What happened to kate spade When Kate Spade died by suicide in 2018, people around the world mourned the loss of the designer, who’d become famous through her eponymous brand. Spade sold her namesake company in 2006, but in the years before her death, she’d launched another label, Frances Valentine, that expressed her quirky, ebullient aesthetic.
A BRAND BUILT ON FRIENDSHIP
When I speak to Arons over Zoom, she’s sitting in Frances Valentine’s offices in New York City’s Bryant Park, overseeing a photo shoot. She’s wearing a chunky cream-colored fisherman sweater that will appear in this fall’s collection. The sweater is an exact replica of one that Arons bought as a freshman at the University of Kansas in the late 1980s, where she first met Spade. She loaned it to Spade in college and didn’t get it back for decades. “Five years ago, Katy hands me a bag of clothes she’d borrowed over the years, and there was my sweater on the top,” Arons says. “Everything about it is exactly perfect to me. I guess we both loved it.”
Arons’s relationship with Spade continues to drive her work at Frances Valentine. In many ways, this brand is the logical extension of the first brand they built in 1993, together with Spade’s husband, Andy, and their friend Pamela Bell. After graduating from college, they moved to New York where they got jobs in the fashion industry—Spade as a fashion editor, and Arons at denim brand Girbaud. It was Andy who had the idea for a handbag brand. The four founders built the company in a tiny New York apartment. “It was probably the most exciting time of our lives,” Arons says. “We were the right age: just enough experience, not too innocent. Everybody in the room was so good at what they did.”
Frances Valentine, which is sold online and in three stores in New York and Florida, is designed to reflect the original spirit of the Kate Spade brand. The clothes, shoes, and accessories are bathed in rich colors like red and gold. There are plenty of patterns, including caftans embroidered in bright floral designs and fabulous leopard print faux fur coats. Many pieces are also vintage-inspired. A trench coat pays homage to Gene Kelly in Singing in the Rain. A series of sweaters references the Darlene pastel floral cardigans of the 1950s. “They are pieces that make you feel happy,” Arons says. “They’re designed to be heirloom pieces that you pass on to your kids.”
WINNING OVER THE ORIGINAL KATE SPADE WOMAN
Although Frances Valentine’s customers span a wide age range, the most common shopper is a woman in her 50s who fell in love with the Kate Spade brand decades ago but eventually outgrew it. This makes sense, given the founders’ approach. “We were designing things that were for us,” says Arons, who is also in her 50s. “And we are the original Kate Spade woman, but we’ve grown up a little bit.”
In the three decades since Kate Spade the brand was born, the entire retail landscape has changed. So when Frances Valentine launched, Arons and Spade decided to make it a digital-first, direct-to-consumer brand, much like the millennial-oriented fashion labels that have popped up in recent years, like Everlane and Reformation.
Arons is now focused on nailing the delicate balance between digital experiences and physical ones. She’s written hundreds of personal notes to loyal customers, inviting their feedback and thanking them for their support. It’s gestures like these that she believes will set Frances Valentine apart from other brands that cater to a similar audience.It has now been three years since Spade’s passing. For Arons, it’s strange to run a company without her. At the same time, working on Frances Valentine every day allows her to feel close to her friend. “I think she would be very happy with where the company is now,” she says. “This morning, we shot a pair of earrings and my first thought was that Katy would love them. Every time I throw on this sweater I think of her.”