The overall feeling for
spring frockery is all about form following function. Easy, breezy, and purposeful, as though following in the footsteps of the omnipresent flight
bag shape that had its long moment in the sun. Sleek,
sexy uniforms are what work now. Utilitarian, not retro and
never frumpy. One notable change is the absence of
the daywear slip dress - that hung in every mall rack across America
two summers ago - that evolved into vintage nylon slips as streetwear. The tide is finally turning towards a long
awaited end of recycled fashion, and the beginning of something new. For one of the first
times in many moons, the Spring Collections were not about collecting
pieces from the '60s, '70s or '30s, and dropping them at the
patternmaker's in time for the show samples to walk out. The loss of replicating eras past left design rooms no where else to go for inspiration but towards each other. The daisy chain of spring design went like this:
Calvin copied Prada, Donna copied Jill Sander, and Ralph copied
Calvin. Which may mean that Ralph inadvertently copied Prada, whose
true source still remains unknown. Mademoiselle Chanel always said,
"Only those with no memory, insist on originality".
Aside from some '80s overtones, most springtime
influences were more about modernity and boundary free global access, ranging from the Orient and the Wild West to Cyberspace. Not all
about silhouettes, fabrications that bring modern function to the
table, are ones to build your nouveau looks around. Even hardcore rocker
chick, Maya, is beckoning a new, modern muse. Although she admits
that it's difficult not to interpret everything that you see around
you, her collection
kept its sharp edge as it balanced draped chain beading and spiderweb
lace, with studded black leather and pinstriped suits.
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