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Brandice Daniel Celebrates 15 years of Fashion, Diversity, and Designers of Color

Memphian Brandice Daniel is the CEO and Founder of Harlem’s Fashion Row (HFR) and the nonprofit Icon360. Currently celebrating its 15th anniversary, HFR is known for holding a number of events such as “The Prelude,” which is a kickoff to New York Fashion Week, and a “Black History Month: Fashion Summit,” which has included speakers such as Lindsay Peoples Wagner and Tom Ford. The Memphis Flyer sat down with Daniel to talk about her journey and diversity efforts in the fashion industry.

Memphis Flyer: Tell us a little bit about yourself

Brandice: I am Brandice Daniel. I manage two companies, Harlem’s Fashion Row and Icon360. At HFR we act as a bridge between designers of color, and brands. We do that through collaborations with brands and brand strategy. With Icon360 we provide funding to HBCU fashion departments. We also provide funding to designers or color.

How did you get into fashion, and at what point did you realize that you could play an integral role in making a change?

My first real, fashion, corporate job was in Memphis. I worked at Catherine’s, which used to be on Knight Arnold. I started there in allocations, and that was my first experience. I started HFR in 2007, and in 2009 I started to do some research and realized that less than on percent of designers sold in major department stores were designers of colors. Within that same group, African Americans spend around 22 billion dollars on apparel. That was when I decided, not that I was necessarily going to make a change, but I knew I had to try.

I know you said you started in 2007, but did you have something that actually pushed you to do that?

Honestly, it was just an idea I had to do a fashion show in Harlem. There were all these incredible Black-owned boutiques that were popping up in Harlem, and they were luxury boutiques. That was definitely a catalyst, I think, to the idea of starting HFR. The first fashion show we did was not perfect, but it was done. The planning of that event was when I started to get a much clearer vision as to where this was going to go.

You said the first fashion show that you all did wasn’t perfect, so what was it like to look back at the fashion show from 2007 and to now be celebrating your 15th anniversary?

Oh my gosh, every time I look at pictures from that show or anything from that show, I’m so excited because it wasn’t perfect, but it was perfect. It was taking an idea and actually seeing that idea in a physical form. It’ still one of my proudest moments. That very first event. It makes me quite emotional, quite honestly, because I didn’t even understand what was going to come from that.

Is there a special reason why you decided to come back to Memphis for the fashion show?

Every five years I’ve committed to doing a fashion show or event in Memphis. I often see people leave their homes, and go and do something great in another city, but they never bring it back to their city. So since the very beginning of HFR, every five years I’m going to bring what I do in New York to Memphis. We did our 5th year on South Main, and our 10th year we did at Clayborne Temple, so I’m excited about our 15th. I’m excited to bring what HFR does back to my city.

How would you describe the fashion and creative culture of Memphis?

I know that the creative community in Memphis is so inspiring and so exciting. Especially this new generation of creatives in Memphis. I just love what I’m seeing. I recently spoke at “A Great Day In Memphis,” and I got a chance to hear Carmeon Hamilton, Kameron Whalum, Chassidy Jade, and Victoria Young on a panel, and I was just so inspired by them and what’s happening. So many people are finally embracing the arts and you know Memphis has such a rich history and culture in the arts. We’ve got deep, deep roots in the arts. For fashion, I’m excited about the opportunity and where it can go in Memphis.

You’ve done a lot of work to improve diversity efforts in fashion. What has changed in the past 15 years? What areas still need improvement?

When I first started HFR, no one wanted to talk about race. No one wanted to discuss it; it was such a taboo topic. I’m really happy that now we are able to have open dialogue around race and fashion, because for me, that’s my purpose, quite frankly, to provide equal opportunities to Black and Latin designers. I’ve definitely seen so much progress there. I think 2020 sped up the process, but I think the work now is keeping our foot on the gas. There are so many other challenges that are happening, so I think now we’re focused on how do we keep this conversation at the forefront. Brands are like “oh okay, we’re done talking about that,” and I see that as a big responsibility for HFR, to keep that conversation going.

So what makes you excited to keep continuing what you do?

The designers. It’s simple. I get to discover incredibly talented and creative designers who look at this industry, understand the challenges, and against all odds say, “this is still what I want to do.” It’s the thing that keeps me going. They deserve the opportunities, the platforms, the connections, they deserve it all. They are definitely one of my biggest inspirations. So as long as new designers keep popping up, as long as designers of colors continue to stay in this race, I will too.

Well, that was a great note to end on. Is there anything else you’d like to add or give insight to?

One thing I will add is that I talked a lot about how Memphis has played a big role in who I am and what I do, and I say to people all the time that the people of Memphis are so special. But they don’t realize how special they are, because they’re surrounded by people who are just as special. So when you take a Memphis person and put them out of their environment, they always thrive. They always thrive. I’ve seen it over, and over, and over again. It’s like telling a fish that water is wet. Right? They don’t know water is wet, because that’s where they’ve always lived, and that’s how I feel about Memphis. People don’t understand how special of a city Memphis is, and how special the people in the city are.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tiger Blue: Henigan, As In “Win Again”

• Lots of elbow room. The first day of October was a perfect day for football in Memphis, Tennessee. Not a cloud in the sky, temperatures in the mid-60s at kickoff as the Tigers hosted Temple at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium. The game started early (11 a.m.), but that somehow made the sunshine seem brighter, the air even more crisp. And 23,239 fans showed up to see the home team win its fourth straight game. That’s less than half the capacity of the stadium and left room for kids to play tag in the upper levels while much larger boys played a form of tag down on the gridiron. This was an important game for Memphis against a conference rival that beat the Tigers a year ago. Yet kids played tag in empty sections of bleachers.

With plans in place for more than $200 million in renovations to the stadium, this has to be a concern for the Memphis program. We seem to have returned to a place where the “core fans” show up for every Tiger home game, but those who packed the place for that epic clash with SMU in 2019 — 58,325 fans — need more of a hook before spending a fall Saturday watching live college football. The Tigers are winning (now 4-1 on the season). They have a talented player at quarterback (Seth Henigan), the only position that matters to a casual fan. They have an opportunistic defense that forces turnovers and creates excitement. But does the Mid-South care that much about Tiger football?

• Is Seth Henigan a winner? Forget their record-breaking stats. Henigan’s three predecessors at quarterback for the Tiger program — Paxton Lynch, Riley Ferguson, and Brady White — each put up a 10-win season. (The Memphis program has a total of four such campaigns.) Can Henigan extend this streak to four? Can he go “1-0” enough weeks to create a season as memorable as 2014, or 2017, or 2019?

Saturday’s win over Temple suggests Henigan is capable of leading the Tigers to such heights. Because it was a rough game for the sophomore. Memphis didn’t score a point in the first half. Henigan barely completed more than half of his passes (24 for 45), and the Owls sacked him five times. But he didn’t throw an interception. He scrambled for yardage, once gaining 19 on a fourth-and-two play that broke down at the snap. It’s fun when a quarterback passes for 300 yards and three or four touchdowns. Those are for highlight reels. But the winners prevail when conditions aren’t pleasant, when they’re getting helped up from the turf every possession, when the punter is compiling more yardage. That was Seth Henigan against Temple last Saturday.

• Nice knowin’ ya. This Friday’s clash with Houston feels significant. The Cougars are departing the American Athletic Conference for the Big 12 next year, so this will be the end of what’s been an almost annual confrontation for a quarter century. (The teams have played 22 times since 1996 and were Conference USA rivals before the AAC was created.) And the games have been fun. Memphis has scored 50 points in beating the Cougars and allowed 50 points in losing to them.

Picked to win the AAC in the preseason media poll, Houston finds itself 2-3, with losses to future league rivals (Texas Tech and Kansas) and current (an overtime loss to Tulane last weekend). The Cougars have surrendered 34.0 points per game, 115th (out of 131 teams) in the country. The Tigers will not be facing the Temple Owls’ defense. Back to that first thought: It will be interesting to see the crowd Houston draws for a Friday-night affair at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium. Memphis-Houston may not be college football’s best, but it’s the best college football seen regularly in these parts for more than 20 years. Here’s hoping the programs find each other again somewhere down the road.