{"id":789084,"date":"2018-09-05T15:22:14","date_gmt":"2018-09-05T19:22:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/?p=789084"},"modified":"2022-09-21T22:08:22","modified_gmt":"2022-09-22T03:08:22","slug":"lebron-james-harlem-fashion-row-collaboration-shines-a-light-on-multicultural-designers-and-women-of-color","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/lebron-james-harlem-fashion-row-collaboration-shines-a-light-on-multicultural-designers-and-women-of-color\/","title":{"rendered":"LeBron James’ Harlem Fashion Row Collaboration Shines a Light on Multicultural Designers and Women of Color"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last night, in a room filled with the likes of LeBron James<\/strong>, Dapper Dan, and many other worldly celebrities, Brandice Henderson-Daniel<\/strong>‘s presence was of the greatest importance. The founder of Harlem Fashion Row<\/a>, a social company built to lend a voice to multicultural designers and women of color, was at the height of her powers since moving to New York City from Memphis in 2005 to pursue a career in fashion.<\/p>\n Daniel, unsure of where she’d land in the fashion industry upon venturing to New York, quickly found her footing and put on her first fashion show in Harlem, in August 2007. She’d found designers and models in the blackest part of the city, where African-American excellence has long been felt and historically upheld. Harlem soon thereafter began to hoist Daniel up, too, alongside the other black designers revolving around New York City at that time. But she quickly noticed a disparity in the numbers among her. Too few black women (and men) were working in fashion. Daniel took issue with that. Harlem Fashion Row later formed with a desire to resolve that institutional and well-known systemic problem.<\/p>\n Brandice Henderson-Daniel via Essence<\/a>\n LeBron James, whose legacy already looms among revolutionaries like Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, Jim Brown, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, and Colin Kaepernick<\/a>, looked to Daniel and her Harlem Fashion Row designers to help him launch his 16th signature shoe — the Nike LeBron 16<\/a>. Daniel and her emphasis on empowering people of color — especially women — were aligned with James’ vision for the shoe and its subsequent launch, so she appointed three African-American women — Kimberly Goldson, Felisha Noel, and Undra Celeste Duncan — to reimagine the LeBron 16.<\/p>\n