NEW YORK, NY.- Look at you in linen, designer Isaac Mizrahi said to a young fan he was meeting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, on a Thursday in August, to see the Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion exhibition.
And Im dressed like Uncle Fester, continued Mizrahi, who was wearing dark clothes.
Mizrahi, 62, showed his first collection about 30 years before Max Alexander, the 8-year-old who met him at the museum, was born. Mizrahi, a fashion world fixture who has sold clothes to the masses on QVC, has some 196,000 followers on Instagram. Max, an aspiring fashion designer who just started third grade, has 3 million.
Like many children his age, Max is playful and excitable. Hi, Max, he said, looking at his reflection in a glass panel. While walking past mannequins dressed in elaborate ensembles, he observed aloud, There are no heads.
But unlike many children his age, Max with support from his father, Jack Kolodny, 50, and mother, Sherri Madison, 48, who was with him at the museum has managed to take an interest in fashion design and a knack for sewing surprisingly far.
He is showing items he has made Tuesday, the penultimate day of New York Fashion Week, at an event at the Conrad New York Downtown hotel. (Maxs day at the Met was one of several engagements he had during a summer trip to New York before that event.)
He has been featured on Good Morning America as well as in People and the Italian edition of Vanity Fair magazine. He has earned celebrity fans like Sharon Stone and Debra Messing. (Both found Max on Instagram.) And he has leveraged the attention he has received to gain audiences with designers including Pamella Roland; Wes Gordon, creative director at Carolina Herrera; and Mizrahi, who shared his wisdom with Max as they wandered through the museum.
Thats Worth, Mizrahi said, pointing to a pale House of Worth gown with a cloud motif designed in the 1890s by Charles Frederick Worth, who is often called the father of the modern couture industry. Remember that word: Worth.
When Max mistook a feathered hand fan for a fly catcher, Mizrahi tried to correct him: Its actually a fan, Mizrahi said. Max wasnt persuaded. Its a fly catcher, he replied.
But Max correctly recognized other pieces, including an embroidered green cape that pooled at the floor. Its Gucci, Max said excitedly, and it was.
Mizrahi can relate to Max, he said, because he expressed an interest in fashion at such a young age that he can no longer remember how old he was. What he has is that capacity to have a vision and then to make the vision a reality, Mizrahi said. I recognize that because I had that.
Maxs mother said he was 4 years old when he announced during a family dinner at their home in Southern California that he was a dressmaker and needed a mannequin.
We questioned why, since we had never seen him show any interest in fashion, and he replied, Get me a mannequin, and Ill show you, Madison said. She is an artist whose preferred medium is cardboard; Maxs father works in finance.
Using cardboard, Madison made a dress form for Max with the proportions of his sister, who is four years older than him. (She is now 12; he has a younger brother who is 6.) Madison started to teach Max how to sew and, with her help, he began making pieces for his sister. After Max turned 5, he began taking sewing lessons with another teacher, whom he sees a couple of times a month.
He attends a small private school in Southern California his favorite classes include art, science, math and gym, his mother said and he typically works on sewing projects at night or on the weekends. Its really no different than having a child who plays soccer, Madison said.
She started Maxs Instagram account in 2020 as a way to share videos of his sewing projects with his grandparents, whom he couldnt see in person because of pandemic restrictions. As Madison continued to post on the account, we started receiving private messages about how Max made peoples days, she said. My family encouraged me to keep posting because Maxs joy is fairly infectious.
As Maxs profile has risen, his family has been learning how to handle the attention: We have family conversations a lot around being grateful for the fans, Madison said. She manages his social media presence and has arranged his meetings with people like Mizrahi. Madison added that the money Max had earned from selling some pieces had been saved, invested, used to buy materials or donated to charities of his choice.
Some clothes Max has made are more whimsical than wearable and show the hand of an 8-year-old. But he approaches many projects with imagination and a clear focus. In videos shared on his Instagram account, Max is seen draping fabric just so on dress forms and sitting at sewing machines as he installs zippers and makes French seams. Sometimes he bats away his mother when her attempts to help dont conform to his vision.
The day before Maxs outing with Mizrahi, he and his mother went to Mood Fabrics, in the garment district of Manhattan, where Max ran his fingers over bolts of fabric as he moved frenetically but purposefully through aisles lined by towering racks crammed with materials.
We need fancy fabric, Max said as he paced the store. After spotting a bolt of gold lamé, he pulled it from a shelf. Bingo, he said.
Max chooses materials by performing what he calls the floof test: tossing a fabric in the air and then running beneath it. He also likes to put fabrics in a bathtub full of water to see how they move.
A childhood interest in fashion design is a trait Max shares with several others, including some who have gone on to have successful careers, like Bob Mackie, Michael Kors, Isabel Toledo and Mizrahi, said Valerie Steele, director and chief curator of the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York.
When you look into the biographies of individual designers, Steele said, you often find that theyre obsessed with fashion from a very early age, from as early as 4 years old.
Ken Downing, 62, creative director and chief creative officer at Xcel Brands in New York, who met with Max and his mother a few days before their trip to Mood Fabrics, also showed an interest in fashion at a young age.
I was 6 years old when I was pulling clothes out of my mothers closet and dressing her, said Downing, a former fashion director at Neiman Marcus who now oversees a portfolio of brands including Halston and Isaac Mizrahi (Mizrahi sold his namesake company to Xcel in 2011).
When Max visited the Halston showroom, Downing said, he was drawn to all things shiny sequins, beads, hardware, silk flowers leading Downing to give Max a nickname.
I call him Maximalist, he said.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.