fresh no ads
All pleasure, no pressure | Philstar.com
^

YStyle

All pleasure, no pressure

FAUX REAL - Karen Bolilia - The Philippine Star

If you build it, they will come. At least that was the idea.

In a rather incestuous turn of events, I’ve been asked to write about my own project called GG. It began as a print initiative that a friend and I wanted to start, but in the end felt too impulsive, without real legs to stand on. Fast-forward to nine months later (this thing is literally my baby), it became something else instead — a website that I hope to grow with friends, acquaintances and folks who share the same values as us. Everyone is pretty much welcome.

I continued without the person I began this with (though he fully supports it), and I suppose I wanted to see it through because of selfish reasons. One, vanity — something to call my own before I hit 25 (self-publishing, how millennial of me). Two, I loved the idea of setting up a community. Three, I wanted to act on my personal frustrations. Starting GG was a way to deal with my anxieties towards the #industrie. I couldn’t hear the word “peg” without hearing fingernails slide down a chalkboard, and regularly eye-rolled at the agenda-setting powers that be. Hate juice: I drank it. Hype, though an effective tool, was overused and felt tired. Nothing felt genuine and I grew conscious of an environment filled with people either excessively marketing themselves, or people who were selling themselves short — everyone wanted to be cool and hip and nonchalant in a bid to be or stay relevant; I know that’s how the world works now but I still don’t wanna buy into it. Obviously, I’ve got some authority issues and a bit of fire in my belly and maybe I need to see a therapist for that — but it also got counterproductive. If you complain about things but don’t do anything about it, you’re no better. So here we are.

The real work was making sure I treated the project as I would any job and not as a hobby. I tried setting realistic deadlines (failing many times) and goals. Approached and got in touch with people who might be interested to contribute. Assimilated the spirit and energy of things that I thought were O.G. GG. X-Girl, Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore, M/M Paris. The original Temptation Island movie. The ‘90s in general. I go back to these core cultural cues whenever I’m struggling to find a singular voice. The idea for the look of the site, wonderfully interpreted by filmmaker and designer Jan Pineda, came up as I hastily pulled random old books from a shelf at Merci in Paris. I took a picture of each cover I liked and sent it to him, and instantly he got it. It’s this synergy that I keep being grateful for, because that’s the only way we got to this point. For all my complaints about the absurdity of this city, finding like-minded individuals was exactly the kind of stimulus I needed to breed this thing.

Formally, GG is an independent, multi-platform project and rooted in fashion, art and culture focused on content execution — the first execution being the website. Though GG itself doesn’t really mean anything, it’s the perfect name for what we’re trying to do. It was an offshoot of a term my friend and stylist Melvin Mojica likes to use — “good time good time” — and it just stuck. I love that you can assign a lot of things to it, disregarding semantics — galunggong, gaga, gigil, etc. Though I would say now that there is a deliberation to GG, because I want to be able to stand by anything that goes in it. GG is purposely derivative, and is about embracing tackiness and spontaneity; it’s letting ketchup drip on your Dries shirt (true story). It’s worrying less if your branding is on point, having real-life fun and being sincere. It’s chilling the hell out. It’s anti-high fashion (how novel!). It’s embracing all sorts of art, design and photography styles. Turning the spotlight on underrated talent. It’s giggling at irony and giving it a high five. Slowly GG will also extend to objects, things that you probably don’t need but wanna have anyway, because why not. With proper funding, I hope to also print it at some point.

As a person extremely mindful of the timing of things, I constantly worry if I got this right. What if it’s not digestible enough? What if this just gets lost in the ether among a pile of other Internet things? What if no one cares?? Guess I’m about to find out. #GG4U

Life in plastic, it’s fantastic

 

 

Sheer was everywhere, from the delicate slips at Celine to the zipped-up column dresses at Hood by Air. There were, however, even more pronounced interpretations of this trend. Perhaps internalizing the world we live in now — a see-through generation of over-transparency, artificial proximity and being bombarded with daily updates of each others’ lives — some designers have turned to plastic. Literally. It’s also no surprise that it’s coming from some of the youngest, most buzzed-about creative directors.

In New York, Eckhaus Latta strung ringlets together to shape dresses and skirts. In London, MM6 turned to capes and makeshift bell sleeves, while Christopher Kane had a go with tinted, scallop-hemmed skirts and shirts. And in Paris, at Jonathan Anderson’s Loewe, he did it all ways: jackets, trousers, bags, and even a plastic heel — you name it, he did it. Virgil Abloh’s Off-White employed it in coats at the final walk, then had a graffiti artist deface them with spray paint in the end. And at Vetements, Demna Gvasalia and his crew took a nostalgic turn with grandma-friendly floral-printed tablecloths transformed into aprons and dresses.

If there’s anything we learned from fashion month, it’s that anything can be base material even if it’s not a traditional fabric. We’re clearly into that.

ACIRC

CHRISTOPHER KANE

DEMNA GVASALIA

ECKHAUS LATTA

FIORUCCI MADE ME HARDCORE

GUESS I

IN LONDON

IN NEW YORK

JAN PINEDA

JONATHAN ANDERSON

QUOT

Philstar
Are you sure you want to log out?
X
Login

Philstar.com is one of the most vibrant, opinionated, discerning communities of readers on cyberspace. With your meaningful insights, help shape the stories that can shape the country. Sign up now!

Get Updated:

Signup for the News Round now

FORGOT PASSWORD?
SIGN IN
or sign in with