Dresses good enough to eat at US chocolate fashion show
WASHINGTON, June 22, 2010 - At first glance the train on the dress designed by Maria Chaconas appeared to be made from crystals, and the necklace sported by a former Miss DC looked as if it were fashioned from beads and wood.
But the fluffy material trailing Chaconas's "Chronicles of Narnia"-inspired White Witch dress was actually sugar, and the baubles adorning the onetime Miss DC were a mixture of chocolate and sugar.
At Monday's charity Des Alpes Chocolate Fashion Show, only the name gave away what these culinary experts were really using to cook up their dream gowns.
While walking down a runway swathed in confectionery might seem challenging, none of the models had any trouble controlling their costumes and Miss DC, who modeled a Cruella De Vil-inspired costume, was even accompanied by a dalmatian.
The ninth annual Sweet Charity event, which benefits DC school libraries, and the corresponding fashion show challenges local chefs to take on the daunting task of creating an outfit from edible treats.
Each outfit must correspond to an annually-selected theme -- "Literacy on the Silver Screen" being this year's task.
Katie Musser, a first-time competitor, took first place with her Cruella De Vil-inspired creation, featuring a chocolate-covered dress cinched with a chocolate belt, and a fur stole edged with hanging chocolate balls.
"Everything about this challenge is hard," Musser said. "A lot of chemistry is involved when creating an outfit. Chocolate when making a dress is more complex, because it is going to start melting as soon as she puts it on."
She found a way to combat the problem by backing every one of her chocolate pieces with felt.
Chef Chad Dunkin used the theme for this year to create an outfit inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds."
He created chocolate-dipped crows, which he perched around the model's dress, and designed a chocolate purse, only to have it melt on the way to the show.
"The transport for me is the hardest part," he said. "It's hard to work with chocolate because it melts."
Dunkin recommended that competitors try things out their outfits first on dummies to work out what is feasible. "I don't think that many people practice before they come," he said. "It can show when you see parts starting to fall off."
Chaconas opted to avoid chocolate, using pulled sugar and pastiche for her outfit.
"It's key to think about the materials and can they last for three hours," she said. "You have to be in costume three hours before the show starts and that is one of the most difficult parts about it." by Hannah Hoffma