PRACTICAL W E AR AB LE LOCAL DESIGNER ROSEANNE SCHLUSSEL GOES FROM SEVENTH AVENUE TO BIRMINGHAM AND BACK. BY CARLA JEAN SCHWARTZ 80 FALL '87 oseanne Schlussel, a Birmingham fashion designer, sells the clothes right off her back. Wherever she goes, people stare and question her about the clothes she wears and designs. The late Tavy Stone, a Detroit News fashion writer, once saw Schlussel at the museum wear- ing her black trench coat with white piping. Stone was so im- pressed with the coat, she featured it in The Detroit News. A few years ago Margery Krevsky, co-owner of Produc- tions Plus, noticed a rust, over- sized dress Schlussel was wear- ing. "I really liked it, and asked her to make it in black. I wore it whenever I traveled, because it was so nice and packable," says Krevsky. Krevsky wore it constantly for two seasons receiving many compliments. Schlussel has a home studio in Birmingham and a showroom on Seventh Avenue in New York. Her fall collection will be in several boutiques across the country. In the metro Detroit area her collection will be at Ashley's in downtown Detroit, The Nick's in Rochester and most likely in Jacobson's, who carried the spring 1987 line. Pieces in the collection sell from $100- $1000, with the average dress selling in the $250 range. She employs about 6-12 local seamstresses in the area. She hires many people through the Jewish Vocational Servive. One seamstress in an Iranian Jew. Schlussel is intent upon keeping the production local so she can supervise the finishing and maintain excellent tailoring. "I work with specific concepts that I really believe a lot of designers don't consider — how women's bodies work; what lifestyles are; what needs are; and what our lives are about to- day. Value in clothes that are not going to look dated." Roseanne Schlussel, the granddaughter of an Orthodox rabbi, grew up in Queens, New York. "There was a real sense of community in Queens," recalls Schlussel. The homes were close together. The family used the city for dance lessons, visiting the museums, and go- ing to the theater. Her father was in the im- port/export business and her mother sold Avon products. Her parents, Claire and Abe Braun now live in Palm Beach. For ten years her father read the torah at Temple Emanuel El in Palm Beach, Florida. Schlussel graduated from Queen's College with a degree in fine arts. "I wanted to do something with art that would be useable," says Schlussel. She then received a Masters degree in clothing and textiles from Cornell University. She stayed at Cornell as the curator of the historical and folk costume collection for one year. She then went to Seventh Avenue, New York's garment district. Typical of young designers, she moved from one company to another gaining ex- perience. She learned about