The one-year-old, glossy, high-end Hadar Orthodox women’s
fashion magazine is capitalizing on Orthodox Jewish lifestyle becoming more
upscale and will publish its third edition just after Purim.
The magazine is
the brainchild of a Yeshiva University Stern College for Women graduate and the
product of hers and a good friend’s creativity and entrepreneurship.
“I always
knew I wanted to be an entrepreneur,” says Bari Weizman, owner and content
director of Hadar, who explains that her magazine embodies the essence of the
modest Jewish woman while exploring her desire to remain current and
fashionable.
The idea came to Weizman one Shabbat when she was schmoozing with
her sister about how all the little girls in their hometown of Monsey were
wearing the same headbands with big, poufy bows, and the women were dressed in
the same black boots on their walk to shul.
“I started thinking about all of
these different fashion bloggers and how there is such a big interest in the
Jewish community to add more fashion into one’s wardrobe, instead of just
putting a Kiki Riki [shell] under everything,” Weizman tells JNS.org.
As she
grew more excited about the idea she reached out to a former colleague, Shevi
Genuth, and invited her to be a partner. Genuth now serves as editor and
publisher of Hadar. The team also recruited Jessica Gugenheim, one of Weizman’s
family friends, as fashion editor.
Gugenheim, who lives in Manhattan, describes
the magazine as individualistic.
“I don’t think our style is trying to follow
any certain drum,” she says. Gugenheim looks for a combination of elegance and
high-fashion at price points that are affordable for the average Orthodox Jew,
who likely has to pay for day school and feed numerous children.
“I love
working with pieces from H&M or Target and making them [the models] look
like they just walked off the runway,” she tells JNS.org.
The magazine uses the
developers’ religious friends instead of professional models, although flipping
through its pages of spiked heels, creative layering, and trendy colors, one
would never know.
Gugenheim worked previously at Anthropologie, a popular
national retailer. There, she says, she “dressed the customers.
” While each
client had her own concern – a petite figure, recent weight loss – she says
finding fashion for Hadar is a more sophisticated challenge. Hadar only
features skirts, long sleeves, and high necklines.
Gugenheim, who has a degree
in art history, works with national brands to get samples that fit the frum
bill. “I just see fashion as a different expression of art,” she says.
“As
opposed to painting on a canvas, the designers are painting with fabric.
” Her
first fashion tip: confidence. “Anything you wear with confidence will look
better,” she says.
But can Hadar Magazine survive the huge transformations occurring in all media sectors, from media owners to modeling agencies, from marketers to advertisers? Media channels are becoming more fragmented and the consumer is more empowered than ever before. Individuals become media in their own right, through blogging and social media.
But can Hadar Magazine survive the huge transformations occurring in all media sectors, from media owners to modeling agencies, from marketers to advertisers? Media channels are becoming more fragmented and the consumer is more empowered than ever before. Individuals become media in their own right, through blogging and social media.
Is there a place for a new print
magazine? In the Orthodox community, says Weizman, the answer is yes. Using an
iPad or a Kindle on Shabbat is still and will likely always be forbidden.
Hence, the Orthodox community turns to print. Hadar reader Yonina Leibowitz of
Monsey, NY, is one example.
“During the week, I don’t have time to sit and read
a magazine,” Leibowitz tells JNS.org. “I work full time.
On Shabbat, I read all
my magazines, the books I want to read. I don’t think print will really go out
of style in my community,” she says, noting that she looks to Hadar for
clothing trends she can easily put into practice.
No comments:
Post a Comment