Virtual Couture? Vivienne Tam’s First NFT Dress Struts Around Metaverse Fashion Week

When is a piece of clothing just a piece of clothing, and when is it fashion? If that question’s too perplexing, try this one: when should a piece of virtual clothing be considered virtual fashion?

Since Tuesday, leaders of top physical and digital fashion houses, assembled in the metaverse, have put their best answers to that query on display at the second-annual Metaverse Fashion Week.

To some of these designers, virtual fashion is defined by its unique potential to reach as many people as possible without sucking up real-world resources. To others, fashion—even in the virtual realm—is still a matter of awe and singularity.

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In that latter camp you’ll find Vivienne Tam, the revered Chinese American fashion designer whose first-ever piece of virtual couture is currently making waves on the virtual runway in Decentraland.

The piece, a virtual qipao dress digitally embroidered with the likenesses of three avatars from the popular Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT collection in a mandala pattern, is a one-of-one NFT, meticulously designed by Tam with the technical assistance of digital fashion platform Brand New Vision (BNV). 

Vivienne Tam’s BAYC Mandala Embroidered Qipao. Image: Vivienne Tam, BNV, CFDA
Vivienne Tam’s BAYC Mandala Embroidered Qipao. Image: Vivienne Tam, BNV, CFDA

The dress marks Tam’s Web3 debut. For over 30 years, she has designed provocative, exclusively physical fashion pieces known for their distinctive East-meets-West style. A number of them feature in the permanent collections of such institutions as the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh and New York’s Fashion Institute of Technology. She's also displayed physical Bored Ape-imprinted apparel on real world runways.

The virtual realm, however, remained untouched for Tam until she was approached to craft an NFT fashion piece to commemorate the Council of Fashion Designers of America’s 60th anniversary. Tommy Hilfiger, Coach, Diane von Furstenberg, Michael Kors, Carolina Herrera, and Willy Chavarria were also invited to produce one-of-one NFTs to celebrate the occasion. 

“The other designers basically took things they were famous for, historic elements, and made a digital version of them,” Richard Hobbs, CEO of BNV—which oversaw the translation of those couturiers’ designs into NFTs—told Decrypt. “But Vivienne, she made her piece completely relevant to Web3.”