JW Anderson Spring 2021 Menswear

Jonathan Anderson’s spring 2021 men’s and resort 2021 women’s collections will go down in memory as the show in a box. As a moment in the Lockdown Collections of 2020, this was the sweetest and most original intervention so far, a blend of digital and tactile, craft-y and clever, in a package that came to the doors of critics, and had us unwrapping it like children. Mmm...what is this?

Inside a fabric wrapping were cards printed with the photos you see here, and a little sheaf of fabric swatches to feel. Scatterings of pressed flowers dropped out between pages. There were paper masks printed with boys’ faces—the ones Anderson propped up on the mannequins in his photos. Tiny orange cards with mottoes on them slipped out: “Never compromise,” read one. “Keep looking up,” on another. And, “The future is unwritten.” Inside another little box was a set of insanely delicious brownies, topped with an edible layer of real pansies and marigolds.

Contrast how this launch of Anderson’s collection would have gone under pre-pandemic circumstances. He’d be in Paris for his men’s show, and everyone would be going through the ghastly backstage ritual that’s developed—jostling with each other in an unseemly and impatient manner, shoving smartphones in designers’ faces, shouting questions, and breathing over one another. In spite of the cataclysm that brought it about, how much more human, civilized, and thought-provoking was the sight of Anderson unpacking the box and calmly, unhurriedly explaining its contents on a video for the world to see?

“I’m surprised we even had a collection!” he said, in a one-to-one Zoom call from his studio. “It was like going back to university days, when you can’t get a model, and you have to do everything yourself, at home with a mannequin in your bedroom. And I really enjoyed it. It felt like a collection made in real time. I realized through it that I’ve never wanted to make things more, to be more creative.”

The ability to tune in to the emotion of the zeitgeist is Anderson’s incredibly accurate superpower. A long time ago, he intuited that people would be starting to relate to handmade things—and exactly how spot-on that’s proved to be. His own patchwork, knitted cardigan, as once worn by Harry Styles, has become a peak-craft-wave TikTok phenomenon across continents. “I’ve never seen anything like it. Fans, everywhere, making their own versions! It’s a hand-knit that’s no longer sold, but we’ve just given the pattern away for free,” says Anderson.

JW Anderson Spring 2021 Menswear Vogue Runway Fashionado

If ever there was an endorsement of the joy fashion can bring in dark times, that surely was it. “Early on,” he remembers, “I went through those defeatist weeks, when you question what you’re doing with fashion, what’s its purpose? I think everyone who’s involved in fashion has felt that. But I do believe fashion is always an important mirror of the times. It reflects the trials and tribulations of the age. So with this box that we’ve sent out, I imagined it being put on a bookshelf, and someone else picking it up years later, and these things dropping out: this record of where we were, right now.”

What historians will be studying hence in these two collections is the resurgence of playful resilience in difficult circumstances, the making the best of what already exists. Lots of patchwork coats, gigantic pockets, pom-pom trims; capes made from chopped-up trench coats and military parkas; brocades and faded wallpaper prints. In the resort collection, lovely bias-cut 1930s dresses (a carryover from his thoughts about glamour from the seasons before), with trailing trumpet sleeves and “wings.”

A line in his press notes described the poignant feeling of optimism against the odds that he wanted to put across: “A sentiment of youthful, freewheeling amusement composedly comes to the fore.” The uplifting little messages he sent out on those cards came, he said, from all the comforting things he remembers people close to him saying on calls over the past few months: “You know, talking to my parents, people saying, ‘It’ll get better soon.’” One of them read, “The end is the beginning.”

Will there ever be shows again, as they were? Maybe not. But in this limbo time, how much better does fashion feel when it’s not rushed, pressured, and hysterical? And how grateful are we to designers like Jonathan Anderson who are thinking up new ways to spark pleasure in thinking about clothes? Today, very.

Source: VogueRunway

FASHIONADO

Giambattista Valli Fall 2020 Couture

“If they’re coming to me, they want the best of me.” That was Giambattista Valli earlier today on a Zoom call from Paris, hours before his fall 2020 haute couture collection would be unveiled via a video starring Joan Smalls. True to his word, the new collection is signature Giamba. There’s no COVID-time second-guessing of his instincts—no economizing on silk tulle or scaling back of faille and taffeta bows. If anything, the tulle tiers are frothier, the bows more voluminous. A face-covering mask could’ve been a nod to the pandemic, but in black chiffon it was more decorative than functional.

Smalls models the collection’s 18 looks in the video, and in the split-screen next to her, scenes of Paris in winter are revealed. “With or without us, nature was going on,” Valli remarked of the months we spent under lockdown. “In the horror of what we’re passing through, there was beauty blooming at the same time.” On day one of this digital couture week, nature is a recurring motif, as is the human desire to get out into it. It may be irrational exuberance on our parts, but it is exuberance which is better than its opposite, and after months of restrictions, this kind of pleasure seeking is hardly a surprise. Even before the collection made its online debut, Valli had two virtual orders. “Happy times are never going to be démodé,” he said. He also has the advantage of a very young clientele; “they’re used to buying on the web,” he added.

As his bride (see gallery above), Smalls wears a strapless dress of ruched ivory tulle decorated with a pair of black bows that match the one that accents her cathedral-length veil of polka-dot embroidered tulle. Valli was eager to highlight the couture techniques of each piece—from a sequin minidress and its many-layered point d’esprit cape to a white ballgown decorated neckline to hem in lipstick-red feathers—and he proudly announced he was able to retain all of his employees during the shutdown and the reopening that’s followed. Amidst this ongoing crisis, that really is cause for happy times.

Source: Vogue

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Hermès Spring 2021 Menswear

Locked down in le confinement, Véronique Nichanian binged on theater—watched online, of course. This sparked the start of a process that led to today’s livestreamed presentation of her spring 2021 menswear collection from the airy foyer of Les Ateliers Hermès in Pantin, on the edges of Paris. It was, said Nichanian on a call shortly afterwards, a “four-hands” operation overseen by her in partnership with Cyril Teste, an experimental director whose Collective MxM specializes in the poetic expression of live dramatic performance via streamed video.

Presented as if shot in one take—with the exception of a cut around a loving close-up of a Slim d’Hermès watch in stainless steel and Barénia calfskin—Teste’s direction here was reminiscent of that of Sam Mendes in 1917. The result was restrained in that it communicated an evocative soupçon of this collection, rather than attempting an exhaustive à la carte. It was also dynamic in its presentation, whooshing us down in an elevator with a model wearing a double-fronted tailored jacket and sash-collared shirt, and then around the light-filled atrium.

Rather than reproducing a show, this qualified more as a show-experience with footage of Nichanian and her team working backstage. There were some especially nice details of her discussing with Teste that she wanted to emphasize the leather detailing in the indentations of a rib-knit sweater as well as the belt worn below it. A close-up on the shoulders of a model wearing a striped shirt revealed a subtly opaque pattern hidden within. Other scenes revealed glimpses of layered shirting in panels of contrasting striping used in jackets, and zippered waistcoats. We zoomed across to a model called Jai wearing a minimally cut yet generously silhouetted putty suit who was told he had “two minutes” and promptly left the building to take a call, before panning to a less urgent mise-en-scène in which another model listened to Primal Scream on his headphones and we got to note his seersucker-looking jacket, also putty, tucked into his slightly darker, lovely, drawstring pants.

Before this presentation went live, Hermès delivered a care package of nibbles to my apartment. I had fully intended to watch this collection video while grazing at the kindly provided black truffle chips, olive tapenade, and lemon verbena tea, but, of course, one of the big problems with a digitally presented show is that the house cannot control the context in which the end product is seen. Crushingly, my children pinched all the food. Even worse, as I watched Nichanian’s presentation on my laptop, one of them was howling with rage across the room following a premature death on Fortnite.

What was much better than a real show about this one, however, was having the chance to get to speak properly with Nichanian—this is rarely doable at the défilé, as she is besieged by Hermès worshippers. As this unconventional show cannot be conventionally reviewed, here is some of what she had to say:

“I had never met Cyril before, but I knew his work and I jumped at the chance to do this project together in four-hands. At the beginning we met on the phone, and talked a lot, and it was like working with an old friend. He knew my clothes but he did not know the job, and this world. I explained to him what a press show is, and what is going on before in the backstage. And we decided together to work on not what is the backstage, but what is called in French ‘hors-champ,’ or ‘off-camera.’ As I told him, it was an opportunity to present exactly what I wanted people to see because when you are on the runway you might be looking at the clothes, or the shoes, or the model—I don’t know. But as a designer I know exactly what I want the audience to see…and it was very funny to do that together [with Cyril].... We all had a lot of joy working together, his team and my team.

Hermès Spring 2021 Menswear Vogue Fashionado

I held a show at Pantin in the atelier once before, a long time ago, and it was my idea to come back here again where the craftsmen are, in this beautiful space with beautiful light.… Freshness, lightness, and joy were something I really concentrated on throughout lockdown and in the making of the collection. And it was strange, doing it at home on the computer.… I did the same double-lapel jacket we saw last winter, in flannel, and I played with different stripes and different blues, and there was a chaîne d’ancre printed over the shirt striping—I’m glad you saw that detail because I was not sure if the camera would show it! The print you see towards the end was from La Danse des Chevaux, a new scarf, and the third print, which was not in the show, is playing with tiny robos, robots. There is a blue leather jacket, in suede, that also has the chaîne d’ancre, although you could not see it in the movie, and the man you see walking behind the mirrors is wearing a noncolor blouson in deerskin, very beautiful, in beige. But I put just two pieces of leather in the collection...although in that knitwear you talked about, yes, we worked on putting the leather between the ribs of the knit.… Thank you, I’m glad you liked the sandals! We did this sandal that is closed, a gardener’s sandal.

The collection is bigger than what was presented to you in the film. We saw 18 looks there, but we are photographing 26, which is what we will share with you. And that is less than usual. And sometimes it was quite difficult working with the team, all on the computers, but at the end we did a good job. Because we made these pieces, real pieces.

Am I looking forward to the return of the défilé? In a way, but I like this way of working too. I like the idea of seeing the reality but also sharing the details on the computer too, and maybe we can play on that.… Everybody is trying to find the right way now, and it is open, and we can investigate.… Yes, it’s an opportunity.”

Nichanian, who has been in her position since 1988, demonstrated both the movement in her clothes and the flexibility in her attitude with this presentation for Hermès today.

Source: Vogue

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Ralph & Russo Fall 2020 Couture

Tamara Ralph spent the lockdown in the South of France, where she triangulated with London and Italy on producing collections. And even without a commute or social commitments, the designer said she’s been busier than ever.

“We’ve had to adapt a lot, but a lot of interesting things also came out of this time in terms of problem-solving,” the designer said by Zoom. Not just in terms of making clothes, but showing them too, which she’s doing with a little help from Hauli, an avatar whose name in Swahili evokes strength and power, and who sprang to life with help from an AI developer in South Korea. “We were working on a bigger digital strategy, but this pushed it into fast-forward,” offered Ralph. “We wanted to do something that had never been done before to that level.”

You have to hand it to her: The result is astonishing. For inspiration, the designer looked to the natural world, travel, art and architecture, producing eight pieces IRL and using AI to develop eight others.

Dressed in couture, Hauli appears amid some of the seven contemporary wonders of the world, among them Petra (in a pale blue silk double satin gown with an embellished cut-out bodice), the Taj Mahal (in a full fringe-and-crystal strapless pink gown), and the Great Wall of China (in a pale pink floral-printed fishtail gown with organza flowers, crystal embellishments, and matching cape). Digitizing florals to develop prints and re-embroidering them is just as laborious in the virtual world, Ralph said. Either way, it seems she’s hit on an essential accessory for sharing her vision.

As the world awaits a return to social proximity, customers also appear excited to push ahead. The designer said people are starting to call in with dates—they still want to get married, after all—and, contrary to expectations, they’re forgoing pared-down, safer looks in favor of fantasy. Which also opens up new paths. Home and hospitality are a space Ralph said she’s been wanting to explore for a while. A collaboration in a new fashion category will land in stores this fall; another for spring 2021 will be revealed in October. Meanwhile, the brand’s sole non-fashion collaboration was supposed to be revealed in Paris today. It’s been pushed back, but already a few customers have lined up to buy it, the designer said. In a neat piece of symmetry, it also involves the initials “RR,” and it’s one of the most expensive models that the storied carmaker has ever produced. Proof, as if more were needed, that once the Ralph & Russo customer steps into this world, she tends to stay put.

Source: Vogue

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THE TOP 10 MOST EXPENSIVE SNEAKERS

THE TOP 10 MOST EXPENSIVE SNEAKERS

Have you ever wondered about the most expensive sneakers of all-time? The popularity of sneakers has risen sky high over the past decade. Many releases are incredibly scarce, which has helped to create the reseller sneaker market. The increased demand for unique sneakers, paired with their limited supply has led to some jaw-dropping prices on the most sought-after sneakers. Sneaker collectors have splurged on kicks that could be defined as the complete opposite of frugal.

Take a look at the Top 10 Most Expensive Sneakers below:

NIKE MOON SHOE

Nike Moon Shoe – $437,500

Nike Moon Shoe – $437,500

Nike co-founder Bill Bowerman originally created the waffle sole using his wife’s waffle iron. The waffle sole was one of the first major innovations from Nike. These sneakers sport an out-of-this-world moniker to go with the price tag. The Nike Moon Shoe was originally created for the 1972 Olympic Trials. Less than 12 pairs of the shoes exist today. The only known unworn pair of Nike Moon Shoes recently sold at auction by Sotheby’s for $437,700 to Canadian collector Miles Nadal, making them the most expensive Nike shoes of all time. In fact, the Nike Moon Shoe is mentioned for the record-breaking price tag by the Guinness World Records. The Nike Moon Shoe can be confidently classified as the most expensive sneakers in the world.

MICHAEL JORDAN’S GAME-WORN CONVERSE FASTBREAKS

Converse Fastbreak – $190,373

Converse Fastbreak – $190,373

Before Michael Jordan teamed up with Nike to create the Air Jordan brand, he wore Converse sneakers throughout his pre-NBA years. This particular pair of Converse Fastbreak Mid sneakers were worn by MJ at the 1984 Olympics gold medal game versus Spain. The game-used and autographed shoes fetched an impressive final bid of $190,373 at SCP Auctions. These kicks are widely considered as the most expensive basketball shoes of all-time.

BUSCEMI 100MM DIAMOND

Buscemi 100mm Diamond – $132,000

Buscemi 100mm Diamond – $132,000

Bling is king. These limited edition Buscemi sneakers are adorned with 11.50 carats worth of diamonds, along with 18-karats of gold hardware. The 100mm Diamond was launched to celebrate the opening of Buscemi’s Soho flagship store in NYC. No word as to who (if anyone) ended up buying these sneakers. Buscemi put together the most expensive mens sneakers at a retail price.

MICHEAL JORDAN’S GAME-WORN AIR JORDAN 12 “FLU GAME”

Air Jordan 12 “Flu Game” – $104,765

Air Jordan 12 “Flu Game” – $104,765

This particular pair of Air Jordan 12 sneakers were worn during the “Flu Game”. After his iconic performance in Game 5 of the 1997 NBA Finals, MJ gifted the game-worn shoes to a Utah Jazz ballboy, who put them up for auction in 2013. The Jordan factor definitely creates a bidding war at auctions. Grabbing this piece of NBA history ended up costing over $100k at an auction hosted by Grey Flannel Auctions. The “Flu Game” Air Jordan 11s are the most expensive Jordan shoes.

2016 NIKE MAG SELF-LACING “BACK TO THE FUTURE”

2016 Nike Mag Self-Lacing “Back To The Future” – $104,000

2016 Nike Mag Self-Lacing “Back To The Future” – $104,000

Almost 30 years after the Nike Mag was featured on screen, Nike made the sneakers available to the public. Nostalgic Back To The Future fans clamored to purchase these very expensive Nike shoes. The Nike Mag was originally released in 2011, then re-released in 2016 with the added self-lacing functionality. Nike raffled the sneakers online with proceeds benefiting the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research. The release was limited to 89 pairs, which led to a huge resale price on these Nike trainers. A pair sold for over $100,000 in 2016 at a Hong Kong charity auction.

1989 NIKE MAG “BACK TO THE FUTURE II”

1989 Nike MAG “Back To The Future II” – $92,100

1989 Nike MAG “Back To The Future II” – $92,100

A piece of movie history. One of the most valuable sneakers. The iconic Nike Mag sneakers remain popular today, over 30 years since the release of Back To The Future II. The auction for the Nike Mag shoes used on screen, was in fact only for a single shoe. The shoe was badly damaged due to age. Shoezeum owner Jordy Geller listed the shoe on eBay, which fetched an impressive 220 bids and a $92,100 final price.

BIG BOI’S DIAMOND ENCRUSTED NIKE AIR FORCE 1

Nike Air Force 1 Diamond – $50,000

Nike Air Force 1 Diamond – $50,000

Diamonds are forever. Big Boi grabbed a pair of custom kicks created by Enel Dawkins of Laced Up Atlanta. These luxurious Nike Air Force 1 sneakers are embellished with 13k champagne diamonds. Adding precious gemstones to a pair of sneakers is a sure-fire way to create a jaw dropping price tag. Big Boi can happily call himself the proud owner of the most expensive Air Force 1 sneakers.

AIR JORDAN 11 “JETER”

Air Jordan 11 “Jeter” – $40,000

Air Jordan 11 “Jeter” – $40,000

Air Jordan created these shoes to celebrate the retirement of Derek Jeter. The Air Jordan 11 “Jeter” was reportedly limited to only five pairs. The sneakers were available exclusively at Yankee Stadium via raffle. A pair recently sold for $40,000 online at Stadium Goods. The Air Jordan 11 “Jeter” sneakers are the most expensive Air Jordans (that were not worn by Michael Jordan).

EMINEM X CARHARTT X AIR JORDAN 4

Eminem x Carhartt x Air Jordan 4 – $30,100

Eminem x Carhartt x Air Jordan 4 – $30,100

This collaborative effort from Eminem, Carhartt, and Air Jordan was limited to only ten pairs. The shoes commemorate the 15th anniversary of Shady Records. The sneakers were auctioned on eBay back in 2015 with proceeds going to Literacy Through Songwriting Program by the MSU Community Music School-Detroit. It is good to know that many of the most expensive trainers are sold to benefit charity.

DJ KHALED X AIR JORDAN 3 “GRATEFUL”

DJ Khaled x Air Jordan 3 “Grateful” – $20,000

DJ Khaled x Air Jordan 3 “Grateful” – $20,000

DJ Khaled dropped these sneakers exclusively via raffle to people who purchased his Grateful album. This very limited release led to a pair selling for $20,000 at online sneaker marketplace StockX. The Air Jordan 3 “Grateful” was once the most expensive thing on StockX.

SOURCE: Frugal Male Fashion

FASHIONADO

Vivienne Westwood LFW AW 20/21

Vivienne Westwood began designing in 1971 along with her then partner Malcolm McLaren in London. At the time they used their shop at 430 Kings Road, London, to showcase their ideas and designs. With their changing ideas of fashion came the change of not only the name of the shop but also the décor. It was in 1976 when Westwood and McLaren defined the street culture of Punk with Seditionaries

By the end of the seventies Vivienne Westwood was already considered a symbol of the British avant-garde and for Autumn/Winter 1981 she showed her first catwalk presentation at Olympia in London. Westwood then turned to traditional Savile Row tailoring techniques, using British fabrics and 17th and 18th century art for inspiration. 

1989 was the year that Vivienne met Andreas Kronthaler, who would later become her husband and long-time design partner, as well as Creative Director of the brand. In 2004 the Victoria & Albert museum, London, hosted a Vivienne Westwood retrospective exhibition to celebrate her then 34 years in fashion – the largest exhibition ever devoted to a living British fashion designer. In 2006, her contribution to British Fashion was officially recognized when she was appointed Dame of the British Empire by Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, and in 2007 was awarded the ‘Outstanding Achievement in Fashion’ at the British Fashion Awards in London. 

vivienne westwood aw 20/21 lookbook fashionado

Vivienne Westwood is one of the last independent global fashion companies in the world. At times thought provoking, this brand is about more than producing clothes and accessories. Westwood continues to capture the imagination, and raise awareness of environmental and human rights issues. With a design record spanning over forty years, Vivienne Westwood is now recognized as a global brand and Westwood herself as one of the most influential fashion designers, and activists, in the world today. 

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COMME des GARÇONS Drops Exclusive "EMERGENCY Special" Collection

Comme des Garcons Fashionado

COMME des GARÇONS has released a limited-edition collection titled “EMERGENCY Special,” which is set to release inline with the re-opening of retail stores in France and alongside a reservation program in Japanese outposts.

Each COMME des GARÇONS store in Japan will allow customers to shop via appointment only and in limited numbers. However, to celebrate the re-openings, the Rei Kawakubo-helmed label has worked on a collection that centers around positive phrases, reminding us of the good causes behind staying at home and taking mass social action to combat the coronavirus crisis.

As a result, T-shirts, windbreaker jackets and tote bags have been emblazoned with the phrases “believe in a better tomorrow,” “thinking and doing will result in the future,” and “on to the future, with good energy.” The text is presented in a hand-applied look, looking as if it could be found on a homemade sign.

The collection ranges from approximately $47 USD to $130 USD, and can be ordered exclusively through COMME des GARÇONS stores.

Source: HypeBeast

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