Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Alexander McQueen. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Alexander McQueen. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 16 de marzo de 2011

LOS 10 LOOKS MAS MEMORABLES DE PARIS FASHION WEEK OTOÑO/INVIERNO 2011

1.- ALEXANDER McQUEEN
FRIDA GUSTAVSSON (IMG)

2.- GIAMBATTISTA VALLI
JAC JAGACIAK (IMG)

3.- MIU MIU
ANAIS POULIOT (ELITE)

4.- LANVIN
KARMEN PEDARU (ELITE)

5.- JEAN-CHARLES DE CASTELBAJAC
DEBORA MULLER (NATHALIE)

6.- HAIDER ACKERMANN
KINGA RAJZAK (IMG)

7.- HERMES
KARMEN PEDARU (ELITE)

8.- YVES SAINT LAURENT
FREJA BEHA ERICHSEN (IMG)

9.- ROLAND MOURET
JAC (IMG)

10.- STELLA McCARTNEY
ANJA RUBIK (NEXT)

lunes, 6 de septiembre de 2010

ALEXANDER McQUEEN SPRING 2011 MENSWEAR

Funny how time slips away. Four months ago it seemed unthinkable, on an emotional level, that Alexander McQueen's label would survive his death. Then logic prevailed, with Sarah Burton, McQueen's second in command and the person who knew as well as anyone how he thought and worked, appointed as creative director.

On the evidence of this Spring menswear collection, the transition could involve a reasonably seamless and subtle reworking of the house aesthetic.

THOMAS AOUSTET


Despite the show's title, Pomp and Circumstance, it was as low-key as its mode of presentation. Maybe there was some pomp in the historicism of suppressed waists and high collars with a Regency flair, or in the cutaway jackets and morning suit striped pants.

And the house's signature theatricality was certainly evident in a red and gold brocade coat, or the opium-den-worthy florid deconstructed redingote in vermilion velvet, worn with baggy trousers in an aboriginal silk print. But there was more humble circumstance in a fisherman's sweater, in an unstructured jacket in cashmere reconfigured to look like rough linen, and in an outrider's jacket in washed black leather that ended in an unhemmed skin. The truest reflection of the McQueen heritage was the sense of a story being told: Burton's interplay between aristo and working-class rough was the latest chapter in a book started nearly two decades ago.










Ian O'Brien


Dan Felton


Johannes Linder




lunes, 30 de agosto de 2010

ALEXANDER McQUEEN RESORT 2011

Alla Kostromichova (WOMEN)

Sarah Burton proved she's the only choice to expand on Lee McQueen's legacy with a Resort collection that effortlessly updated his design codes without losing his drama. There's so much great material lying fallow in old McQueen collections that it would overwhelm anyone without the empathy, experience, and ability to edit that Burton brings to a difficult job. For Resort, she confidently revisited some of her own favorite moments in her mentor's saga with a lightness that could be easily construed—for want of a better notion—as a woman's touch.

For instance, a Victorian jacket was reconfigured as a white cotton shirtdress. But, more significantly for the future, proportions were lifted, with a higher waist taking some of the edge off of McQueen's traditional silhouette. It worked spectacularly well with evening dresses that fell away beautifully from the torso. One of them—in what looked like blood-drenched chiffon—evoked a vision of Isabelle Adjani in La Reine Margot, one of McQueen's favorite movies. It seems a taste for the macabre comes as naturally to Burton as it did to him. She shares his instinct for extreme glamour, too. His Hollywood clientele will scarcely be disappointed by the tuxedo dress that was bifurcated by black lace.

The tension between hardness and fragility that characterized McQueen's work was successfully sustained in defined shoulders (some armored like a samurai's) and tailored torsos that fell away into fins of diaphanousness. Burton continued to hybridize fabrics as she did in the Fall collection—lace transformed into chiffon in one cocktail dress.

Touches like that should allay the inevitable fears of McQueen's fans that continuation of his line would involve some kind of sellout. Yes, there is more of what could pass for "daywear" here, but if Burton's collection is commercial, it's because it is direct. Pieces like the white kimono-sleeved coat-dress or the black dress in a lacquered raffia and organza have a straightforward chic.

Burton hasn't neglected the dark romance, either—the brocades, the bullion embroidery are still here. She's simply let some light in.




Alla Kostromichova (WOMEN)




















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