Trina Chomica

Trina Chomica

Wearable Art Show coming to Port Townsend

PORT TOWNSEND — While Trisa Chomica works with Greek yogurt lids, Aliina Lahti is marshaling the cedar curls.

The women are two of the designers taking part in the Wearable Art Show, a live, on-the-body art display Saturday.

Dozens of people from across the North Olympic Peninsula and beyond are working with unconventional materials, all in the name of putting on two eye-popping fashion shows — at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. — at the Port Townsend Elks Lodge No. 317, 555 Otto St.

This third annual show is a benefit for the Jefferson County Fund for Women & Girls, a nonprofit group.

Chomica, an interior designer known for her fashion-forward sense, will send model Kristen Chittick of Port Angeles down the runway in a gown made of bottle caps and yogurt container lids.

Lahti, an alumna of the Port Townsend School of Woodworking, was sewing together curly cedar shavings from a wood planer into a 1920s-style flapper frock — and naturally, model Christine Hulburt will dance the Charleston in the show.

Another 22 artists are finishing their Wearable Art Show entries, to compete for awards including Best in Show and People’s Choice, the prize presented by the event’s spectators.

Tickets to the Wearable Art Show vary depending on where you want to sit: At the matinee, general seating is $20, while a front-row spot is $35. For the evening performance it’s $25 for general and $75 for the front row. The premium seat-holders will also be treated to a reception with the artists at 6:30 p.m. Saturday.

Tickets to either Wearable Art Show performance are on sale at Quimper Sound, 230 Taylor St., and at the Jefferson County Community Foundation website, www.JCCFgives.org.

For her piece of wearable art, Chomica is using more than 400 yogurt lids and bottle caps; she collected many of them, while friends contributed even more.

The lids come in purple, red, pink and orange, with lots of white accents, Chomica said, adding that a gown she saw in Vogue magazine also inspired her.

For Chittick’s sashay down the runway, Chomica chose violinist Lyndsey Stirling’s “Crystallize,” a tune mixing a classical sound with dub-step.

“I wanted something romantic, since it’s a ball gown,” she said, “but a little bit edgy.”

The Wearable Art Show is a good party, Chomica feels, as “it raises money and you get to be creative at the same time.”

Lahti, for her part, said the show is a great motivator for artists to stretch out and make something far outside the mainstream. She finished at the school of woodworking this spring, and works as an artist while serving as volunteer coordinator at the nonprofit ReCyclery bike center.

Some 34 artists submitted entries, and Seattle fashion designer Michael Cepress and University of Washington School of Art professor Layne Goldsmith selected two dozen, including designs from students and mother-daughter teams.

Artists whose work will appear on the runway include: Linda Abbott-Roe, Judith Bird, Kelsey Bush, Bo Choi, Lauralee DeLuca, Lynn DiNino, Heather Gale, Tamara Halligan, Kelly Matlock, Margie McDonald, Amanda Melbostad, Galadriel Nichols, Teri Nomura, Paula Pay la Renta, Marsha Wiener and Joyce Wilkerson, plus students Carly Davies, Ruby Gale, Hana McAdam, Anna Moore and Annalise Rubida.

The show has attracted capacity crowds in the past, said Debbi Steele, chairwoman of the Fund for Women and Girls. With its music, gowns, frocks and suits, it is a spectacle.

In past years, “our models wore incredible pieces,” Steele said. Materials included recycled ties, sailcloth, handwoven material and vinyl records.

For Chomica, the show is a celebration of design and of seeing what’s possible.

“It’s so fun,” she said, “to see it come together.”

Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Paranormal investigator Amanda Paulson sits next to a photo of Hallie Illingworth at Lake Crescent, where Illingworth’s soap-like body was discovered in 1940. Paulson stars in a newly released documentary, “The Lady of the Lake,” that explores the history of Illingworth’s death and the possible paranormal presence that has remained since. (Ryan Grulich)
Documentary explores paranormal aspects disappearance

Director says it’s a ’ Ghost story for Christmas’

Funding for lodge in stopgap measure

Park official ‘touched by outpouring of support’

Wednesday’s e-edition to be printed Thursday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition on… Continue reading

Joe Nole.
Jefferson County Sheriff Joe Nole resigns

Commissioners to be appoint replacement within 60 days

Residents of various manufactured home parks applaud the Sequim City Council’s decision on Dec. 9 to approve a new overlay that preserves manufactured home parks so that they cannot be redeveloped for other uses. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim preserves overlay for homes

Plots can be sold, but use must be same

A ballot box in the Sequim Village Shopping Center at 651 W. Washington St. now holds two fire suppressant systems to prevent fires inside after incidents in October in Vancouver, Wash., and Portland, Ore. A second device was added by Clallam County staff to boxes countywide to safeguard ballots for all future elections. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Political party officials fine with Clallam’s loss of bellwether

With election certified, reps reflect on goals, security

For 20-plus years, Bob and Kelly Macaulay have decorated their boat and dock off East Sequim Bay Road for Christmas, seen here more than a mile away. However, the couple sold their boat earlier this year. (Doug Schwarz)
Couple retires Christmas boat display on Sequim Bay

Red decorations lit up area for 20-plus years

Hurricane Ridge day lodge funding held up in Congress

The fate of $80 million in funding to rebuild… Continue reading

Judy Davidson, left, and Kathy Thomas, both of Port Townsend, look over the skin care products offered by Shandi Motsi of Port Townsend, one of the 20 vendors at the second annual Procrastinators Craft Fair at the Palindrome/Eaglemount Cidery on Friday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Procrastinators Market

Judy Davidson, left, and Kathy Thomas, both of Port Townsend, look over… Continue reading

Services could be impacted by closure

Essential workers won’t get paid in shutdown

A now-deceased male cougar was confirmed by Panthera and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife staff to have been infected with Avian influenza on the Olympic Peninsula. (Powell Jones/Panthera)
Two cougars infected with bird flu die

Risk of human infection still low, CDC says

D
Readers contribute $58K to Home Fund to date

Donations can be made for community grants this spring