
Karl Lagerfeld: The constant wayfarer, Lagerfeld has left last season's strict
futuristic approach behind. For fall, he was off in an entirely
different direction that was more a sea than space odyssey, one that
summoned up an Eighties baroque attitude along the way.
As always, Lagerfeld did his trim shirts, this time with a military
bent, and smart but severe suits, some with tight rows of covered
buttons, but the big message here was exaggerated sailor collars. They
created a strong square shoulder, the "bridge shoulder," as Lagerfeld
called it, that provided a canvas for all things opulent, as in fur and
baubled embroidery. Such swanky elements embellished bomber jackets,
fur vests and the collars and waists of otherwise simple cocktail
dresses. It worked well as an accent on sparkly tailored tweeds but turned tricky on...
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Comme des Garcons: The collection Rei Kawakubo showed on Saturday
was an
engrossing, typically curious dream in which fragility and utility
blurred into a complicated vision of beauty, right down to the toes—
white chalk outlines on heavy black booties. She opened with three
girls who looked like the prettiest anthropomorphic triangles in a
Surrealist fairy-tale, done up in what might be called cosmetic colors
—puffed-out tulle in barely there buff, their hair painted a feisty
pink atop veiled faces. Then came the cape-like army fatigues and
coverts, often jackets and triangular skirts, some with graphic
outlines of traditional jacket shapes, others with giant tribal-like
images of fantastical animals. And more counterpoint: big, comforting
blankets in outsized checks and patterns as well as curvy knits that
looked like Kawakubo's twisted take on the sexy secretary...
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Lanvin: Alber
Elbaz
continues to get it remarkably right. The Lanvin collection he
presented on Friday was both on trend and beyond trend, his lineup
consisted of stunningly elegant relations to the brash, big-shouldered,
retro glamazons parading about elsewhere. His starting point, as
always, was the here and now, and not the
runway version of it. To drive home that point, he showed on what
appeared to be just-rained-on black asphalt, located in a far-off
venue. But there was nothing distant about the clothes. "This dress,
they tell me it's not a runway dress," Elbaz said prior to his show,
indicating a simple look and waving about at various staffers. "But
it's a woman dress, so I'll show it." For fall, he pulled back from
spring's often-vibrant
mood, despite some quite dramatic draping that resulted from cutting
primarily on the bias. Suits gathered into ample but soft peplums in
front; an asymmetric ruffled cascade fell down the side of a dress.
When he wanted to embellish further, it was with haughty fur stoles,
fabrics streaked with midnight glitter and...
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Dior: For fall, Galliano enveloped himself in a motif of Orientalism, a
fascination shared by the house founder. Specifically, Galliano looked
to the richness of 18th-century Persian miniatures, extracting their
colors and patterns to wrap around the house standards, most
noticeably, the New Look, re-created here as something approachable and
modern, the exaggerated arch shoulder and megapeplum considerably
relaxed. He paired his jackets with skirts that resembled gently
deflated bubbles, some with banded hems. The result: tailored looks for
women who want more pizzazz than they'll find in common suiting, and
less aggression than in much of the Forties-cum-Eighties options out
there this season...
read moreAs always, check
wwd.com for full coverage on all the shows
Photos: Comme des Garcons, Dior, and Lanvin: Giovanni Giannoni. Karl Lagerfeld: Dominique Maitre