| Owners are calling on designers to
coordinate every facet of their restaurant’s image—including
uniforms
That awkward fashion faux pas—arriving at a party in the
same designer dress as another guest—is now happening in some
of the trendiest restaurants. But these days, it could be the
waiter or hostess who’s sporting the same stylish outfit as
fashion-forward customers, as restaurants increasingly turn to
clothing designers to create their staff uniforms.
Image-conscious operators say it’s a way to integrate the
food, décor and dress into one polished package that attracts
trendsetting diners. As an added perk, staff members are
loving the look. —patricia cobe
Tamarine Palo Alto,
California Owner: Anne Le Designer: Calvin Tran “My
restaurant has an authentic but contemporary Vietnamese menu
with high-style presentation,” says Le. “Plus, we cater to a
cosmopolitan crowd of venture capitalists, lawyers and other
Silicon Valley types. I wanted something a little more cutting
edge,” for the uniforms. Le turned to friend Tran, and the two
agreed that he would create a new uniform for Tamarine—a
modern version of the al gaiy, the traditional “long shirt”
worn by women in Vietnam. Tran translated the look into black
tunics for Tamarine’s hostesses. Le is catering the opening of
Tran’s newest boutique in exchange.
Sascha New
York, New York Owners: Sascha and Latoya Lyon Designer:
Norman Norell The uniforms at Sascha—like the restaurant’s
soaring space and menu’s elegant interpretation of early 20th
century fine dining—are meant to evoke the 1930s era when
Manhattan’s Meatpacking District was in full swing, dining out
was “a huge deal” among New York’s elite and Cuba was the
vacation destination. Latoya collaborated with the designers
and they came up with a sailor-inspired uniform “that’s sexy
and flattering on several body types.” “It reminds me of that
cigarette-girl look from the Stork Club of the ’30s,” she
says. The original design and manufacture cost $40,000.
Providence Los Angeles,
California Owners: Michael Cimarusti and Donato
Poto Designers: Joseph Shuldiner and Dolf Castillo These
designer uniforms are collarless hapi coats—the traditional
garb of a rural Japanese farmer—worn over a black T-shirt and
flat-front pants. “Castillo cut muslin mock-ups from an
antique hapi coat, making it slightly boxier with extended
cuffs,” says Shuldiner, who looked to Cimarusti’s cuisine
(seafood with French/Japanese accents) and the restaurant’s
color palette (burgundy/olive green/ oatmeal) for inspiration.
Seamstresses added a hidden sash inside the waist and lined
the cuffs with different colors to denote servers’ ranks.
Providence’s logo is machine-embroidered on the front. “The
uniforms make a statement but don’t draw attention away from
the food,” says Shuldiner, who worked for free on the designs.
“Our goal was to make the restaurant and the menu the
star.”
Employees
Only New York, New York GM and Partner: Akiva
Elstein Designer: Rogan Gregory Elstein asked Gregory
for a design that echoed the art deco character of the
restaurant and its strong “worker” theme: the restaurant’s
owners also work as employees behind the bar and in the front
and back of the house; the restaurant is an after-hours
destination for industry folks; and the motif draws on the
labor union culture of the 1920s and ’30s. Gregory, who only
charged for materials and labor, came up with a chambray dress
(for female servers only) with a drop waist and blouson top
and a bib collar—a feminine take on traditional ’30s work-wear
that incorporates a bit of the flapper silhouette of the
times.
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