Christian Fashion Week 2013 To Be Held In Tampa 
Tamara Lush (AP, February 7, 2013) 
Tampa, Fla. -- The organizers of Christian Fashion Week have a message:  
modest does not equal frumpy. 
"A lot of the designers we talked with looked at the challenge as a 
creative  challenge," said Jose Gomez, who, along with his wife and another 
couple, 
is  organizing the event. "How do we push the boundaries – with 
boundaries?" 
The couple's first-ever Christian Fashion Week begins Friday with a VIP  
reception and then a runway show on Saturday in Tampa. They've pegging the 
dates  to the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week in New York and hopes that the two-day 
event –  it's not really a week-long show – will evolve into something 
bigger over  time. 
"We want to do something to make New York jealous," Jose Gomez said. 
The runway shows will be slightly different than a typical fashion event.  
Backstage, there will be separate changing areas for male and female models 
so  people can "preserve their dignity," he said. The swimwear show will 
take place  first, and during that show, the audience will be women only, he 
said, to avoid  any "awkward" feelings for audience members. 
"We are trying to be sensitive to the fact that our audience may be in  
different places about how they feel about it," he said. 
During intermission, Shari Braendel, the author of "Good Girls Don't Have 
to  Dress Bad" and a fashion blogger, will speak. Bibles and other 
Christian-themed  items will be placed into the gift bags. 
The nine designers selected for the runway event will showcase original  
women's couture, women's ready-to-wear fashion, men's clothing, swimwear and  
bridal gowns. Several of the designers are Florida-based, while two are from 
New  York and one is from Venezuela. Not all of the designers are 
Christian, but all  showed an interest in designing modern, beautiful and 
modest 
clothes. 
"We really wanted quality represented," said Jose Gomez. His wife, Mayra, 
was  working on the day that her husband did an interview with The Associated 
Press,  but she has modeled and runs Models4Jesus, which hosts events for 
and by fashion  industry professionals who happen to be Christian. Among her 
messages: Models  shouldn't have to pose nude if they don't want to. 
Julia Chew at 18 is the youngest designer of the group. She was drawn to 
the  show in part because of her faith – yet in designing the collection for 
the  show, she didn't have to "remind" herself to create modest clothing 
because  those are her values. 
"I'm a teenager, and I want to be accepted," she said. "As a Christian, I  
want to dress and design clothes in a way that honors my body." 
Chew, who recently graduated after being homeschooled by her parents, said  
her collection was inspired by nature – she enjoys camping trips with her 
family  – and her gauzy, chiffon dresses were inspired by waterfalls. She's 
also been  "obsessed" with feathers recently and crafted a stunning 
above-the-knee length  dress entirely of dyed black feathers. 
Crew sells her creations on Etsy, a website where designers, crafters and  
creators can sell their homemade items. 
Alma Vidovic, also of Tampa, is another of the designers. She spends her 
days  as a stylist at the Home Shopping Network, and in her free time designs  
clothing. Her first-ever bridal line will be shown at the Christian fashion 
show  Saturday; the dresses are subtle and sexy, with one strapless 
ivory-colored  dress that hugs the body and flows into cascading ruffles at the 
hem. 
"I see my fashion as a story," she said. "I wanted to create a kind of 
floral  story, a blooming, a coming of age." 
Both Vidovic and Chew say that dressing creatively doesn't automatically  
translate into showing skin. 
"It's about comfort and really expressing who you are," Vidovic said. 
Gomez said that people in the Christian press have taken notice and some  
publications – such as Christianity Today – are expected to send reporters 
and  photographers to the show. 
Already, Jose Gomez said, he's had calls from sponsors for next year's 
show,  and is thinking ahead about hosting it in a bigger location, like Miami 
or even  New York. 
"Modesty is the right thing to do," he said. "The fashion industry operates 
 under certain assumptions, but there is an  alternative."

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