Designing Clothes and An Image

By Maurice Pinzon

Edixon Valdez (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

Edixon Valdez (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

Edixon Valdez has fashion designs in his head, accompanied by an image of himself in the fashion world, that he is molding as he seeks to make a big splash in the industry. He is hoping to separate himself from fellow aspiring designers who will be graduating with him from the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) this spring. It may be an essential strategy in a tough fashion market, but even during times of economic despair, there seems to be more optimism in New York than in the rest of the country and Mr. Valdez, 28, exemplifies that sentiment.

Mr. Valdez has been drawing since he was a young boy growing up in Nizao, a small town in the Dominican Republic, best known for sending baseball players, including Vladimir Guerrero, to the Major Leagues in the U.S.

When Mr. Valdez was eleven, he began sketching dresses for his newborn niece and has not stopped thinking of designing women’s clothing since. Mr. Valdez said he learned about clothes from his aunt, a seamstress, now in her 70”²s. Mr. Valdez would pick up the fabrics his aunt left lying around and make things out of them.   He continues to think that quality fabrics are worth the extra expense because they make the clothes look exponentially better.

Soon after Mr. Valdez arrived in New York City at age 17, he began studying hotel management, but decided to switch his career path after realizing his true passion had always been fashion.

Now in his senior year at FIT, he is already planning his first collection for February 2011, for New York’s Fashion Week. Mr. Valdez hopes to show his designs where he previously worked, at the Trump International Hotel and Tower. He was also promised space at a couple of boutiques if he can produce six women’s pieces by February.

Mr. Valdez principally designs women’s evening wear but also men’s sportswear, because, he said, “Every time I do something for me, everybody likes it, so I have to reproduce it.”

The Newspaper Print Shorts designed by Edixon Valdez. Model, Randall Harris. (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

The Newspaper Print Shorts designed by Edixon Valdez. Model, Randall Harris. (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

At a meeting to exhibit two of his pieces, the female model did not show, so the male model wore shorts that Mr. Valdez designed for himself. Mr. Valdez seemed to get a kick out of recounting the reaction to the shorts, a collage of newsprint from dailies. He said he thought of designing them and then wanted to take them to the beach so that people would think he was wearing a newspaper. That’s exactly what happened, he recalled, when others on the beach initially thought he was wearing newsprint.

His role model and only idol in fashion is Karl Lagerfeld. Mr. Valdez said of Lagerfeld, “He projects himself as fashion. Somebody looks at him, can only think fashion and style.” During “Fashion’s Night Out” in September, Mr. Valdez recalled, he was wearing his “Newspaper Print” shorts and Mr. Lagerfeld saw them and nodded in approval. “I wanted to say ”˜I made it,’ but the words wouldn’t come out,” said Mr. Valdez.

On the subject of whether models are too thin, Mr. Valdez said, “I have to be honest, I do like skinny models. The clothes look beautiful. It’s about aesthetics and beauty.” He pointed to the actress and singer Selena Gomez, as an ideal woman to wear his clothes. She is “very fragile and very feminine,” he said.

Mr. Valdez, although savvy and ambitious, can also be quite the dreamer. “I believe beauty can be the answer to so many problems. Solve it with beauty, give it beauty and it will solve itself,” he concluded.

For more information about Mr. Valdez’s fashion designs, visit  Edixon Valdez.

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Latin Week in New York City

By Maurice Pinzon
This October, the New York City Latin Media and Entertainment Commission (LMEC) launched its first major city-wide event, seven years to the month after Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg signed an executive order creating the commission with the task of retaining, and attracting, new Latin media and entertainment ventures in the city.

The Latin Media and Entertainment Week (LMEW) activities, Bloomberg administration officials and LMEC members admitted, took too long to coalesce. However, officials and supporters were optimistic the initiative would galvanize New York City’s Latin media and entertainment groups into building something even more spectacular than the “Calle Ocho” music festival in Miami. The week-long events, which some people were referring to as “Latin Week,” ran from October 4th – 10th, at numerous venues throughout New York City.

Mario Baeza, the chairman of the LMEC, during opening remarks at a kickoff October 4 reception at Time-Warner headquarters said, “We were charged with trying to make New York City, once again, the Latin media and entertainment center of the world, something that we kind of abdicated to Miami and other places.”

But unlike the Miami music festival, the LMEC events also included theater, film, art and museum presentations and performances. Even a Latino circus, the “Circo Hermanos Vázquez” was scheduled to perform in the Bronx.

In an interview with New York News Network, Mr. Baeza, who is also chairman of Vme Media and the Baeza Group, admitted the programming was a work in progress and indicated that the economic payoff for New York would come when people outside the city attend future LMEW events. Mr. Baeza projected $3 – $5 million in economic revenue for the city. He added, “I think this could be a $30 million event, that’s kind of what we’re targeting.”

Carlos Manzano, the executive director of the LMEC said one goal was “getting people to consume and spend, but to enjoy and celebrate.”

Mr. Baeza pointed out that the LMEC had succeeded in luring the Latin Grammy Awards to New York but that it had not institutionalized anything close to what was about to take place during Latin Week.

Deputy Mayor Carol A. Robles-Roman, who was instrumental in creating the commission, in an interview with New York News Network, indicated that plenty of Latin media and entertainment events were always taking place in the city, but that “nobody had ever really packaged it in any way that was user friendly.” She added, “Next year it will be bigger, then it becomes an expectation, like Hispanic Heritage Month.”

Deputy Mayor Robles-Roman said, “The premise of the Latin Commission, as a group, was to create fertile ground to have different programming.” The commission has supported groups such as Teatro Stage Fest after the group came for support to expand their programming.

The LMEC holds formal meetings where organizations make presentations to commission members. The members then decide if the idea is viable and whether to support it. Ms. Robles-Roman explained that the Bloomberg administration, through the commission’s support, provides advice and introductions for individuals and organizations to connect with each other so they can build and expand their programming.

For more information visit: LMEC.

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Eighth Suspect Arrested in Hate Crime Attacks in the Bronx

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg entering the Blue Room with Raymond W. Kelly and City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn. (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg entering the Blue Room with Raymond W. Kelly and City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn. (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

By Maurice Pinzon
Saturday afternoon, standing next to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Council Speaker Christine C.   Quinn in City Hall, New York Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly announced the apprehension of an eighth suspect in the attacks that targeted three men, that the alleged perpetrators perceived as gay.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg characterized the attacks as “brutal torture.” adding “torture really is the only word that comes to mind.”

According to Police Commissioner Kelly, the arrests came swiftly in a “full court press,” after the Police Department learned of the true nature of the crimes. Commissioner Kelly said, “it was initially investigated as a robbery because the victims were not fully forthcoming at first.”

But after it became clear to investigators they were dealing with bias crimes, the Police Department’s Hate Crimes Task Force was put in charge of the investigation. With scores of detectives from the Special Victims Division, seven suspects were apprehended Thursday night and on Friday morning. Those arrested are: Idelfonzo Mendez, 23. David Rivera, 21. Bryan Almonte, 17. Steven Carballo, 17. Nelson Falu, 17. Denis Peitars, 17. Elin Brayon Cepeda, 16.

The suspects in the attacks, which took place on Sunday October 3, now face charges of unlawful imprisonment, abduction, assault, robbery, sodomy, menacing and hate crimes.

At the 5pm City Hall news conference Commissioner Kelly announced: “An eighth suspect surrendered to detectives in the Bronx, he is   Elmer Confresi, he is a male 23 years of age. He goes by the street name of ‘Macho’.”According to Commissioner Kelly, Mr. Confresi turned himself into the 43rd precinct detective squad with an attorney.

Commissioner Kelly in answering a question from a reporter said the suspects, “have made statements implicating themselves in this crime.”

Commissioner Kelly said that leaves one suspect at large, Rudy Vargas-Perez, 22, a resident of the Bronx. As detectives continue their search for Mr. Vargas-Perez, Commissioner Kelly urged him to turn himself in and asked anyone with information to call 1-800-577-TIPS. Mr. Vargas-Perez apparently   had agreed through his attorney to turn himself in but has not done so as of Saturday.

Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn and Council Member Fernando Cabrera talking to store owners about leaflet. (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn and Council Member Fernando Cabrera talking to store owners about leaflet. (Photo by Maurice Pinzon)

Earlier in the day at a morning news conference in the Bronx, Speaker Quinn also urged the suspects to turn themselves into the police. Speaker Quinn was joined at the news conference by Council member Fernando Cabrera, who represents the Bronx district where the attacks took place. Governor David Paterson and other elected officials, Bronx community leaders and members of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender (LGBT) groups were also in attendance.

After the news conference Speaker Quinn and the elected officials walked along a shopping district around the corner from the abandoned house on Osborne street where the attacks took place, handing out leaflets and speaking to residents urging them to also call the 1-800-577-TIPS hotline with any information about the crime.

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