Quantcast
Channel: Jess Cartner-Morley | The Guardian
Viewing all 1625 articles
Browse latest View live

Burberry's Christopher Bailey turns spotlight back on to collection

$
0
0
Bailey diverts attention from £20m pay package while Christopher Kane is slick and nostalgic at London fashion week

After a decade as Burberry's golden boy, Christopher Bailey recently found himself in the headlines for all the wrong reasons.

At the fashion company's annual general meeting in July 53% of shareholders voted to reject the £20m pay package awarded to Bailey on appointment as chief executive as well as designer at the company. The vote was non-binding, and Bailey's deal was vociferously defended by the board but the shareholder rebellion undoubtedly piled pressure on Bailey to deliver in the build-up to this Burberry catwalk show.

Continue reading...

The death of the show-off: how London fashion week embraced the new normal

$
0
0

Who killed the peacock? Once fashion weeks were a riot of excess. Now low-key dressing is in on the catwalk and on the street. Whats behind the new modesty?

The moment you know that showing off is over? When its over even at London fashion week. After all, to catwalk (verb) means to show off. A fashion show is attitude as art, peacocking as commerce. But this LFW was different. There was no bombast, no pomp. The clothes on the catwalk were understatement, rather than statement dressing. Instead of strutting in six-inch heels, all high steps and flared nostrils and arched eyebrows, the models were in flat shoes, and they just well, they walked. Like, you know, normal people.

The look on the catwalk was modest, in every sense. Skirts were knee-length, or thereabouts. Quite often, as at Richard Nicoll and J. JS Lee, the hem was dipped, longer at the back or front. (It seemed to say, Theres no hemline-diktat this season, folks, anywhere around the knee is fine, really.) They were worn with T-shirts, white shirts, sweatshirts. There were lots of dresses, too, but these seemed to take as their starting point the dress as simple, one-piece dressing rather than as a symbol of hourglass femininity. At Christopher Raeburn and at Preen, for instance, there were dresses in the form of long, zipped-up bomber jackets to above the knee. The denim jacket icon of Normcore, the hipster trend for appropriation of the most boring clothing possible showed up everywhere in London, just as it did last week in New York. And not just at traditionally streetstyle influenced-shows, but also, strikingly, at the mass-commercially focused Burberry. There were practical, slouchy rucksacks as It-bags at Preen. A fashion roster packed with designers who are strong minded to the point of perversity seemed to have made a pact to dial down, to take a break from making women jump through hoops. JW Andersons subversive, haute-androgyny became something easier, with contrast collars and flared sleeves accenting simple two-piece outfits. Roksanda she has dropped the Ilincic as a reflection on the designers signature simplicity, which is rather this season kept her gorgeous colours but toned down the pomp of the silhouette.

Continue reading...

How to wear sleeveless tops video

$
0
0
This season bare arms are in. But rule number one when wearing a sleeveless jumper is to avoid any version of the look that recalls the tank top style so no knitted tie or paisley shirt. Jess Cartner-Morley shows a selection of sleeveless jumpers for your autumn wardrobe Continue reading...

Max Mara gets nostalgic at Milan fashion week

$
0
0
Italian fashion house bucks the economic decline to revel in the grandeur of days gone by with swishy skirts and retro prints

This was, above all, a day of heightened national feeling. And while Italian catwalks may be some distance from Scotland's polling stations, fashion is never far from the zeitgeist. At Milan fashion week, Italian heritage and national pride were the themes of the day.

The country's economy may be in recession for the third time in five years, but its luxury fashion industry continues to buck the decline. Recent figures show a 4% rise in sales, largely due to healthy exports. As a result, the mood in Italian fashion is one of nostalgia.

Continue reading...

Prada puts spotlight on craftsmanship at Milan fashion week

$
0
0
The collection began as love letter to brocade, with outfits expressing tension between vintage fashion and modern design

Backstage after the Prada spring/summer collection, it soon became clear that the audience was conflicted. "Mrs Prada, was it about the 70s?" asked one. "It was about the future, right?" suggested another. Miuccia Prada beamed with pride. "For me, this is a success," she said.

She had a point to make, but as ever it wasn't really about clothes. "I am fixated with craftsmanship," she said. "Not just in fabric but in furniture, in chandeliers. More and more I am obsessed with antiquity, and the elements of the past that are not possible today."

Continue reading...

What I wore this week: bare arms | Jess Cartner-Morley

$
0
0
'This autumn, bare arms are the new bare legs'

Power dressing comes in many forms. Which is lucky for me, because I never could pull off shoulder pads. As an alternative to tailoring, fashion-focused women have long used clothes that refuse to bend to the practicalities of everyday life as a method of suggesting a steely core within a feminine wardrobe. Think of the types who stalk corridors in high heels that would have the average woman stumbling; who forgo tights in favour of still-golden bare legs long after most women have stockpiled the opaques. ("Uncomfortable? Oh no, five inches is quite low for me." "It's snowing, you say? I don't feel the cold.") The message is clear: I'm hardcore.

Continue reading...

10 trends from Milan fashion week: culottes to look forward to

$
0
0

Dolce & Gabbana ramped up the sparkle, Versace took sheer to a new high and hair went wayward on the catwalk. Heres Guardian fashions roundup from Milan fashion week spring/summer 2015

Continue reading...

Labour conference: Miliband tries to ditch Red Ed tag with Tory blue tie

$
0
0
The party leader must hope the navy choice will put clear blue water between him and the Old Labour label

Ed Milibands speech to the Labour party conference on Tuesday unveiled a bold new strategy to shake off the Red Ed tag: he wore a tie in Tory blue.

Milan fashion week has slightly overshadowed the exciting fashion news emerging from Manchester, but the blue tie has been a trend.

Continue reading...

10 things to know about Victoria Beckhams new Dover Street store

$
0
0
The worldwide fashion brand/designers flagship store opens on Thursday in Mayfair, featuring polished-concrete stairs, a signature scent and, possibly, David working as a doorman

1) The store was designed by Farshid Moussavi, one of the most successful female architects currently designing. Moussavi was responsible for the masterplan and infrastructure of the London Olympic Park. For a sense of her angular, modern, clean aesthetic, check out the Museum of Contemporary Art in Cleveland, Ohio. Also, shes very glamorous and wears five-inch heels to site meetings.

2) It has a signature scent. Diptyques Feu de Bois candles, to be precise.

Continue reading...

Christian Diors invisible runway at the Louvre is a hit at Paris fashion week

$
0
0
Raf Simons moves into Louis Vuittons old stomping ground as he matches history with minimalism and its a hit with buyers

For a lesson in how to balance reverence with iconoclasm you need look no further than the catwalk shows of Raf Simons at Christian Dior.

And this balancing act is not just a clever trick; the bottom line depends on it. For the veneration felt by luxury backers LVMH for the illustrious past of Dior is matched only by their determination that Dior should dominate the future. It wouldnt be a true Christian Dior collection without a nod to a Bar jacket, or a New Look suit, or a houndstooth check; but it must never feel old-fashioned, or it wont sell.

Continue reading...

Mind the Gap: can Rebekka Bay turn the brand around?

$
0
0

She wanted to be an architect when she grew up but clothes are faster than buildings. Designer Rebekka Bay explains her plans to reinvent Gap for an anxious, uncertain generation

You can measure the scale of Rebekka Bays job by the mighty view from her desk. We are on the 11th floor of the Gap headquarters in Tribeca, New York, where, as creative director, she commands her empire from a glass-walled corner office. Supersized marble meeting table; shelfie-ready stacks of art reference books; a Frank Stella print in the waiting area outside. And a view to the south-west, over the Hudson river, that is so beautiful at sunset that between five and six oclock, I dont do any work. I just stare at the light.

Sunset downtime notwithstanding, Bay, 44, has her work cut out. Her pedigree as the creator of H&Ms upscale, minimalist offshoot label Cos won her the Gap job, which she took on two years ago. It was a huge jump in scale, and profile. Cos is sold in 90 stores; Gap is sold in 1,700 stores worldwide, its performance under the spotlight of business pages globally. The size of the business means long lead times, so that the first collection overseen by Bay hit stores only this spring; this month sees the launch of the autumn collection, the first for which Bay has had her full team in place.

Continue reading...

Phoebe Philo unveils warm and immensely likeable Céline collection

$
0
0
Creative director reveals Kate Bush inspiration along with next seasons must-have flats at Paris fashion week show

So ardent was the clamour for hugs and double kisses around Phoebe Philo after her Céline show at Paris fashion week on Sunday lunchtime that, by the time the designer came to speak to reporters, she had pulled off the camel sweater worn to take her catwalk bow. Under it she was wearing a black cotton T-shirt printed with Before The Dawn, the name of Kate Bushs current tour.

Bush was only an oblique reference in this collection the song This Womans Work (I should be crying but I just cant let it show/ I should be hoping but I cant stop thinking) was the soundtrack to the show and Philo, who saw her perform a few weeks ago, talked backstage about Bush not as a visual reference, but as someone who seems to really know who she is ... Im very impressed by that. Yet something in the way Philo, usually inscrutable and, deadpan and aloof, cast herself in the unlikely role of fangirl the tour T-shirt, the song on a loop spoke for what this collection was about. It was warm, immensely likeable, more feminine than the rigorous, almost brutalist chic Céline has come to stand for.

Continue reading...

Kim Kardashian sets the scene for Givenchy at Paris fashion week

$
0
0
Givenchys sucker-punch sex appeal softened by intricate craftmanship that suggests a nose-to-nose, pillow-talk intimacy

Hubert de Givenchy had Audrey Hepburn; 60 years later, Riccardo Tisci, current creative director of the house that Givenchy founded, has Kim Kardashian.

The comparison is neither acid, nor arch. The correlation is surprisingly close. Givenchy costumed Hepburn for films and dressed her for awards ceremonies, developed a personal relationship with her, and made her the public face of his perfumes. They were pioneers of a mutually beneficial designer-to-celebrity hook-up that is now an industry standard for fashion, and of which Tisci and the Kardashian-Wests are simply the foremost example.

Continue reading...

Slimanes Saint Laurent Paris show channels the spirit of YSL at his Bohemian best

$
0
0
The designers new collection does straight up rocknroll sex-appeal in a show almost as divisive as the man himself

Hedi Slimanes catwalk shows for Saint Laurent begin begin properly, that is, after a diverting extended prelude in which models and rock stars drink champagne and snuggle up on the overcrowded front row, sideboob to leather jacket with some feat of structural engineering.

(It is Saint Laurent, not Yves Saint Laurent, by the way; the striking out of the personal, given name of the founder is one of the myriad ways Slimane has asserted control over a house founded seven years before he was born.)

Continue reading...

Apple Watch at Paris fashion week five things we learned

$
0
0

The fashion editors were invited to have a play with the new Apple Watch in Paris. Here are five things of note from a morning of madeleines and wearable tech

1. You will definitely want one.
To be specific, the one were going to want is the rose gold one, with the white strap. I suspect this, inevitably, will be the most expensive one. The $349 (a UK price has not been announced) rubbery one is nice, but its all about the gold. Sorry.

2. Jony Ive and Marc Newson are power players in fashion now.
Forty-five minutes before the Chanel show was due to start, Karl Lagerfeld himself arrived at the Apple Watch preview, and sat down with Anna Wintour to try on a watch and be talked through the functionality by Ive and Newson. If thats not Apple flexing some powerful fashion muscle, I dont know what is. The breakfast launch was impeccably fashion-week-worthy: it took place at Colette, the most famous boutique in Paris, with espressos and Evian and miniature madeleines. Further proof that Paris fashion royalty are on Team Apple Watch: Azzedine Alaïa is hosting a dinner in honour of Ive.

I'm going to need a bigger wrist. #AppleWatchpic.twitter.com/Db3vcIZFcF

Continue reading...

Karl Lagerfeld's new look for Chanel: feminist protest and slogans

$
0
0

The designers typically elaborate spring/summer 2015 show at Paris fashion week featured a faux street, complete with banner-waving models and guard rails. What was he trying to say?

Karl Lagerfeld, who once dismissed concerns over size-zero models as the whinings of fat mommies with bags of crisps, is an unlikely champion of feminism as a fashionable issue. How, then, to interpret his Chanel catwalk show at Paris fashion week, which closed with a megaphone-wielding Cara Delevingne leading a model army chanting for freedom, the Kardashian-clan catwalk star Kendall Jenner holding a banner reading Womens Rights are More than Alright, and a sea of placards reading Ladies First, History is Her Story, We Can Match the Machos and Boys Should Get Pregnant Too?

Continue reading...

Sex, feminism, farewells and Kimye: talking points from Paris fashion week

$
0
0
From surf chic to x-rated canapes to button mania, here are nine things we learned at the Paris spring/summer 2015 shows

Skirt wearers beware its all about shorts next season. Moving on from culottes in Milan, Raf Simons at Dior traditionally the home of ladylike style has decreed that the board short is what youll be wearing come spring. But dont think that sanctions carrying a surfboard and sporting a ratty pair of Vans. Simons made the board short posh by pairing it with ornate frock coats and embroidered booties. Think Kelly Slater crossed with Sofia Coppolas Marie Antoinette and youre almost there. A truly genius mash-up.

Continue reading...

How to wear long skirts with high neck tops video

Nicolas Ghesquière takes Louis Vuitton on a journey through space and time

$
0
0
From the debut of its own art museum to Ghesquières intrepid time-travellers, Louis Vuittons Paris show matched glamour with the intergalactic

The difference between Marc Jacobs Louis Vuitton (1997-2013) and Nicolas Ghesquières Louis Vuitton (2014-future date unknown) is this: Jacobs Vuitton was about travel, and Ghesquières Vuitton is about exploration. The Vuitton story began with trunks made for the wealthy and adventurous, and Jacobs loved to fetishise the rituals of high-end holidays: his shows featured bellboys and chambermaids, hotel corridors and steam trains. Ghesquière is more interested in travel as a mindset and a catalyst for ideas.

The Louis Vuitton fashion show, Ghesquières second for the brand, served also as a glamorous debut for the new Foundation Louis Vuitton, a museum of contemporary art which will house LVMH chairman Bernard Arnaults collection of modern art, and which officially opens later this month. Architect Frank Gehry has compared the building to an iceberg, to sails, and to a cloud. The asymmetric glass and steel arcs, and the waterfall lapping around the entrance, give it a sense of being a fractured-mirror image of the 1899 Grand Palais, that other vast glass-roofed Parisian temple of art, which sits on the bank of the Seine in the centre of Paris.

Continue reading...

The 10 best-dressed people from Paris fashion week SS15

$
0
0

The Guardians fashion editor selects the ten best-dressed celebrities, editors and bloggers who made their rounds at Paris fashion week, from the insiders fascinations to a few unlikely entrants

The author of the Man Repeller blog is the Lena Dunham of the streetstyle world. The voice of her generation, as expressed in just the right boyfriend jean and perfectly mussed hair. With her minimal makeup and goofy faces, Medine puts style before vanity. (It should be pointed out that this is relatively easy to do when, like her, you are naturally gorgeous.)

Continue reading...
Viewing all 1625 articles
Browse latest View live