Bankers, dandies and genteel, well-heeled fellows of every stripe, it’s been nice knowing you. If there was one unifying theme of the week, it was that next fall belongs to a different kind of man — the varsity athlete (Brooks Brothers), the rugged woodsman (Michael Bastian), the motorcycle-riding rebel (Mik Cire, William Rast), the urban adventurer (3.1 Phillip Lim), the rural explorer, the hunter, the military veteran, the thief in the night. (When the models at a Thom Browne fashion show manage to look like menacing cat burglars, you know change is afoot.)
They wear soft, unstructured jackets, cardigans and cable knits, they layer on scarves and slip on chunky, butt-kicking boots. They haul rucksacks, cinch in their belted jackets, insulate against the weather, gird themselves for battle and get the job done.
Which made it all the more appropriate that on Feb. 12, this year’s GQ/CFDA Best New Menswear Designer in America award went to Florence, Ala.,-based designer Billy Reid, whose collection, pictured here, presented at Milk Studios, embodied the full range of rough-hewn masculine luxe, with looks labeled “The Woodsman” (a faded plaid mountain coat, with a blanket lining and shearling collar), “The Woodford Reserve Master Distiller” (a dark olive plaid cashmere suit with a railroad stripe shirt) and “Railroad Varsity” (a washed-down, double-breasted shawl collar cardigan, raw selvage denim and an Oxford gray wool twill engineer’s cap — a collaboration with Stetson). (Jonas Gustavsson and Peter Stigter / For The Times)