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Showing posts with label Haute Couture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haute Couture. Show all posts

FASHION MUST-READS

Posted by Maya Peilow and Bethan Holt

Schiaparelli couture SS14 (via Style.com)
It's been a busy month for fashion, with the AW14 menswear collections and the Haute Couture shows shaking us from our Christmas stupors. With the international fashion weeks just around the corner, here are our some thought-provoking reports on the biggest stories from fashion's January….

Street Style

We’re used to seeing pictures of editors and style stars looking fabulous outside fashion shows. But a recent piece in Business of Fashion, questions whether it’s really appropriate to call this street style. If you’re wearing the latest pieces off the runway and specially-made gifts from your designer friends, are you truly expressing your own personal style? The premise of great street style imagery is about seeing everyday people with innate taste and styling abilities. But if websites such as The Cut are able to release “street style bait” – suggestions of what to wear if you want to be photographed- then surely the originality behind street style is completely lost? (via Business of Fashion)

What's the point of fashion weeks?

In the latest think piece on the current state of fashion weeks from a senior editor, the FT's Vanessa Friedman wonders whether the real purpose of fashion weeks has become clouded or confused. "Maybe the reason we complain so much about fashion weeks is because what we (critics, consumers, viewers) think they are for, and what brands and designers think they are for, are no longer the same thing", she writes. Fashion weeks might be about the opportunity for journalists and buyers to form an in-depth view of the moods, thoughts and ideas coming out of the brightest minds in fashion design. But Friedman also concedes that more and more it's about creating content and buzz for social media, red carpet fodder and even a direct selling tool. Tell Friedman what you think the point of fashion week is by tweeting her @VVFriedman (via FT.com)

The Dior Dream

Dior’s Raf Simons made 63 fashion students’ dreams come true this week when he invited them to the haute couture show in Paris. But this was no ordinary show. Not only were these students invited to a special show, they were treated to a tour of the ateliers the night before and a trip backstage afterwards to examine all the tiniest details and techniques used to create the collection. Simons decided “it would be a great idea to add another show especially for students and the atelier people.” Claire McKinney, one of the lucky 63 selected from schools around the world, felt inspired by the whole experience. She said, “they taught us that there will always be people who want to buy couture and there’ll always be a place for creativity.” Needless to say, I’m sure fashion students worldwide will be praying for their own invitation to the July show. (via American Vogue)

Pre-Fall is too long

Sorry, this piece is only available to WWD subscribers so let us summarise; Bridget Foley points out that the pre-fall collections run from November 13th and only wrapped up last Friday. She quite rightly calculates that is almost 20% of the calendar year through which new collections are peppered. For editors like Foley, that means a sort half-heartedly constant fashion week during that time. More generally, the consequences of such a long window of unveilings means that pre-fall never really gets a "moment". Nobody is quite sure when to write about it or cover it. By the time it's over, the A/W shows are mere weeks away and menswear and couture are also taking place. Foley proposes two solutions. Either designate a three or four week time frame in December for designers to show pre-fall and let the fashion week organisers get a schedule together between them. Or, move the shows to a smaller time frame but move 90% of them to a digital show so that editors can log in and watch from wherever they are in the world. Of course, the way the vast majority of people already get to see pre-fall is via style.com etc. Then, keep 10% of live shows for what Foley calls "real fashion" like Chanel's Dallas show and the Lanvin and Calvin Klein collections which she also singles out for praise (via WWD)


As he made his debut at the newly revived House of Schiaparelli, Marco Zanini spoke to Alexander Fury about the house's "fashion trainspotter" heritage, modern couture and how the former Rochas designer is making Schiaparelli right for now (via The Independent)

Feminism is back in fashion

Rick Owens SS14 stepdancers (via totokaelo.com)
On the Spring/ Summer catwalks, there was extensive evidence of a newly empowered mood both in the messages of designers' shows (see Rick Owens and Prada) but also in the clothes themselves. Beyond the shows, more and more fashion figures are declaring their feminist leanings and getting involved in the debate. But, is this a mere trend or a meaningful new fashion chapter? (via the Financial Times)

Prada & Gucci

If you want to know what to expect for menswear this autumn, look at the Prada and Gucci shows. The two powerhouse Italian designers’ visions of menswear, as shown at Milan Fashion Week, offered simple silhouettes and minimalistic accessories. Their use of natural, earthy colours and limited use of brand signatures, mark a move towards a fresher, more casual AW14. (via The New York Times)

Destination Paris

Paris has become the global capital for menswear, with 35 out of the 50 designers who showcased earlier this month coming from around the globe. The Chambre Syndicale, the body which decides who makes it onto the fashion week schedule, included designers from Germany, Korea, Turkey, the UK and the USA, to name but a few. Its president, Didier Grumbach, speaking to Business of Fashion, attributed this to the increasingly international audience in Paris. “We have 23 different nationalities showing in our women’s fashion week. I haven’t counted the men’s, but it’s a similar situation. The Italians have stayed more Italian. In Paris, we believe that fashion has no nationality.” Why Paris? American designer Thom Browne, who used to show in New York, claims that Paris fashion week enables him to “show the collection earlier to get a head start on production and I also feel that Paris fashion week embraces true conceptual design.” Richard Haines, fashion illustrator, said Paris had another quality. “In terms of a level of creativity and execution, this is the ultissimo.” What better accreditation for an international designer than to present their collections on the same stage and level of creativity as the likes of Chanel, Dior and Givenchy? (via Business of Fashion)

RAF SIMONS' DIOR DEBUT SETS FASHION WORLD (AND THE WEB) ALIGHT

 Posted by Melanie Rickey, Fashion Editor at Large

I'm pregnant enough to make getting out of a car a three point manoeuvre so decided not to go to Paris for the Haute Couture shows this time (the most sensible I have been in my life). And so, following in the footsteps of colleagues who have walked this way before me, I'm watching the latest fashion proceedings in Paris from the comfort of my swivel chair and a window on the world through my Mac. The view is, in fact, rather brilliant proving almost as insightful as actually being there.

The Dior live stream for Raf Simon's debut show – OMG!! Cue Raf mania etc. - for the house was in full working order - we watched it on Dior.com complete with the actual show music, Windowlicker by Aphex Twin, pumping through (with Elle.fr and Dior's Facebook page as back-ups).

Witnessing the build up to the show on Twitter/Instagram was bordering on hysterical – one editor wrote, “So excited its like Christmas day when you are five years old.” When you think that basically, said editor (and indeed all of us to an extent) is excited about clothing designed for the newly minted society ladies from BRIC nations, created by a rave music loving Belgian modernist, for France’s most storied and bourgeois fashion house, in the midst of a first world recession, it seems smart to remain clear-eyed in the eye of fashion beauty. Especially when considering the fate of the previous Dior creative director John Galliano who infamously unravelled under the pressure of his role. Being caught up in fashion raptures seems somehow inappropriate to me now, but it's hard when confronted with the most perfect outfit I've ever seen (below).

(via @franburnslondon) My favourite

So, I’m going to try to be clear eyed. The heart and the head are saying two differen
things… While this did feel like the most anticipated fashion debut in my living 
memory, and the flower filled venue and clothes were incredibly beautiful, the show and 
collection itself was exactly what I expected - even down to the slim-leg trousers topped
 with modern ballgown tops that were a lyrical rendition of the so-called “mullet” dresses 
most young London women are wearing - nothing more. I'm not sure if that is a bad thing 
or a good thing. Probably good. 

It was certainly clear by look two that Raf Simons knew he had the Dior job back in February
 when he presented his final collection for Jil Sander, so similar was the look and feel of the
 clothes. In fact maybe his last Jil Sander show was actually his first unofficial Christian Dior 
show – even the hair and make-up was the same.

In a nutshell this felt like a spot-on continuation and evolution to the Raf Simons body of 
work, while it also respected the elegant codes of the Dior DNA. My gut feeling is, let's 
wait and see what he does for his Dior ready-to-wear – I sense he will be redefining and 
modernising the end-use customer in Dior's off-the-peg collection far more intensively 
that he can with a Haute Couture show. A society lady is what she is, after all, and she 
will be hammering down the door of the Dior atelier on Rue Francois Premier....right
 about now.

THE FIVE TWEETS WHICH SUMMED IT UP FOR ME:


Nerdishly overexcited for today's Raf Simons debut, I have arrived 20 mins early at Dior. Doors not even open. 

That was so exciting my legs have turned to jelly...wow. Beautiful!
The Dior show just ended. In the last 13 minutes, Raf Simons just single-handedly altered the contemporary haute couture landscape. Bravo!

I'm hardly understated myself, but if I read one more Vreeland-level overreaction to the shenanigans in Paris... Wipe your seats, peeps.
Is it THE rapturous and monumental start to Raf's career at Dior we all expected though? I'm not sure....

(via @franburnslondon)


(via @franburnslondon)

(via @franburnslondon)
(via @franburnslondon)

Via @JessC_M

(via @kegrand)
(via @SHOWstudio)
Via @JessC_M
(via @SHOWstudio)
(via @timesfashion)


WHO WAS THERE?

Marc Jacobs (via @cathyhorynsnyt)

Riccardo Tisci (via ValerieToranian)


Donatella and Allegra (via @lauracraik)
Natalia Vodianova (via @lauracraik)

Anna dello Russo (via @lauracraik)

THE SOUNDTRACK

The Magic of Haute Couture

dior1

With every haute couture season I am more and more drawn to the transparencies which are a trend for some years now, I am fascinated with the beautiful embellishments and the exquisite craftsmanship in these garments. The dresses look so fragile as if they'll break at a single touch and the feminine silhouette really puts a woman in great value.
Here are my favorites, starting with Dior..

dior2

dior

The delicacy at Valentino

valentino

And the sparkling, precious refined gowns from Elie Saab. Even the colors are delicious!

elie saab

What do you say?

THE WEEK IN FASHION: 23rd- 27th JANUARY

Posted by Bethan Holt, Fashion Junior at Large

The world of fashion is racing ahead at full throttle right now; menswear and couture are just done and February is just around the corner which means we're on countdown to the big four fashion weeks. And that all means there's plenty of fashion news to let you know about...

E.Tautz- one to watch at the menswear shows (image from sharpened lead.com)
News from the British Fashion Council: London is to have its very own mini menswear fashion week. The June dates precede the established shows in Milan and Paris. The change also makes commercial sense because it ties into the calendar for buyers. We're glad to see menswear getting its own moment in the spotlight rather than seeming like an afterthought to womenswear (until now, London Fashion Week had a men's day tagged on the end). It makes perfect sense too; London being the home of Savile Row- the ultimate menswear shopping destination.

Michelle Obama at this week's State of the Union address (image from guardian.co,uk)
At this week's State of the Union address, Michelle Obama continued her rather impressive track record on occasion appropriate dressing with a Barbara Tfank sapphire blue dress. However, one blogger on the French Elle website took the opportunity to write an article which argued that the Obamas have enabled black style to move from 'street wear' to 'chic'. Naturally, a row ensued which quite understandably accused the publication of racist leanings. Apparently, the article, which has now been taken down, was 'misinterpreted'. We would just like to point out that Michelle Obama is not the world's first chic black woman. See below, The Supremes, as a starting point.

image from www.sweetlyrics.com
LVMH announced this week that the Celine AW12 show will be scaled back due to Phoebe Philo's pregnancy- she'll be eight months gone by the time of the show on March 4th. Instead, there will probably be a presentation at the same time which is deemed a more manageable task than the full-blown runway affair. Vanessa Friedman at the FT sees this decision as emblematic of a new attitude to designers; 'the Celine move marks a conscious decision to choose the designer over possible marketing returns from the runway pictures'. In a post-Galliano age, designers might finally be recognised as human beings, as well as talented makers of profit earning collections.
Philo's Mum and Dad were at her SS12 show (image from catwalking.com)
Sienna and Savannah Miller have called it a day on their roles as Creative Directors at twenty8twelve, the label they started six years ago and which is named after Sienna's birthday. It looks like the sisters probably haven't had too much to do with the design process for some time, even though Savannah is highly qualified, having studied at Central St. Martins. Nish Soneji, the Pepe Managing Director which owns the label, told Drapers 'We never intended to be a celebrity brand and we remain confident of our DNA'. Don't expect much change at the London show in a few weeks then.
Sienna and Savannah (www.dirklinder.com)
OUTFIT OF THE WEEK: Miss Piggy in Giles at last night's premiere of the new Muppets film. Giles commented 'She's the biggest diva we've ever worked with'.

Fab! (image from graziadaily.co.uk)




We've noticed some particularly deep and meaningful (ahem, not) comments from the mouths of models this week.. SH*T MODELS SAY

Alice Dellal on Karl Lagerfeld: 'He's so nice. It was nice to be able to talk to him'
Dellal on being in a Chanel shoot: 'It made me feel like a lady'

Helena Christensen on advice she'd give to the models she's just selected: 'I want to say "run as fast as you can'

And the biggest gems from Laura Craik's satirical interview with Kate Moss. On Mango's clothes 'The cut and they’re kind of ... you know ... really well made, and the jeans are ... you know, they’re really well made and the cut, you can wear them a lot ... '

Kate Moss on the Daily Mail's obsession with her: 'I don’t know. ’Cos it’s the Daily Mail? They just get on everyone’s tits, don’t they? I don’t know'

Lady Amanda Harlech (from www.justin-teodoro.blogspot.com)
If you haven't read it already, then can we heartily recommend to you Alex Fury's interview with Lady Amanda Harlech, Creative Consultant at Chanel a.k.a Lagerfeld's right hand woman? It's a brilliant lid lifting on the real role of the 'muse' as Harlech is so often called as well as her quite extraordinary life. Particularly apt for couture week. 

Just out: Natalia Vodianova for Stella McCartney. Similar to last season but with pretty flowers this time.

image from wwd.com
The Haute Couture shows are over for another season, not that it matters much for those us not buying. While we can, and do, admire the artisanship, these are collections which only a few of the super-super rich will think about it in an "I want that now" kind of way.

It's easy to feel left out, especially when most of our realities involve the very possible threat of a double dip recession. We shouldn't feel left out. The sad truth is today's Haute Couture is aimed squarely at markets in China and Russia where there is a boom-time economy and fashion is going through a wealth flaunting bling stage. So that yellow shiny long, thigh split dress will never see the light of day again in Europe. In Russia on the other hand....

It is a fact of life that designers now need to straddle all the potential markets from affordable to outrageously expensive. Karl Lagerfeld did that rather nicely this week; he began on Tuesday with his couture show, the next day he launched his affordable, online only collection- available exclusively at Net-a-Porter. Launch events were hosted in London and New York and judging by the huge queues, Karl's mega straddle paid off- they came flocking. Oh, and Chanel have also produced a nail polish in the same clear sky blue which underpinned the couture.  Chanel know better than any other brand how to tickle the fancy of all their critics and fans from uppity newspaper fashion editors to young bloggers, and this is what makes it the world's best fashion brand.

Image courtesy of @jimshi809
This is how Karl celebrated, with a party at his place in Paris. Azealia Banks was performing, can you spy Karl? he is filming the whole thing with one of his many iPads. Looks like the indoor smoking ban is NOT being respected at Karl's place.



Whaaat did she say? (from derekblasberg.com)

In other couture news, Jean Paul Gaultier has offended Amy Winehouse's family by staging a 'bad taste' tribute to the singer to showcase his collection. Barber shop singers performed Winehouse tracks and models wore beehives and smoked cigarettes. Mitch Winehouse said that the show 'glamorises some of the more upsetting times of her life'. We agree that the donning of mourning veils at the end of the show was probably a step too far, but then JPG has never been one to play safe. Jean Paul was a huge fan of Amys and recently told FashEd he was devastated when she died, so the homage was done with good intentions. Perhaps just a bit too soon for the Winehouse family. What do you think?
JPG's couture tribute to Amy Winehouse (image from catwalking.com)
After an eight year absence, Versace made a return to the couture schedule, albeit in a scaled down presentation. This is another label which is doing the 'straddle', only last week Donatella's second Versace collection for H&M sold out. Watch Suzy Menkes' interview to get the lowdown on everything Versace...



A few special looks to sum up couture...

Elegant New Look references at Christian Dior by Bill Gaytten
Livening up the clothes with mohicans at Chanel (this will be big in China)
 Pastel overdose at Elie Saab 
Beautiful Valentino

One for the Russian crowd at Versace (all images from catwalking.com)

GIVENCHY HAUTE COUTURE SS10 *FIERCE*

Posted by the Fashion Editor at Large
I thought I would share my petit photo gallery of the Givenchy Haute Couture show this week. I am a fan of the work of Riccardo Tisci, who is a man after my own heart. He studied at St Martins and last year I did an interview with him for Grazia, where we intantly clicked and talked comfortably about everything from Madonna, and London nightlcubs to reinventing the idea of the codes of Givenchy. I will dig these quotes up, as they are very relevant now that Riccardo is in full-flow with his work at Givenchy. Seven or so years ago, after Alexander McQueen and Julian Macdonald had both "had a go" at making Givenchy a brand for the 21st century, we all worried it would never find its feet again. Thankfully it has.

Photographs by the Fashion Editor at Large
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