

“ Project Runway is the undergraduate program and Making the Cut is the graduate and PhD program,” Gunn said. They said Amazon’s large budget gave them greater creative freedom than on Project Runway, though they acknowledged the latter paved the way. It’s fully integrated into Making the Cut, as it’s fully integrated into a good deal of the fashion industry because it’s the way things should be.” Klum suggested body acceptance has already made a lot of progress in fashion, saying, “For us, it’s not really a thing anymore.” When asked about inclusive body representation on the show, Gunn said it’s seamless with plus-size models: “It’s the real world. Gunn added that the team didn’t “dumb these clothes down” but instead “translated” them in such a way that “they become affordable” for Amazon shoppers. Klum explained that for each runway show, the designers created one look where they could “go for it” and one look that was “really wearable” for Amazon shoppers.

So it’s great it’s a win-win,” Klum said, calling Making the Cut “such a better show.” The team claimed that the sellability of the pieces on Amazon did not affect the designs or the winners. “For the first time, our audience can shop. Pieces will sell for $100 or less in sizes XXXS to XXXL. Amazon noted that 50 percent of the main crew was women.įans will be able to buy winning fashion pieces from Making the Cut on Amazon immediately after each episode, though sales won’t affect how Amazon measures the show’s success. Naomi Campbell, Nicole Richie, Altuzarra creative director Joseph Altuzarra, Vogue Paris Editor in Chief Carine Roitfeld and influencer Chiara Ferragni will appear as judges on the program, which filmed in New York, Paris and Tokyo. The unscripted show tracks 12 entrepreneurs and designers vying to become “the next big global phenomenon” for a $1 million prize to invest in their style business. The two return to the genre as executive producers and hosts of Making the Cut on Amazon, with two episodes airing weekly for five weeks. “We couldn’t break out of it because there was a fear - not among us, we’re the ones who were thinking creatively and innovatively about what we wanted to do.” Gunn hinted that executives at Project Runway were afraid of changing the format of the fashion reality show, even at the urging of Klum and Gunn.
