Vivienne Westwood Spring/Summer 2016 ready-to-wear collection – Paris Fashion Week.

Vivienne Westwood  has made a habit of using her fashion shows as a platform for activism. This season, she was championing two related causes. On the runway she paid homage to Venice, a city that, perhaps due to climate change, is sinking even faster than it was before. Venice is a good theme for Westwood—her shows tend to have a certain carnival atmosphere in their mix of the decadent and the louche. You’d have expected a Vivienne Westwood Save Venice! collection to feature quite a few of her signature evening dresses, with their bouffant skirts and baroque swirls of sculptural draping but instead of cocktail looks, she emphasized rather plainspoken daywear silhouettes, shown on male as well as female models, in a gesture that read less political than as an homage to the Venetian tradition of the masque. The cross-dressing theme was echoed as well in the array of tailored items, in particular suits that looked oversize and mannish, with trousers cut to appear as though they’d been cinched up spontaneously to fit a woman’s smaller frame. That was one of Westwood’s dramatic flourishes; others included poufed sleeves and hardware and crystal embellishment sewn onto jackets. Westwood made a few very spectacular pieces, such as the extra-long coats worn high overhead and a bodysuit of sequin-dripping net that conjured a very fancy birdcage. Of course those looks had quite an impact on the runway.
What is always clear at a Vivienne Westwood show, despite the reliable spectacle, is exactly what has ensured the designer’s longevity: wearability.  The ruffled-hem wrap dresses; the sexy oversized tailoring; and the embroidered skirt and sweater combos had serious appeal. These are clothes that time and time again highlight the beauty of the female form, made by a woman who knows exactly the areas that women want ( and not) !

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Mugler Spring/Summer 2016 ready-to-wear collection -Paris Fashion Week

Militarism, that was a prevalent theme in  David Komá’s  collection yesterday.Donatella Versace just launched her martial-themed spring-summer 2016 collection.. I’s easy to understand why some designers makes military theme so often: the well done military collections can look very sexy and exactly this the most women likes. It can seems contradictory in an industry based on generating Innovation
Komá  explaned it in his way – “We have such incredible girls here, and it’s about being inspired by them. Wanting them to look cool, to look fresh, and to enjoy clothes.”
His Inspiration seems to be  all Military Service:  The first wave was naval, an interplay of navy and white with decorative insignia buttons on looks that included an angled peak-lapel, three-button, double-breasted jacket and minidresses and this  rearranged the fold and contrast of traditional sailor suits. As second  came the army; the olive section included a cutaway backless dress in leather—the top and bottom half linked by a clasp of three gleaming officer stripes. Soft kicky trousers were topped with deconstructed bodices, while the classic field jacket was turned into a sleeveless minidress with silk poacher pockets—a skinny belt peppered with eyelets cinched the waist. And than came the third part : the Glamour-  The cocktail contingency was, as ever, well catered for with this collection and next season his customers have something to wear with it. Yesterday was also Koma’s debut bag collection for the Mugler House that took shape in architectural shapes with metal frames to complement the collection.

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Junya Watanabe Spring/Summer 2016 ready-to-wear collection – Paris Fashion Week

Junya Watanabe unveiled his spring/summer 2016 collection. The Show was in the National Museum of Immigration History.
The multinational culture , was it where Watanabe took the Inspiration for his spring/summer collection?
 My review will be posted shortly. See the complete collection now.

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Yohji Yamamoto Spring/Summer 2016 ready-to-wear collection – Paris Fashion Week

Yohji Yamamoto unveiled his spring/summer 2016 collection in Paris Fashion Week.
Yamamoto’s spring collection was brimming with the fashion for which he’s famous. Black. Wrapping. Draping. Deconstruction. Sophistication.
Black fabric came gracefully draped and knotted around the body in asymmetric versions of Greco-Roman and Japanese robes. Lean and sensual, flashing flesh here and there, the silhouettes took on an urban tone when paired with high-top sneakers. In a shift to corroded romance, corsets overflowed with fabric and boning over layered hoop skirts. It segued to an artful street vibe with graffiti in the shape of hands on a cutout bodice. A black corset dress, cut up and draped over a broken-down denim cage skirt and jeans, provided the collection’s most current and cool Moment.

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Balenciaga Spring/Summer 2016 ready-to-wear collection -Paris Fashion Week

Designer Alexander Wang left Maison Balenciaga.Today,02.October 2015,he unveiled his last collection designed for the Balenciaga House.Wang will now focus solely on his eponymous fashion house based out of New York.“
Back to Wang’s  last Balenciaga Show:  it seems that his swan song was the freest of any of the collections he did for the house, and the most tender.
„When you know it’s your last anything, you say, ‘Let’s take a risk,’ what do you have to lose?” Wang said backstage. “At a house that’s known for innovation, I thought, ‘Let’s think about it the opposite way, let’s think about fabrics and shapes that feel supple and simple, but approach them in an artisanal, couture way.’ ”
Ivory silk-satin dresses streamed in ruffles, while white feather garlands were wrapped and draped and appliquéd on layered tops, smocked cotton summer dresses and playsuits. Elsewhere, there were beautiful scoop-back, finely knitted wool slips with embroidered lace inserts; sumptuous matelassé jackets and lace hotel-room style slippers, all of which glided out on a soft, dusty pink carpet beside gently rippling water installations. Every look was a dreamy shade of white, from the ruffled slip dresses to the low-slung trouser and crop top pairings.

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