Multicultural Chic |
Abstract African and Japanese origami looked sleek on the slim A-line dresses at Miu Miu.
Fringes decorated Miuccia Pradas soft leather dresses as well as her bags. A skirt was made of painted bottle tops, an ingenious recycling of art originating from the Third World.
At Vera Wang, the geisha took center stage with voluminous ceremonial pomp and lots of handcrafted detailing from beading to bunching, ruching and ruffling.
Japanese influences in London were of the anime variety: Giles Deacon had furry, Totoro-inspired cocoon dresses while Gareth Pugh had Skeletor silhouettes.
Dragging 80s icons like athletic mesh and stretch jersey, Consuelo Castiglioni of Marni creates what she calls "sportswear with an interpretation, as a good combination with my femininity." She has wonderfully sculpted cotton tunics and dresses that are loose at the back but belted in front, worn over cropped leggings. Patterns included circles, half-moon shapes and color blocks to give the sporty clothes a modernist edge.
Junya Watanabe had signature tailcoats, nip-waist dandy jackets and lean boy-cut pants done in splendid gray and black baroque printed paisleys and beige gabardines appliquéd with white lace.
Rei Kawakubo at Comme des Garcons segmented her high-belted jackets into fragments and reconnected them with in-fills of sheer mesh or delicate over-layers of organza and plastic.
Alexander McQueen had a poignant take with his elegiac vision of decaying grandeur exemplified by Edwardian tailoring and curvaceous gowns with exaggerated hourglass figures, thanks to hip-padded carapaces. The formerly aggressive McQueen is showing a period of grace, evoking a lost world of gentility. A profusion of flowers spilling out of hats, brimming from the bodice and leaving a trail on stage gave the collection an exquisite, botanical beauty which could very well herald a bright fashion season ahead. Romance still has a future, it seems, and the future will always have romance.