A group of
specially designed wheelchairs built in Fresno rolled down a New York
fashion runway during the city's renowned Fashion Week as part of a
first-of-its kind fundraising event.
The
Rolling with Style Gala held at Cipriani's in New York on Tuesday was
designed to celebrate the lives of women in wheelchairs and raise
awareness about paralyzed women's health issues and spinal cord injury
research.
Jenny Smith of Louisville, Ky., appears on a screen above as she makes
her way down the runway on a wheelchair decorated by fashion designer
Zang Toi during the "Rolling with Style" gala, a fashion fundraising
event Tuesday benefiting women's health and spinal cord research in New
York. The wheelchairs used in the event were manufactured in Fresno.
 Michele Boardman, of Marleysville, Pa., in a wheelchair dressed up by
fashion designer Kimora Lee Simmons, has her makeup applied before the
gala. |
Four women were honored for their personal courage
and achievement during the black-tie event. And their Fresno-made
Quickie wheelchairs were dressed up by well-known designers, including
Nicole Miller, Kimora Lee Simmons and Marc Bouwer.
"This was
really exciting to be part of an event like this," said Avtar Kooner,
plant manager at Sunrise Medical's Fresno factory, maker of the Quickie
wheelchair. "This is one of those things that our workers really feel
good about. This really adds an emotional touch to what we do here."
The
Carlsbad-based Sunrise Medical — a world leader in the making of
medical equipment — became a sponsor of the event through one of
its vice presidents, Marilyn Hamilton.
Hamilton co-founded the
Fresno-based Motion Designs Inc. — maker of the Quickie
wheelchair — in 1979, a year after a hang-gliding accident left
her a Paraplegic. The company was purchased by Sunrise Medical in 1986,
but the Quickie wheelchair continues to be made at its Fresno plant.
Hamilton said Tuesday's event exceeded her expectations.
"This was an absolutely over-the-top, spectacular event," she said.
"This was really historic, and I am so proud and delighted to see it all come together."
Hamilton, of Carmel, is one of four women who worked for nearly three years to organize the fundraiser.
They
formed a nonprofit group called Discovery Through Design to battle
stereotypes of women with disabilities and celebrate their
accomplishments.
As part of the gala, guests were treated to a
couture fashion show that included the four "roll models" being honored
in their designer wheelchairs.
The women being honored were
Rosemarie Rossetti of Ohio, Jenny Smith of Kentucky, Michele Boardman
of Pennsylvania and Melissa Holley of Tennessee.
Proceeds from
the gala were to go to organizations such as the Christopher Reeve
Foundation, The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis and The Spinal Cord
Injury Project at Rutgers University.
"When the first woman
came down the ramp in her wheelchair, everyone just stood up and
clapped. It was amazing to see," Hamilton said.
Equally
amazing, she said, were the wheelchairs. Workers at the Fresno plant
spent four to five weeks working on the specially designed chairs.
"This
was really a once-in-a-lifetime event for these women," Hamilton said.
"And they show that they have not let their Disability or their
wheelchairs get in their way of their dreams."