'No one ever said to Ozzy, 'hey, can you say that again?' Whatever you shot, that's what we had to use. And that's what made the show so brilliant, because it really was real.' Kolinsky continued, 'Everything he did was kind of like a crazy rocker version of 'Father Knows Best.' And he was kind.' Jason Mittell, professor of Film and Media Culture at Middlebury College, exclusively told The Post, 'It's pretty amazing that it started in 2002, which was really the very beginning of the reality TV boom. 'Survivor' and 'Big Brother' had only been on for a couple of years at that point.' He explained that when 'The Osbournes' premiered, 'There was a real sense at the time that reality TV was a passing fad.' 12 Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne at the MTV EMA's 2014 at The Hydro on November 9, 2014 in Glasgow, Scotland. Dave Hogan/MTV 2014 With 'The Osbournes' diving into the family's life and following them as characters, 'that really had not been done before on TV,' he shared. It was swiftly followed by Paris Hilton's 'The Simple Life' in 2003, and the reign of the Kardashian family, which first launched on TV when 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians' premiered in 2007, just two years after 'The Osbournes' ended. The show followed the outrageous antics and home life of the Black Sabbath frontman, his wife Sharon, 72, his daughter Kelly, 40, and son Jack, 39. The couple's other daughter, Aimee, 41, chose not to participate in the series. 12 Sharon Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne, Jack Osbourne, Minnie, Kelly Osbourne, Robert Osbourne in 2003. ©MTV/courtesy Everett 'He and the family were the ones who really put reality TV on the map. I believe the reason why the show was so successful was because they really were a loving family,' Kolinsky said. 'And we got such creative freedom because it was new. I don't know what other family in the rock world would have been able to pull this off.' She added, 'The family was just so gracious with giving us access to everything about their lives. They let us film them when they woke up in the morning. They let us film them in every situation that they were going through. They never said, 'No, we don't want to see ourselves in that light.'' 12 Ozzy Osbourne in Hollywood in 2024. ALEXJR / BACKGRID Kolinsky recalled an incident when Ozzy and Sharon were leaving on a trip, but 'The Osbournes' wasn't allowed to film on a plane. So, the creative team filmed the pair sitting in 'a black SUV that kind of looked like a private plane,' she recalled. 'And we found shots of a pilot's hand punching in instruments. We used that and cut to his assistant. So, we made his assistant the pilot, and tilted the shot, to make it look like the car was taking off.' She recalled showing Ozzy the footage before it aired, 'and he was on the floor, hysterical. Like 'Oh my God, I can't believe you made the car a plane and used Tony as the pilot!' At the time, 'The Osbournes' was the highest-rated show in MTV's history, drawing over 5 million viewers per episode. 12 Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne at their home on December 31, 2004 in Buckinghamshire, England. Getty Images During a 2021 appearance on the 'Armchair Expert' podcast, Kelly said that when 'The Osbournes' began, 'No one had ever done what we did before. So as we were doing it, we didn't know either. We didn't know what they were going to use, and what they weren't, because they filmed everything.' She recalled that when the show premiered, 'The next day, everything changed. It was like Beatlemania, except for 'The Osbournes.'' In 2002, the Kardashians and 'Real Housewives' weren't even a twinkle in TV producers' eyes. 12 Khloe Kardashian, Kris Jenner, Kourtney Kardashian, Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner, Kendall Jenner on 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians' in 2013. Brian Bowen Smith/E! Reality TV existed – that was the year 'The Bachelor' premiered, too – but it was mostly competition shows like 'American Idol' or ones about niche industries, such as 'Monster Garage.' Today, fame-hungry people let viewers into their lives all the time – on shows like 'Vanderpump Rules' or 'Below Deck.' A slew of celebs also have their own reality shows, such as Sylvester Stallone in the 2023 Paramount+ show 'The Family Stallone,' Denise Richards (her first of several shows, 'Denise Richards: It's Complicated,' premiered in 2008). Alec and Hilaria Baldwin currently have TLC's 'The Baldwins.' 12 Kim Kardashian,, Kourtney, Khloe, and Kris Jenner on 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians.' 12 Mia Regan, Romeo Beckham, Cruz Beckham, Harper Beckham, David Beckham, Victoria Beckham, Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz attend the Netflix 'Beckham' UK Premiere at The Curzon Mayfair on October 3, 2023 in London, England. WireImage David and Victoria Beckham also saw viral success with their 2023 Netflix series, 'Beckham.' But, the Osbournes 'set the template,' Mittell explained. About Ozzy's unlikely path from heavy metal rocker to reality TV star, he said, 'I think a lot of [the show's appeal] was just the combination of the sense of, here's this guy who is known for these massive rock shows and this flamboyant onscreen personality and the piercing voice. And here he is, just watching history documentaries. Or, wandering around the house, and living the normal family life.' He added, 'So I think that was a big part of [the show's success], was the idea that it was such an unusual contrast to what we would think the life of an iconic rocker would be.' 12 Annemarie Wiley, Erika Jayne, Dorit Kemsley, Kyle Richards, Garcelle Beauvais, Sutton Stracke, Crystal Minkoff on 'The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' in 2023. Emily Shur/Bravo In a 2019 SiriusXM interview, reporter Jess Cagle told Sharon, 'Without you, you realize, there would be no Kardashians.' The family matriarch replied, 'It was really Ozzy. He was the one that was in the public eye. He was the celebrity, and he's the one that took all the risks….I think it paid off for Ozzy because people saw how funny he is. He's just hysterical, and a teddy bear.' 'The Osbournes' showed the metal star as a foul-mouthed loving father who was often amusingly bewildered by mundane daily life. 12 Sharon Osbourne, Kelly Osbourne, Jack Osbourne and Ozzy Osbourne appear as guest presenters on MTV TRL at The Penthouse, Leicester Square on December 17, 2004 in London. Getty Images For instance, in the series premiere episode, Ozzy struggled to figure out how to use a TV remote. 'I'm a very simple man. You've got to have computer knowledge to turn the f–king TV on and off,' he said. 'I pressed this one button…I'm going: 'What is this? Where am I, man?'' 'He just didn't really care that much about doing anything embarrassing,' Mittell told The Post. 12 The show only lasted four seasons. Getty Images Cameron Glendenning, who became a camera operator on 'The Osbournes,' told The Post that Ozzy would hang out in the garage with the show's crew at night when he was bored, and he'd prank fans who would turn up at his gate by turning the sprinklers on them. 'He'd come in there and he would be like, 'Oh yeah, let's get him! Let's go get him,'' he recalled. To Glendenning, it was just another day in the office. 'He's a f–king rock legend and we were just a bunch of kids in his garage shooting a TV show about his life and he would like break that fourth wall, walking in the garage, and we would all, you be like, 'Oh s–t! The boss is here,' but you know he was just so funny,' he added. 12 Ozzy has mixed feelings about his time on television. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images The 'War Pigs' singer had mixed feelings about his own show, which is why it lasted only four seasons, despite its outsized impact on TV history. 'I don't know how the Kardashians have done it for so long — it sent us crazy at the end,' Ozzy recounted in January 2023. 'I am not sorry I did it, but after three or four years I said, 'Do you know what, we're going to lose somebody because it is getting too crazy. There is rock 'n' roll fame, which is pretty intense, but that Osbourne level was just unbelievable.' Kolinsky remembers the show as being 'part of something so special, and so unique, and so iconic.' She recalled an incident where she felt the show's impact. Shortly after it premiered, the producers went out to the House of Blues. There were no seats available, but when it came out that they worked on 'The Osbournes,' they were swiftly escorted to the venue's VIP section. 'That was the effect that show had on people. Everybody wanted to know you. [Ozzy] united different generations. The fact that he was a heavy metal rocker didn't dismay an older crowd from being hooked on the show. And, to so many people who didn't know him from his music, he was just this funny TV dad.'