Wolk Morais Collection 7 runway show
Looks from Wolk Morais Collection 7 presented at the Jeremy Hotel in West Hollywood on June 26, 2018, the same day the label’s shop-in-shop opened in the nearby Fred Segal Sunset store, marking the first bricks-and-mortar outpost for the L.A.-based designers Brian Wolk and Claude Morais.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images) By Adam Tschorn
Handout
Looks from the Wolk Morais Collection 7 runway show on June 26, 2018, at the Jeremy Hotel in West Hollywood.
Black and white geometrics were inspired by pottery designs.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images)The finale of the Wolk Morais Collection 7 runway show.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images)Wolk Morais Collection 7’s color-blocking was inspired by Los Angeles painters of the 1940s, ‘50s and ‘60s.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images)Wolk Morais Collection 7 included lots of riffs on unisex suiting, one of the label’s signatures.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images)Looks from the Wolk Morais Collection 7 runway show.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images)Looks from the Wolk Morais Collection 7 runway show.
(Phillip Faraone / Getty Images)Katherine McNamara, from left, Chandler Kinney, Willow Shields and Georgie Flores were among the attendees at the Wolk Morais Collection 7 runway show.
(Emma McIntyre / Getty Images for Wolk Morais)Designers Claude Morais, left, and Brian Wolk in front of the Fred Segal flagship on Sunset Boulevard, where their Wolk Morais shop-in-shop opened on June 26.
(Emma McIntyre / Getty Images for Wolk Morais)Senior features writer Adam Tschorn is a former small-town newspaper editor, game-show question-and-answer man and fashion scribe who joined the Los Angeles Times in 2007. He currently covers a wide range of pop-culture topics with a focus on cannabis culture. Holding a B.A. in philosophy and an M.A. in journalism, he feels perfectly suited to looking at things, asking “why?” and writing down the answers.