![runway scout runway scout](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/91/29/d8/9129d85fef0360a5bba02bd70a2d9716.png)
Lauren had fun picking apart black- and white-tie dress codoes, playing with ways to make a tuxedo jacket or tails casual through fabrics. A model walks the runway wearing designs by Bille Jacobina at the Ones To Watch show at Fashion Scout during London Fashion Week Spring/Summer collections 2016/2017 on Septemin London. Consider baggy cargo pants and a relaxed blazer made out of herringbone fabric, or the many jackets with tails Lauren created this season out of denim, ivory satin, and, spectacularly, leather. The most interesting developments here are the contrasts. There’s a nice cyclical energy to that, which Lauren clearly relishes, after all, repurposing pre-loved materials is what put him on the map. Through a process called stitchwork, these teensy bits of fabrics are patched together to make a textile that can be used to make a pink jacket for a cowboy. It’s made from scraps of fabric that were discarded to make last season’s pink tuxedos. The spring 2023 lookbook opens with a pale pink trucker jacket. That individualism expresses itself in unexpected ways. “There’s something at the core of the idea that resonates with people that has to do with individualism, and the idea of the figure that doesn’t conform and has the courage to draw their own path,” he says. Instead, his collection, titled Re-construct, taps into his muse’s renegade spirit. It’s not all boots, denim, and big hats (though there is plenty of that). Owned and operated by the City of Bangor, the airport has a single runway measuring 11,440 by 200 ft (3,487 by 61 m). Greg Lauren started spring 2023 by thinking about the cowboy: the archetype, the myth, and the real deal.