MAURICE MALONE

Detroit Designer
Living His Dream
BY CHERYL
HAZELL
At first glance Maurice
Malone, his trademark locks recently lopped off, seems quiet,
soft-spoken. "I'm going for the nappy afro look," he
explains, his brown hands wrapped around a freshly popped Heineken
as we relax on the rooftop patio of a popular Queen West club
and restaurant. This self-taught progressive 35-year-old, one
of the Council of Fashion Designers of America's most promising
designers, stands squarely up against other cosmopolitan creators
with much to say when it comes to urban fashion. It's a tough
world out there but Malone has been doing it his way from the
get-go with the constant support of loyal buyers who loved his
style.
"I first started by making a hat I had seen that I couldn't
buy," he remembers with a smile. "Then I started making
other outfits and people started buying them and after a couple
of months I'm like `Hey, being a designer is all right, too.'"
When I look back 15 years ago I guess I'm living my dreams now
because I did everything. The only things I thought about were
being on the big runway shows in NYC and driving a nice convertible
sports car."
Runway shows? Top models have
flaunted his fashions on the catwalk of die-to-be-shown-there
collection gatherings where top designers, fashion editors, stylists,
and photographers converge several times a year. Convertible
sports car? His custom-designed titanium blue Ferrari Spider
parked out front was hot enough for passersby to stop and take
a long hard look at.
Not one to be put in a box, Maurice tries to hold stereotypes
at bay and going haute couture has been one way to do it. "It's
what I enjoy doing and something I have a talent for and like
it doesn't matter if, the way I do things, if everyone's picking
it up or not. I know the consumers want it. I know there's a
market." There certainly is considering that people of color
are known for their dramatic expressions of individuality fuelling
the desire to be draped in the identifiable cultural garb of
the up-and-about. And if his company's target market is the well-rounded
brother or sister who frequent art exhibits, restaurants, or
people who travel a lot, then well-rounded we should all become
if only to don a Malone.
"The best way I can describe it is, I'm my own customer
and my lifestyle is everything from jeans to suits. And I thought
about it, like what consumer is from this level to that level."
And even if high prices keep black designers under a cloud of
stiff competition the brand of the black urban male is magnetic.
"Even the white kids want what the black kids are designing,"
Maurice acknowledges says with a nod. Out of the 32 million African-Americans
in the United States there are less than 250 industrial black
designers in America to serve them, proving that there is room
for growth and creativity.
Orlando Moseley, Toronto representative for the Maurice Malone
group of companies agrees. "Maurice is a total go-getter
whose creativity is apparent in the photographs that are in his
ads and through the innovative way he deals with fabrics. Malone
is the only black urban designer who owns 51% of his company.
He's the dude next door, down to earth. And he's opened doors
for many people, especially folks from Detroit, who are on the
fashion and music scene."
And as far as people "on
the scene" go, "We loan clothes to just about everybody
in the business," says Malone. But this season even non-celebs
can bank on being seen in more Malone creations now that the
new designs are upon us and the jeans have taken on a new name,
MoJeans.
The inspiration for Malone's Fall 2000 collection was textures
and colors with an active, young, trend-setting crowd in mind.
"I wanted to be all over the board," Maurice reflects.
"Make it bright with classic fall hues. We wanted mainly
the fabric to have a look and feel to it to be a little different.
We wanted to mix synthetic fabric with natural fibers."
Two favorites are the men's cashmere mushroom tweed full-length
coat with matching flat front trouser worn with a midnight blue
crinkled cotton shirt. And for women? A honeycomb knit top and
camel lace up pant with faux snake detail topped by a strawberry
fields pony coat was definitely worth a second and third look.
Maurice is top notch when it comes to celebrating modern clothing
design but this major player also has designs on being a record
company magnate in the hip hop community. Having different expectations
of himself has Maurice looking to be on another level. "We
also have a record label called Hostile Takeover," he said
above pulsating reggae rhythms. The first single came out last
October from a group from Harlem named B.A.G.S or Bullets And
Gun Smoke. They debuted at #17 on Hot Rap Singles and made it
all the way up to #11. This September, we're dropping our second
single from an artist, RUSH, It's Like That - from the
compilation album featuring the six other groups that are on
the label. The compilation should be out in October or November.
Not to be overlooked is Proof, a Detroiter, Dr. Dre's and Eminem's
hype man, and free-styling champion of the Source Magazine who
will also be bringing out a smash single for release on Hostile
Takeover record label.
Simply put, Malone
is making his dreams a reality
Tell
us what you think. word@wordmag.com
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