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Zac Posen headed to 'Project Runway'
Noted fashion designer will fill judge Michael Kors'
chair
NEW YORK (AP) -- Zac Posen is in on "Project Runway" -- he'll be
the new featured judge, filling the chair Michael Kors sat in for the show's
first 10 seasons.
"This was an amazing opportunity," Posen said. "I hope I'm here to give a new
perspective to the designers."
Kors isn't "out" -- as host Heidi Klum likes to say to the
fashion-design contestants who get the boot on the granddaddy of fashion reality
TV shows. His schedule didn't allow a commitment, but he will come back as a
guest judge for the season finale, according to a statement for Lifetime TV.
Posen said he learned from Kors. "When I was a guest judge, I saw he was
always a generous, warm mentor."
Posen's best skill to offer the contestants is his sharp eye, he said. Craft
and construction are among his passions, he explained, so nothing gets past him
there.
It's Klum's role in the new lineup to bring the voice of the woman who might
be the eventual customer. Nina Garcia, the fashion director at Marie Claire, has
her editorial eye, and Posen analyzes the specifics of the design, he said.
Posen, however, also sounded a little jealous of Tim Gunn, who has the part
of trusted adviser. "I wanted to be behind the scenes with Tim. ... I was seeing
the clothes on the runway, but Tim had all the background interaction."
The silver lining? Posen said he'll appreciate a little more what the
stylists, editors and retailers are looking for as they sit in the front row for
his own catwalk shows, which last season drew much attention for a model lineup
that included Naomi Campbell, Coco Rocha and Karolina Kurkova -- a
threesome getting their own TV reality show this winter called "The Face" on the
Oxygen network.
Another twist to the revamped "Project Runway," in which the winner gets
$100,000 to start their own brand, is that the contestants compete as teams
instead of individuals.
"You can imagine the designers' reactions when we first told them," Klum, an
executive producer, said, "but it resulted in some really interesting conflicts
and partnerships. And that is how designers work in the real world -- they
do have to work on teams and manage teams -- you get to understand their
personalities more."
Posen said he aims to be a collaborative player and appreciates what everyone
else at his company does, although he is the starting and stopping point of each
look that bears his label.
He'll be at the studio solo next week over the holidays, sketching and
draping fabric with the music "thumping": It's one of the most wonderful times
of the year, he said.