Photo: Parsons  
It’s that time of year again where New York’s fashion schools peacock  their graduating class before industry heavyweights, and last night,  Parsons—the former educational stomping ground for Marc Jacobs and  Proenza Schouler—celebrated its seniors with a benefit dinner.  Hosted  by Donna Karan, the event was part runway show, part opportunity for  students to rub elbows with their soon-to-be fellow alum. “It’s really breathtaking to know that they’ve come out of their way to  see what we’ve been doing for the past four years,” Giana Sacco, one of  the award-winning students, said of the night’s high-profile attendees.   But it sounds like the more seasoned designers have been paying  attention all along.  ”For me, Parsons is a connection of dots—to see  how everyone has evolved and how this place has allowed them to express  themselves over the past few years,” Karan told ELLE.  And nearby,  Narciso Rodriguez was in agreement, “I’m a Parsons alum and you have to  give back, you have to support the arts and all the talented young  people here.” The school is particularly good at spearheading industry-wide evolution,  not only by training and encouraging its students, but also by pushing  the envelope technology-wise.  Pointing to a monitor, Simon Collins, the  school’s dean of fashion, proudly explained, “If you look at that video  display, that is our lookbook—it’s sort of something out of Harry  Potter.  Everyone creates a lookbook but not like that, not an active  lookbook.  We feel like we actually enable people to pioneer new aspects  of the industry.”  And he was right, on the screen was a detailed video  of student’s work that would be distributed to the school’s legion of  editorial allies—and it was surely a welcome departure from the  paperweight collection guides currently in circulation. Between courses the lights dimmed and the techno pined on and a  procession of student theses paraded throughout the room, each one  expressing a new idea, shape, or form.  In that moment it was easy to  tell why parsons has become a mill for talent—they really do demand the  best.