11111/ .■ 11111• ■ .411/0M... Clothing designer Lauren Riback is shown with her custom boxer shorts and tank top. BY LINDA BACHRACK PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANGIE BAAN I t all started back at Seaholm High School ... at least the clothing design aspect of Lauren Riback's mul- tifaceted art career. Riback, 22, who is attending Parson's School of Design in New York City, made low-slung, flare-leg fleece pants for her friends at Seaholm, back when fleece warm-ups were all about function, not fashion. "My high-school friends and I got together and taught one another how to sew," she says. Pretty soon, everyone wanted the pants they were wearing. When she got to the University of Michigan, Riback sold an expanded line of her casual wear out of her dorm room. She made fliers for the dorms and sorority houses, and a full-fledged business was born. "Everyone had a computer; I had a sewing machine," says Riback. Now, through NNTord of mouth, her E-mail address is inundated with orders from college kids around the country. The cleverly packaged clothing line includes tank tops, boxer shorts, long pants and Capri pants in fleece and cotton. "They're perfect to sleep in. Then you can roll out of bed and wear them to class," she says. She also sews a line of baby clothes. "It's all custom-order," says Riback. "You choose the color, fabric, even the drawstring." While growing up in Birmingham with her parents and three older brothers, Riback received plenty of artis- tic encouragement. "I made all the decorations for my bat mitzvah," she remembers. "I drew huge Disney car- toon characters and my parents were so supportive. Mom helped me glitter. They still have one of my cows in the living room!" She knew she could draw and, in fact, teaches art at the Ann Arbor Art Center, and completed a wall-size mural for a family in Ann Arbor. But the love of sewing didn't develop until high school, when Riback sat behind a sewing machine, the instruction manual in her lap, and made her prom dress. "My grandma kept me disciplined," she says. It was her first real piece of cloth- ing and her first zipper — a silver and pink silk A-line dress with spaghetti straps. Although her degree from U-M is in photography and graphic design, she'll study fashion design at Parson's. "Anytime I have 15 minutes, I sew," she says. "Who needs sleep? I'd rather indulge in my passions." E-mail Riback at lriback@yahoo.com or see her clothing designs at Lori Karbal et al in Birmingham. 6 • SEPTEMBER 2002 • STYLE AT THE Jul