As the
economic climate cools, designer labels are retreating to their core values.
The result is beautiful, wearable clothes – the backlash against fast fashion
On Wednesday the final curtain came down on the biannual global merry-go-round of New York, London, Milan and Paris fashion weeks. The clothes in the 300 or so catwalk collections shown over this four-week period will be in shops from August 2013 until January 2014.
On Wednesday the final curtain came down on the biannual global merry-go-round of New York, London, Milan and Paris fashion weeks. The clothes in the 300 or so catwalk collections shown over this four-week period will be in shops from August 2013 until January 2014.
On Wednesday the final curtain came down on the biannual
global merry-go-round of New York, London, Milan and Paris fashion weeks. The
clothes in the 300 or so catwalk collections shown over this four-week period
will be in shops from August 2013 until January 2014.
These are the bland facts that underpin the premise of
fashion weeks. Show it, make it, sell it, make more. Before the economic depression
settled over Europe, its fashion weeks were also about excitement, drama, young
designers pushing crazy new ideas and challenging women to express themselves
in inventive ways.
But the autumn/winter 2013 collections were not pulling
punches, as most brands focused their attention on doing very nice clothes they
know their customers will buy, in the best possible way they know how. At
Chanel it was all about techno tweeds; at Céline fantastic fluffy coats and
knits; Valentino focused on exquisite dresses inspired by Vermeer's Girl with a
Pearl Earring; Vuitton's handbags were as luxurious as possible.
For some editors this is not the way forward. "Fashion
needs radical concepts, people who are doing new and exciting things,"
says Sarah Mower, contributing editor of American Vogue and the British Fashion
Council's ambassador for emerging talent.
For others, the commercial approach is a quiet revolution.
"This season has been about designers and brands returning to their core
values," says Grazia's fashion director Susannah Frankel. "I don't
think this is boring. If anything, it gives the customer something she can rely
on. It is a backlash against the fastness of recent years. What I saw on the
catwalks was individual designers at their most authentic, and that to me is
exciting."
Chanel's 'techno tweeds' at Paris fashion week.
"In difficult times commercial is good," says Emma
Elwick Bates, British Vogue's style editor. "From a Vogue point of view
the autumn/winter season has seen the return of real womanly dressing in a
Hitchcockian way; all clavicles and cleavage – lots of breast action. But in
essence what we have seen is designers focusing on the greatest hits and in
turn building a desire for a shopping list of classic winter basics. It sounds
obvious but next winter will be about a really great coat, and boots."
Indeed the designer's designer, Miuccia Prada, easily the
most revered working today (if you don't count Phoebe Philo of Céline)
described her collection as "a lot of things I really like". Hardly
revolutionary, but it's not a bad starting point to consider what fashion can
be for: namely clothes to be worn and loved.
Paula Reed, the former fashion editor and recently appointed
fashion director of Harvey Nichols, has seen the fashion weeks from an entirely
new perspective this season. "On a magazine you can talk about ideas – but
as a buyer you have to commit to the idea and sell it to a customer. It's a
challenge," she says. "London and Paris were the cities with the best
ideas, they crackled with energy and excitement. What young London designers
can do on a shoestring is awe-inspiring, and if you are looking for innovation,
Christopher Kane radiates it."
But Reed summarises that for the new season "You'll
want 10 coats. But will have to settle for one, and if you haven't got a
polo-neck you're stuffed. Polo-necks underpin everything," she says.
Street style, though, is playing an increasingly important
role in the fashion weeks; the proliferation in street-style blogs, and those
fashion eccentrics who dress to the nines in order to be photographed have
spawned their own trends and their own labels. "When you get to the
showrooms, you see that each collection is offering a bomber jacket, a duffel
coat and sweatshirts. It's all about reaching those younger customers,"
adds Reed.
Capturing the youth market is why young New York-based
Alexander Wang was hired to take over at Balenciaga; and also why Hedi Slimane
was hired for Saint Laurent.
Slimane, with his California Grunge collection managed to be
the most controversial designer this season, simply by doing luxury versions of
clothes that look like what disaffected teenagers across the world are already
wearing.
Alexander Fury, editor of Love magazine, suggests Slimane
is: "gleefully carrying on the punk tradition of Yves Saint Laurent
himself who when he was fired from Dior in the 60s, it was for showing a
leather jacket on the catwalk".
So in a season of refined luxury great coats and polo-necks,
Hedi Slimane is the only rebel. There is something rather fitting about that.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου