Friday, October 15, 2021

Video: Dawei SS22 collection

In this video, fashion label Dawei has presented its SS22 collection at Paris Fashion Week (PFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: Dawei Studio via YouTube Photo credit: Dawei Studio, Facebook
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Video: Auralee at Paris Fashion Week

In this video, fashion label Auralee has presented its SS22 collection at Paris Fashion Week (PFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: QCEG Video Channel via YouTube Photo credit: Auralee, Facebook
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Video: Victoria/Tomas SS22 collection at PFW

In this video, fashion label Victoria/Tomas has presented its SS22 collection at Paris Fashion Week (PFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: IMAXtree.tv via YouTube Photo credit: Promostyl, Facebook
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Video: Givenchy SS22 collection

In this video, French luxury house Givenchy has presented its SS22 collection at Paris Fashion Week (PFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: Givenchy via YouTube Photo credit: Givenchy, Facebook
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Video: Kimhekim at PFW

In this video, fashion label Kimhekim has presented its SS22 collection at Paris Fashion Week (PFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: MaisonKimhekim via YouTube Photo credit: Design Scene, Facebook
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Thursday, October 14, 2021

Video: Dolce & Gabbana womenswear SS22 collection

In this video, Italian luxury fashion house Dolce & Gabbana has presented its womenswear collection at Milano Fashion Week (MFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: Dolce & Gabbana via YouTube Photo credit: Milano Fashion Week
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Video: Salvatore Ferragamo SS22 collection

In this video, Italian luxury fashion house Salvatore Ferragamo has presented its SS22 collection at Milano Fashion Week (MFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: Salvatore Ferragamo via YouTube Photo credit: Milano Fashion Week
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Video: CIVIDINI SS22 collection

In this video, fashion label CIVIDINI has presented its SS22 collection at Milano Fashion Week (MFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: CIVIDINI via YouTube Photo credit: Milano Fashion Week
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Video: Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini SS22 collection

In this video, fashion label Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini has presented its SS22 collection at Milano Fashion Week (MFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: FF Chanel via YouTube Photo credit: Milano Fashion Week
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Video: Shi.rt by Aquilano e Rimondi SS22 collection

In this video, fashion label Shi.rt by Aquilano e Rimondi has presented its SS22 collection at Milano Fashion Week (MFW). Watch the video below. Do you want to see more clothing collections? Click here to view the FashionUnited Marketplace. Video: IMAXtree.tv via YouTube Photo credit: Milano Fashion Week
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Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Alexander McQueen comes home for spring/summer 2022 show

Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Alexander McQueen returned home, to London, with a magnificent spring/summer 2022 catwalk show in the clouds, inside its very own fashion bubble, with views across the capital from the top of a car park. The British fashion house, part of the Kering family, usually shows during Paris Fashion Week, but since the pandemic, it has instead chosen to release its collections digitally with films shot in the mud on the banks of the Thames to against the backdrop of the wondrous chalky white cliffs at Newhaven beach. For spring/summer 2022, McQueen’s creative director Sarah Burton was inspired by the sky and its “ever-changing, all-encompassing magnificence”. The designer explained that the artwork for the prints was all shot from the rooftop of the fashion house’s studio, which has the “most incredible views of the city” from Saint Paul’s Cathedral to the London Eye. Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen The magnificence of the sky was projected into the breathtaking show space, a transparent, reusable cloud-like structure designed by the architect Smiljan Radic on the roof of Tobacco Docks Yellow Park in Wapping, East London. The bubble shimmered, with the late afternoon sun trying to peek through the clouds, which was a striking contrast to the eerie storm soundtrack by John Gosling before the show started. The whole production was a visual fashion storm, from the location perfectly placed, high in the clouds, to see all aspects of London’s skyline, from the skyscrapers of Canary Wharf to The Shard and the Gherkin, to the intimate circular catwalk with models appearing from a hidden staircase in the middle, to the expressive prints and looser silhouettes, and supermodel Naomi Campbell closing proceedings in style. Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Sarah Burton inspired by London’s changeable skies for Alexander McQueen’s spring/summer 2022 This was a stand-alone show filled with darkness and light, coming through the storm of the pandemic with unpredictable skies into brighter, happier times with sunshine yellow tulle dresses and vibrant pink tailored suits. Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen The collection itself showcased the power of nature and the contrasts of changeable weather with pieces that balanced femininity with edgy, masculine detailing. From floaty dresses printed with photographs of sunrises, blue skies and clouds, to tailored coats and shirts with cloud-like sleeves, while wind-blown inspired trench coats had voluminous parachute sleeves and crystal “raindrop” embroidery was on everything from dresses, skirts, and jackets to thigh-high boots. Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Burton explained in the show notes: “We watched the weather and captured the formation and colouration of clouds from daybreak to nightfall and documented changing patterns, from clear blue skies to more turbulent ones. That led me to storm chasing. “I love the idea of the McQueen woman being a storm chaser, of the qualities of storm chasing uniting the passionately individual community of characters wearing the clothes. They inhabit the same universe and the clothes are inspired by and made for them. Storm chasing is not only about the beauty of the views but also a sense of mystery and excitement – about embracing the fact that we can’t ever be sure of what might happen next.” Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Like the changeable sky, Burton offers a contrasting palette for spring/summer 2022, with feminine corseted, sequin-heavy, and off-the-shoulder dresses toughened with zipped and buckled detailing, boxy tailored suits, stylish cropped aviator leather jackets, and punk-inspired platform boots. Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Alexander McQueen ‘London Skies’ SS22 Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Highlights included sequinned shard rain embroidered tank dresses, an off-the-shoulder taffeta dress with a moody sky cloud print, a delicate pink shredded tulle and crystal-embellished corset dress and a look that combined the feel of working from home with the new ‘going out’ - a cropped white cotton-jersey sweatshirt with crystal raindrop embroidery teamed with an exploded skeleton skirt. Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Naomi Campbell closed the show with a storm wearing a cropped single-breasted tailored jacket with crystal raindrop embroidery over a strapless skeletal corset dress with an asymmetric skirt and shredded tulle storm cloud embroidery. This was the first McQueen catwalk show in 18-months and the brand’s first for 20 years in London, and it was well worth the wait. "> Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen Image: courtesy of Alexander McQueen
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Sneaker investment app Rares secures new funding

Image: Rares Rares, an online community and marketplace for investing in ultra-rare sneakers, has secured fresh funding to drive its growth. The company raised almost 4 billion dollars in a seed funding round led by MaC Venture Capital, with additional participation from Cake Ventures, Portfolia Rising America Funds I and II, and Evolution VC. The company said the funding will support the growth of its team, expand its product and inventory, and bolster its ability to deliver “ultra-rare and valuable assets to the cultures that made them popular”. Rares bills itself as the first alternative asset marketplace exclusively for sneakers. The platform has merged traditional investing with the burgeoning sneaker market, allowing users to buy and trade fractional ownership of highly valuable sneakers. Launched in April of 2021, Rares says its goal is to “financially empower sneaker culture and its participants”. Its first major acquisition before this seed round was the Air Yeezy prototype, which it acquired for 1.8 million dollars. “Access to significant capital has been the achilles heel for many entrepreneurs, especially women and other minorities,” said Rares co-founder Gerome Sapp in a release. “So as a minority, being able to close this significant seed investment round with MaC Venture Capital leading provides my incredible team and I with a new inspired enthusiasm for the bright future ahead for Rares.”
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Boohoo to launch collection with Megan Fox

Image: Boohoo E-tailer Boohoo is collaborating with actress Megan Fox on an autumn collection. Working alongside the brand and Fox is stylist Maeve Reilly. The collection is set to be released on October 19, with over forty different styles. This includes pieces such as a retro padded-shoulder blazer dress, a zebra print trench coat and a varsity jacket. Fox, who is best known for her work in the ‘Transformers’ films, cult classic ‘Jennifer’s Body’ and the series ‘New Girl’, spoke of her excitement to collaborate with Boohoo saying that the brand “really gave Maeve and I the freedom to express ourselves.” Set to be photographed by Felisha Tolentino, notable for her work with Forever 21 and Urban Decay, this collection will be designed by both Fox and Reilly. “I feel like I’ve really come into my own over the past few years,” said Fox. “Especially when it comes to my personal style and this collection reflects exactly that.”
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Pals Socks and Paul Frank launch sock collaboration

Image: Pals Socks Sock brand Pals Socks is collaborating with fashion designer, cartoonist and artist Paul Frank on a sock collection. The two brands partnered to create a limited-edition collection, featuring the beloved Paul Frank characters. The collaboration became available on October 12 for a limited time. Designed for both adults and children, the collection aims to promote inclusivity and adventure. Pals Socks founder Hannah Lavon discussed the compatibility of the collaboration saying, “Paul Frank’s characters are made up of different quirks and colours. And despite those differences, they are friends anyway.” Featuring four different pairings, the friendly looking characters aim to be introduced to the newest generation through parents who grew up wearing Pal Frank. Signature character, monkey Julius is matched with four other characters - wingman Bob, Clancy the Giraffe, Sam the Grub and advisor Skurvy. “We hope,” Lavon said, “parents will share in the nostalgia of Julius, Clancy and friends with their kids, while teaching important lessons along the way.” The friendly, colourful aesthetic that both brands espouse makes them suited to each other, using the familiar characters to send the collaboration’s main message: we don’t have to match to be friends.
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Icebreaker and Spinnova to develop circular mid-layer products

Image: courtesy of Spinnova New Zealand-based Icebreaker is teaming up with material tech company Spinnova to developing fully circular mid-layer products out of merino wool and Spinnova fibre. The VF-owned, ethical and sustainable natural performance apparel brand is working with Spinnova on a joint sustainability journey to develop a mid-layer product with a minimal environmental footprint while still offering high performance. The product features merino wool, a natural, renewable and biodegradable fibre, which is combined with Spinnova to make the fibre fully circular, as the developed yarn can be separated and reused without needing to add new raw material. Spinnova fibre also has strong insulation properties, which makes it a great companion for merino wool. This means that the blend Spinnova and Icebreaker are now piloting for mid-layer products is sustainable, comfortable, and fully circular. After consumer use, the developed yarn can be separated and reused, “with the ambition to get one step closer to circularity and lowering the products’ impact on the environment,” explain both companies in a statement. In addition, Spinnova is made without harmful chemicals and uses 99.5 percent less water and produces 65 percent less CO2 emissions than cotton production from cradle to gate. Due to the mechanical process, Spinnova uses to harness its raw material, wood pulp, the fibres can simply be remade mechanically, again without harmful chemicals or quality loss. Spinnova team up with VF-brand Icebreaker to develop circular mid-layer performance products Spinnova chief executive and co-founder Janne Poranen, said: “We’re very proud of this collaboration, and excited to keep experimenting how Spinnova can fight climate change as both a sustainable new material and a disruptively circular new material that can be remade over and over again.” Image: courtesy of Spinnova The partnership also shows how versatile the Spinnova fibre is, as it can replace and complement various materials from outdoor use to everyday wear and high fashion. Previously, Spinnova has been blended with cotton, and Spinnova and Ecco’s partner KT Trading are in the process of producing fibre from leather waste. Alistair Smith, director of global product design at Icebreaker, added: “Nature is our hero, and our source of inspiration – we were excited to learn about Spinnova’s approach to fibre spinning that mimics nature’s own processes. “In addition to this shared source of inspiration, the potential to recycle Spinnova into a new fibre again and again makes this disruptively circular. This partnership enables our strategy in developing circular business models and drive forward sustainable design.” Icebreaker is the second VF Corp brand to collaborate with Spinnova. Earlier this year the Finnish sustainable textile material company signed a development agreement with The North Face to develop new, sustainable, high-performance textiles for the outdoor apparel category.
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Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Away announces designer collaboration

Image: Away Lifestyle brand Away has announced its first designer collaboration. The collection will be focused on Away’s best selling travel products, with emerging designers Sandy Liang, Tia Adeola and Ji Won Choi reimagining three of the brand’s core silhouettes. The collaboration is set to be released on October 14, in a limited capsule. The brand plans on making it a multi-year occurrence, bringing artists with a diverse range of backgrounds and aesthetics together. Jen Rubio, CEO and co-founder of Away, said in a press release that she is “thrilled” to introduce the products to the global community and that “it has been an honor to see how these three astonishingly talented designers infused their personal ethos of style into Away’s streamlined design sensibility.” The three silhouettes that were redesigned were the Large Everywhere Bag, Front Pocket Backpack and Travel Pouch Set. The designers put their own modern take on the products in order to reflect their own personal point of view. The inspiration behind the products was taken from each designer’s unique experiences with places and people - ultimately anything that helped to form their aesthetic identity. Designer Sandy Liang said that her floral pattern was inspired by “the playful wanderlust people are feeling towards travel right now” whereas Adeola reflected on “restructuring the representation of female bodies in the 21st century.” Adeola’s piece features multiple colours, tweed accents and pink ruffle and intends to challenge constructs with “statement pieces that are meant for the everyday.” Choi’s designs are also linked to travel. “I wanted to create something uplifting, bright and sporty - something that could be spotted from far away,” Choi said of her chosen piece. While “mainly inspired by travel” the piece also was prompted by “different cultures, places and people.” Her design is a reimagined Away silhouette in three different shades of bright blue, colour blocked with Choi’s signature white piping. “This is an exciting start to our annual collaboration,” said Rubio.
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Karl Lagerfeld names Amber Valletta sustainability ambassador

Image: Karl Lagerfeld Karl Lagerfeld has appointed Amber Valletta as its sustainability ambassador. Valletta, best known for her work as a model and actress, was a long time friend to Lagerfeld himself. She has worked with the brand before, releasing a sustainable accessories capsule in spring 2021. Made with sustainable materials such as recycled cotton, the proceeds from the capsule’s K/Kushion bag was donated to The Ocean Cleanup, a nonprofit foundation focused on ridding the oceans of plastic. “I am thrilled for the opportunity to help progress the sustainability journey that has already begun at Karl Lagerfeld,” Amber Valletta said in a press release. “It feels like a wonderful and natural homage to Karl, as he was such an innovator himself.” In her role as a sustainability ambassador, Valletta will operate as a key consultant, working to optimise the brand’s sustainable ventures. A committed environmentalist, Valletta serves as an ambassador for One x One, The Conscious Design Initiative in a partnership with the UN. She is also the first ever sustainability contributing editor for British Vogue. Working with Karl Lagerfeld’s design director Hun Kim on future sustainable products, she is set to launch her second collaboration with the brand in Spring/Summer 2022. The capsule will include womenswear, and continue expanding on the sustainable accessories line from the previous 2021 capsule. CEO of Karl Lagerfeld, Pier Paolo Righi, endorsed the ambassadorship sayin: “Amber and I have for many years continuously exchanged ideas to make fashion more sustainable. It means a lot to me that we can now bring Amber on board to make her an integral part of our sustainability journey.” “For me,” said Valletta, “it will always be innovation and creativity that solves fashion’s challenges in this sector.” Valletta’s appointment and the release of sustainable products is part of the ongoing initiative, Karl Cares. Other sustainably led actions by the company include a commitment to the Fashion Pact, leading to the brand’s pledge to be net-zero by 2050 and the announcement of their zero deforestation policy.
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First insurance billable post-mastectomy brand Myya launches

Image: Myya The first direct-to-consumer, intimates and prosthetics brand Myya has officially launched. The brand’s unique approach to post-mastectomy bra fittings allows customers in the US to be sized from their homes by certified mastectomy fitters. Myya also highlights inclusivity in size and colour, as well as being the only online boutique that is able to directly bill its customers’ insurance companies, according to the company. The brand currently stocks sizes A to O cup, with women able to schedule a one-on-one fitting through the telehealth app the company provides. Certified mastectomy fitters will provide support and advice as to what is the right size for each individual, taking into account the customer’s preferences and where the person is in their recovery. With one in eight women developing breast cancer in their lifetimes, Myya was founded by Jasmine Jones who was inspired by her grandmother’s struggle with the illness and lack of post-mastectomy bra options. Jones, who was one of the few Black women in the world to close over 1 million dollars in venture funding, developed Myya at Cherry Blossom Intimates, the brand’s retail space. Speaking about the effect of the pandemic on the brand’s personal fitting program, Jones said that “when the Covid-19 pandemic hit, I was extremely worried that I would not be able to touch another customer - I wouldn’t be able to measure them, fit them correctly, or provide them with the ‘best friend’ our in-store shopping experience offers.” This inspired Jones to create the online side of Myya, with an area of importance being the retention of the brand’s “luxurious and supportive environment.” Thirteen percent of the profits will be donated to the National Breast Cancer Foundation, with the brand already having pledged 25,000 dollars this year. “We know going through big changes isn’t easy,” Myya’s website reads, “but we’re here to help you move forward.”
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French Connection narrows H1 losses

Image: French Connection French Connection has reported narrowing losses in the first half of the year. In the six months ending July 31, the British retailer’s underlying loss came in at 0.9 million pounds, compared to a loss of 3.6 million pounds in 2019, prior to the outbreak of the pandemic. The company cited the closure of non-contributing stores, a bounce back of wholesale volumes and a tight focus on overheads. Meanwhile, group revenue came in at 40.2 million pounds, a 21.2 percent drop compared to 2019, due to a reduced retail portfolio and temporary Covid-19 store closures, which were partly offset by an increased wholesale and e-commerce contribution. French Connection’s composite gross margin dropped to 31.6 percent compared to 42.7 percent two years ago, due to the mix shift towards lower margin wholesale channel and the level of fixed product development and logistic costs on the lower overall volumes. Signs of recovery at French Connection Chairman and chief executive Stephen Marks said he was “pleased that the improvement in business we saw in the early part of the period has continued throughout the first half of the financial year”. He said wholesale in the UK and US performed well, “with a good outcome to the Summer season”. Earlier this month, French Connection announced it had accepted a buyout offer from a consortium of bidders including its second-largest shareholder, Apinder Singh Ghura, in a deal valuing the company at 29 million pounds. CEO Marks, who remains the biggest shareholder with a stake of 41.5 percent, revealed at the time he plans to retire from the company when the transaction closes. The high street retailer was highly popular in the 90s and early 00s but has struggled in recent years to compete with online competition. “Over the last five years, French Connection has made significant progress in its plans to rationalise the size of its store portfolio and to return the group to profitability,” Marks said on Tuesday.
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London’s V&A places spotlight on menswear in 2022

Image: courtesy of Gucci by Harmony Korine; Gucci Pre-Fall 2019 Men’s Tailoring Campaign The V&A Museum in London has unveiled further details about its major menswear exhibition, ‘Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear’ launching next year that will feature looks by Harris Reed, Gucci, Grace Wales Bonner, Rick Owens, JW Anderson, Comme des Garçons, Raf Simons, and Craig Green. Opening March 2022, ‘Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear’ will mark the first major V&A exhibition to celebrate the power, artistry and diversity of masculine attire and appearance, with looks from fashion’s legendary designers and rising stars alongside historical treasures and acclaimed artworks. The show will present around 100 looks and 100 artworks, displayed thematically across three galleries, which trace how menswear has been fashioned and refashioned over the centuries and how designers, tailors and artists, and their clients and sitters, have constructed and performed masculinity and unpicked it at the seams. Image: courtesy of Harris Reed by Giovanni Corabi; Harris Reed Fluid Romanticism 001 Running from March 19 to November 6, 2022, the exhibition will display contemporary menswear looks from fashion designers like Harris Reed, Craig Green, Grace Wales Bonner and Raf Simons alongside historical treasures from the V&A’s collections and landmark loans, including classical sculptures, photographs, films, and Renaissance paintings. Highlights include paintings by Sofonisba Anguissola and Joshua Reynolds, artworks by Robert Longo and Omar Victor Diop, and an extract from an all-male dance performance by Matthew Bourne’s ‘New Adventures’. Fashioning Masculinities will showcase possible masculinities across the centuries from the Renaissance to the global contemporary, with outfits worn by familiar faces interspersed throughout. From Harry Styles, Billy Porter and Sam Smith to David Bowie and Marlene Dietrich, highlighting and celebrating the multiplicities of masculine sartorial self-expression, dressing beyond the binary. Image: courtesy of Wales Bonner by Dexter Lander; Wales Bonner SS15 Afrique Claire Wilcox and Rosalind McKever, co-curators of ‘Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear,’ said in a statement: “Masculine fashion is enjoying a period of unprecedented creativity. It has long been a powerful mechanism for encouraging conformity or expressing individuality. Rather than a linear or definitive history, this is a journey across time and gender. “The exhibition will bring together historical and contemporary looks with art that reveals how masculinity has been performed. This will be a celebration of the masculine wardrobe, and everyone is invited to join in.” Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear exhibition to open at the V&A in March 2022 Image: courtesy of Craig Green by Amy Gwatkin The exhibition will open with a Craig Green spring/summer 2021 ensemble of a deconstructed suit, alluding to the construction and deconstruction of both the masculine body and conventions of masculinity, a theme that will be central throughout the show’s three main galleries – Undressed, Overdressed, and Redressed. Undressed will explore the male body and underwear in a utopian dreamscape, looking at how classical European ideals of masculinity have been perpetuated and challenged over the centuries. Plaster casts of the Apollo Belvedere and the Farnese Hermes, which highlight a tradition of depicting idealised male bodies draped in textiles that reveal more than they conceal, will be juxtaposed with modern and contemporary representations of the body, from prints and photography by David Hockney, Lionel Wendt, Zanele Muholi and Isaac Julien, to a Calvin Klein advertisement. Fashion highlights from this section will include garments by Jean Paul Gaultier and A-Cold-Wall*’s Samuel Ross showcasing how fashion’s fascination with the body has seen changing masculine ideals from evoking classical drapery to sculpting flesh to celebrate body diversity. This will be exemplified in the exhibition by excerpts of ‘Arrested Movement’ by Anthony Patrick Manieri, an inclusive portrait series and awareness initiative celebrating and promoting positive body image. Image: courtesy of Gucci; Alessandro Michele for Gucci AW15 Overdressed will take visitors into the elite masculine wardrobe in a “sumptuous, immersive space with courtly grandeur,” featuring oversized silhouettes, lavish materials like silk and velvet in daring colours, and symbolic patterns to express status, wealth and individuality. It will feature armoured breastplates, silky smoking suits, sweeping capes to ribbons and lace, including Grinling Gibbons’ wooden carving imitating a Venetian needlepoint lace cravat, displayed alongside real lace. The section will also include grooming, with makeup and shaving equipment. Aristocratic portraits by Joshua Reynolds and Jean-Baptiste Perronneau will be displayed alongside pink ensembles by Harris Reed and Grace Wales Bonner, alongside fashion from Kim Jones for Fendi, Alessandro Michele for Gucci, Rahemur Rahman, Ahluwalia and Orange Culture. There will also be a custom Randi Rahm suit and full-length embroidered cloak with a hot pink lining worn by Billy Porter at the Golden Globes in 2019. Image: courtesy of Nicholas Daley by Man Kit Au-Yeung The third section, Redressed, will explore the construction and dissolution of the suit, from Beau Brummell to the contemporary catwalk, reflecting on English country tailoring and the origins of the suit, with historic garments from the V&A collection shown alongside contemporary reimaginings, including a kilt by Nicholas Daley. Redressed will also highlight how an abundance of mass-produced suits bred creativity as Mods, Teddy Boys and all manner of subcultures looked to define their styles through tailoring, explored in the exhibition through garments and photography. As well as how designers like Tom Ford for Gucci and Donatella Versace took their interest in leather to a new place, alongside a series of frock coats from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day with examples by Prada, Alexander McQueen and Raf Simons. ‘Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear’ runs from March 19 to November 6, 2022, at the V&A in London. 
Image: courtesy of Rahemur Rahman by Daniele Fummo; Rahemur Rahman, AW19
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