American designer Michael Kors paid tribute to US feminist icon Gloria Steinem on the final day of New York Fashion Week Wednesday.

His Fall-Winter 2023 parade saw several models wear round, low-hanging belts in a nod to the 88-year-old Steinem's signature look.

Steinem, considered the leader of second-wave feminism in America in the late 1960s and early 1970s, sat front row at the show in Manhattan's West Village.

She looked on alongside Vogue editor-in-chief and high priestess of fashion Anna Wintour, and actresses Mindy Kaling and Kate Hudson.

Model walk the runway during the Michael Kors Collection Fall/Winter 2023 Runway Show. Photo: Angela Weiss/AFPModel walk the runway during the Michael Kors Collection Fall/Winter 2023 Runway Show. Photo: Angela Weiss/AFP

“The women who intrigued me then (and who) still intrigue me today are the women who break the rules, do things their own way,” Kors told reporters Tuesday, ahead of the show.

“Even though they're strong or they're powerful, and they're smart, they're happy to admit that they love fashion, and they enjoy fashion,” he added.

Steinem said in a 2015 interview that she often wore a “concho” belt.

A concho is a metal ornament, often silver and round, that has its origins in the culture of the Navajo Native American nation. 

Uruguayan-American Gabriela Hearst is another designer who drew inspiration from non-conformist, pioneering women for the New York parade.

A model walks the runway at the Gabriela Hearst show during New York Fashion Week on February 14. Photo: Albert Urso/Getty Images North America/Getty Images via AFPA model walks the runway at the Gabriela Hearst show during New York Fashion Week on February 14. Photo: Albert Urso/Getty Images North America/Getty Images via AFP

On Tuesday, she honoured Irish architect Eileen Gray, who paved the way for the modernist architecture movement in the 1920s.

Her homage was evident in Hearst's straight, functional cuts of recycled cashmere jackets, trousers and long coats.

Gray's “Dragons” armchair sold at auction in Paris for almost 22 million euros ($28 million) in 2009, more than 30 years after her death aged 98.

It set a record for 20th-century decorative art.

“She never got to see this reality and, like many women, she undervalued herself and her excellence,” Hearst said in her designer's notes.

Meanwhile Philippe and David Blond, the duo at the helm of The Blonds, tinged their collection with references to old Hollywood. 

Glittering dresses and fake furs were combined with Louboutin stilettos and a James Bond soundtrack. 

Their inspiration was, of course, Elizabeth Taylor, David Blond revealed backstage.

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