Photos by Larry Hirshowitz

Bianca Branaman understands what L.A. designers do best: simple, body-conscious, casual. Pieces that allow us to feel true to ourselves, able to go anywhere, do anything.

The daughter of painter Robert Branaman, who illustrated Beat poetry books for
City Lights, and debutant-turned-spiritual-seeker Susan Mack, whose father was
a one-time lawyer for Richard Nixon, Branaman filters the heady ideals of her
formative years into her simple designs. A product of California Dreamin’, Branaman
was raised in Big Sur, San Francisco, Laurel Canyon and Manhattan where she lived
at the historic Ansonia building, the same place that housed Plato’s Retreat.
When she and her four siblings weren’t being home schooled, tending organic gardens
or encouraged to paint on walls, they attended Catholic school. Their home was
filled with the likes of Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and artist Wally
Berman, who’s been regarded as a muse behind Easy Rider.





 Celadon
green tie dress
enlarger icon




During the eight years Branaman modeled professionally, she spent a year living
in Paris; but she says she didn’t come to understand couture until she started
working as a shop girl upstairs at Ron Herman Melrose, where she became an expert
in the female form.


“The main importance, for me, is accentuating the areas of a woman’s body which
they feel sexy about: chest, upper torso, the curve of their back . . . And hiding
the parts they’re insecure about: their butts, their thighs. I love the creative
process and I love, love, love watching women try my stuff on and feeling
sexy.”


Branaman, who credits her dad for developing her artistic instinct, designed an
A-line skirt for herself while working at Ron Herman, which caught the eye of
the store’s buyer. It soon became one of their hottest items. After a few seasons
— and one hard winter — Branaman found the pressure of funding her own line too
stressful and took another day job.


“I am a spring/summer designer,” she explains, eating watermelon in her coolly
lit apartment-studio. “People don’t look to California for fall. They write those
orders in New York or Paris. My strength is California living.”

Branaman’s current line of rayon/cotton/Lycra pieces came after she happened upon a fabric she describes as “so soft it’s addictive.”





 Left:
backless sash dress;
right: halter/skirt combo over
loose, wide-legged pant
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“I bought 1,000 yards of it. I was like ‘Oh my god! I can make everything
out of it.’ I bought them out. I schlepped it home and said, ‘Okay man, I am back
in business!’”


Her first piece last spring, a tunic that could be worn as a skirt, top or dress,
and others like it, started selling out of Ron Herman, Lisa Kline and Bergdorf
Goodman in N.Y., attracting fans like Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie, Lara Flynn
Boyle and Courtney Cox Arquette.


“My inspiration always comes from what I want — let me just be comfortable and
experience my day,” she says. “I had a life of extremes, which is probably why
I seek balance.”




Bianca Branaman can be found at Ron Herman, 8100 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood,
323-651-4129; Blonde, 2430 Main St., Santa Monica, 310-396-9113; Native, 5915
Franklin Ave., Los Feliz, 323-962-7710.



Models: Michelle Mason (Otto Agency) and Molly Brumagin



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