viernes, 21 de enero de 2011

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PARIS (AFP) Only a handful of women in the world can afford it, and designers make little if any money from it, but haute couture never fails to cast a magic spell over the realm of fashion.

Starting next Monday, no fewer than 20 houses will be sending out their latest one-off creations over three days of exclusive haute couture shows that get underway in the French capital.
 All it takes is some embroidery from the very best workshop to add 45,000 to the bill 
young couturier Alexis Mabille
Joining such venerable names as Chanel, Christian Dior, Jean Paul Gaultier and Givenchy will be newcomers Alexandre Vauthier (a favourite of R'n'B star Rihanna), Maxime Simoens and Julien Fournie.

Italy's Valentino and Giorgio Armani Prive will be present as well, together with Elie Saas and Rabih Kayrouz from Lebanon.

"An haute couture dress is never expensive enough," said fashion industry consultant Donald Potard, and to the few hundred women who can indulge themselves, the appeal of a one-of-a-kind creation is undeniable.

A unique creation from a young designer is never less than $20,000 (15,000 euros); double that figure for something from a big-name house. Wedding dresses can go for 120,000 euros or more.

"All it takes is some embroidery from the very best workshop to add 45,000 to the bill," said young couturier Alexis Mabille.

Haute couture exists only in Paris, where it is a legally protected appellation subject to strict criteria such as the amount of work carried out by hand, the limited number of pieces and the size of a house's workforce.

Every six months, haute couture houses get together to decide who can join their ranks.

While the carefully choreographed shows are magnets for the fashion press, many buyers -- from all corners of the world, with a significant number from Asia and the Middle East -- prefer to be discreet.

At salons such as Jean Paul Gaultier's elegant quarters in Paris, clients have their own personal mannequin on which their chosen designs can be painstakingly made. The final product can take hundreds of hours to complete.
 They do not want to be seen. They prefer to be discrete, which gives them a certain mystery 
Claude Mialaud
Few in number, buyers of haute couture nevertheless vary in age and background. "Don't think they are all chic elderly ladies," says luxury industry consultant Jean-Jacques Picart.

"Is there something for me?" is a question that Claude Mialaud, director of haute couture at Jean Paul Gaultier, hears often.

She previously held the same job at Yves Saint-Laurent for 15 years and typically travels outside France about 15 times per season to privately show the collection; she also greets clients privately in Paris.

"They do not want to be seen. They prefer to be discrete, which gives them a certain mystery," she explains.

Mialaud's travels find her in New York, the Gulf, Switzerland, Spain and Hong Kong, accompanied by one or two seamstresses who can perfect the creation on the body of the woman who will ultimately wear it.

Some details on a design can be altered -- sleeves added, for instance, or a hemline changed. But Mialaud is duty-bound to reveal if an haute couture dress has been sold to someone else.

"There are women," she says, "who cannot risk finding themselves meeting someone else in the same dress."

Among those making their haute couture debuts in Paris, Vauthier, 39, previously worked at Thierry Mugler and Jean Paul Gaultier.

Simoens, 26, a favourite of many French fashion editors, founded his own house in 2008 after working for Jean Paul Gaultier, Christian Dior and Balenciaga, while Fournie, 35, used to be artistic director for Torrente.
Park benches at Junya Watanabe.  #pfw
Park benches at Junya Watanabe. #pfw

One more #junyawatamabe look I dug. MH #pfw posted by @gqfashion from Twitter

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Visvim's Hiroki Nakamura in his 19th century Monk's robe....

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Visvim's Hiroki Nakamura
Dear Shaded Viewers,
As soon as they upload I will post a few sound bytes from Hiroki. After lunch Philippe and I went to visit the Visvim showroom. Hiroki walked us through the collection and I have to say there is such a difference when you find clothing with a soul. What sets Visvim apart from other collections is the amount of research both in textiles and craftsmanship but beyond all that it is the love that goes into each piece. Like I said, clothing with a soul. More later.
Diane
All Diane's photos taken with SAMSUNG NX10
Le gemelle Idyl e Ayaan Mohallim, le stiliste della linea elegante e alla moda Mataano, sono già state accolte con un successo senza pari nella loro breve carriera. Oprah Winfrey sul suo seguitissimo show, ha lodato le due come future miliardarie. La CNN ha filmato le due giovani imprenditrici per un servizio sul nascente talento africano e la scorsa estate le ragazze hanno mostrato la loro collezione a centinaia di spettatori all'African Fashion Week in Sudafrica.

La chiave del loro successo? La loro visione cosmopolita e la loro capacità di parlare alle donne da una prospettiva multiculturale. Nate negli Stati Uniti, le ragazze hanno trascorso la loro infanzia in Somalia, per poi trasferirsi a Washington DC quando scoppiò la violenta guerra civile somala. Le due si sono separate per l'università - una ha frequentato l'Università di Boston, l'altra l'Università del Michigan, poi si sono riunite a New York, il melting pot universale. Tutto ciò ha portato a Mataano (che in somalo significa gemelli), una linea che unisce strutturate silhouette con tessuti drappeggiati, capi forti con taglie femminili e la sensibilità africana con il gusto occidentale.

La loro collezione primavera 2011 mette insieme pantaloni ad harem delicatamente drappeggianti in color pesca chiaro con strette canottiere in avorio, giacche di seta organica con pantaloncini dal taglio corto e gilet di basso taglio con gonne a balze. Anche se questa è solo la quarta collezione delle gemelle, i loro capi mostrano un talento promettente, che va ben oltre i loro anni.

The Black Barbie IssueNell'anniversario dei 50 anni di Barbie, un'edizione speciale black.

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Finally we got to the end of the shows. They started on the 10th and ended last night with Miu Miu. Hundred of shows, models, designers, stylists and journalists. Seen a long list of clothes. Some memorable some not. Tomorrow, I will give you the summary of it all. Today it's going to be about shows yet again.

On time without a second of delay, after years of making everyone wait for at least three hours, Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton revisited Paris in the 20s when chinoiseries and exotic themes were very much in style. The runway had on the background a big tent with pearls and a tiger print. The show opened with a model wearing a long black dress with a sleet and the classic trasversal Chinese buttons and embroideriese followed by a pink laminated Chinese pajama still with big tridimensional embroideries. A sexy dress with fringes and thousands of golden chains that took us back to the twenties when in Paris every evening was a party in the private hotels and cabarets. The other dresses had fringes with pearls, black and open in the front, interrupted by irregular stripes in green, yellow and hot pink.

A group of four girls wearing culottes in black lace, small underwear pieces with laminated pants that had contrasting bands on the hips
. Jackets typical of those times with large oriental sleeves, again laminated and using strong colors such as purple, in contrast with the fitted yellow skirt that had the seamline of the pockets in another color.

Another group of girls was wearing three quarter length knit-dresses in the colors of tobacco, eggplant, prune and green. Bicolor robes, blue and red, with big polka dots embroidered with free fringes. As if taken from the world of Suzy Wong, small chinese jackets to wear over short shorts or long tunics with flower prints and large sleets, tiger prints, geometrical, a game of contrasting colors: yellow and turquoise, purple and tobacco, red and cobalt.

Those years' eccentricity, a world in which you could be daring and go against the current. A sparkly collection, nothing like what we saw until now, different from the minimal and punk trends. Personal.

The last show of Jean Paul Gaultier for Hermès was the sum of everything he had done in these years
. From the set with horses and horseback riders wearing perfect white and black to the models with riding boots and Argentine gaucho hats. Leather corsets, tobacco, black, in python and green, suede vests over long skirts and long dresses, pants and dungarees with criss crossed jackets. Like small bags, the envelopes around the belt and closing with a lock similar to the Kelly bag. The new leather and pith Kelly is gorgeous. A loto f beige, ecru, tobacco, black with touches of orange, red and salvia green. Leather belts like the bridles of a horse crossing the chest and the back, over long black dresses or shirts and pants. Suede and leather shorts. Classic Gaultier-Hermès repertoire. Next season it will be the turn of Christian LeMaire. A new chapter.

Miu Miu's collection was a strong one, like all of the Miuccia Prada collections, based on a precise concept. Elegance can be contemporary without having to borrow from the past, compare with other eras, far away countries. Zero references. Today, that's all. Leather jackets with flower inserts and big stars, worn over pleated dresses with three colors, such as white, black, red, a thin belt in a fluorescent color, underneath still pleats in two colors. White leather suits, or gold, silver, black, always with colorful flowers and star inlays. Dresses that end at the knee in elegant shapes yet ironical and unexpected when it comes to colors and prints.

A continuous mix of fluorescent colors, even for the belts, shoes, little collars like flower petals that have been cut and emptied
. Long dresses in yellow and print dresses in softer colors, like pink and light green, a swan on a black background and flowers that look almost like cartoons, spreading over the entire length of the dress, using strong tonalities. Again, star prints for the kilts and one enormous star that looks elongated and distorted on the front. White cotton dresses down to the hips and then silver with a colorful and fluorescent flower pattern combined with a belt around the waist.

Shoes were all different from each other, having one common denominator in the geometrical designs, lots of straps at the ankle, zips, and laces. A lot of gold, white, black, hot pink, fluorescent yellow, green, gold, silver, optical games that didn't look retro. A collection made for today's women, someone who doesn't mind pleats or a suit but has a glamorous vision of life that doesn't follow the codes.
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19 january 2011

Constance Jablonski in 'Ángel Blanco'
Photographed by Alex Cayley
Scanned by rockangel - Vogue España February 2011













She also got the cover!

Karmen Pedaru in 'Coups d'Eclat' Photographed by Paola Kudacki Scanned by carla-a - Vogue Paris February 2011



Karmen Pedaru in 'Coups d'Eclat'
Photographed by Paola Kudacki
Scanned by carla-a - Vogue Paris February 2011






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