Wendy Pepper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wendy Pepper (born August 23, 1964) is a fashion designer who appeared on the first season of the reality television show Project Runway, which aired on Bravo, from December 2004 through February 2005. She was one of the three finalists and the first of the three to be eliminated in the final "Fashion Week" challenge.

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Pepper was born in Dayton, Ohio and now lives in the town of Middleburg, Virginia. She attended the University of Washington in Seattle, earning a degree in anthropology. While in college, Pepper studied abroad in Nepal and began to sew carpets with local Nepali women. This sparked her interest in design and working with fabric. She returned home and continued to learn more about textiles, fabric-painting, and quilting.

Pepper's designs garnered her first place in some challenges, while she barely escaped elimination in others. She won two of the competitions, with her design for the Banana Republic challenge and the Grammy dress for Nancy O'Dell. Her win in the Banana Republic challenge allowed her dress to be sold in select Banana Republic stores in the United States as well as online. Her dress sold out within three hours online and within two days in stores. As a result of her win in the Grammy dress challenge, Nancy O'Dell wore an altered version [1] of Pepper's dress to the 2005 Grammy Awards, despite some expressed reservations from the judges. She also had noticeable failures, including her dress for the Innovation challenge and her dress for the Envy challenge.

As a finalist on Project Runway, Wendy was given the opportunity to display her "Thrill of the Hunt" fashion collection to a large audience at New York Fashion Week. She claims it was the second most important day of her life after the birth of her daughter.

After Project Runway, Pepper unsuccessfully endeavored to open her own store in Middleburg, Virginia and also continued to work with individual clients. Soon after the show ended, Wendy divorced her second husband, Robert Downing. She told the New York Post that her experience on television had changed her and "it was difficult for my husband to sort of come along for that step." While a successful business in couture eluded her, Pepper continues to garner media attention. She appeared on the front page of The Georgetowner magazine in Washington, D.C. She appeared in the New York Post, The Washington Post, Loudoun Magazine, the Middleburg Eccentric, and Factio magazine. She also took part in two other Bravo television shows: Celebrity Poker Showdown and Battle of the Network Reality Stars. She also took part in the interview process for contestants for season two of Project Runway. She had a brief cameo appearance in Bravo's Project Jay, an hour-long documentary on the winner of the first season of Project Runway.

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