Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Fashion pieces and trends that defined the decade

The decade closes and took with it it’s signature feminine silhouettes and accessories. From the Bekett wedge sneaker from Isabel Marant to the long pleated skirt from Dior, including the shoulder jackets from Balmain, the army trend and the influential minimalist-intellectual wardrobe from Phoebe Philo for Celine, FashionUnited has picked up the pieces and the most memorable trends launched between 2010 and 2019.

2010 - 2012: Mad Men silhouette, wedge sneakers and 'balmainmania'.

The decade opens with the influence of an American series with a polished aesthetic: Mad Men. The Fifties and Early Sixties wardrobe of women's roles left their mark on the minds and gave rise to desires for flared silhouettes. Prada's fall-winter 2010 collection sets the example by proposing a retro look, with hair pulled back into a voluminous bun and a pronounced waist.

As fashion embraces the look of Joan Holloway and Peggy Olson - heroines of Mad Men - Isabel Marant's studio on rue de Charonne is designing a sneaker for her fall-winter 2010 collection that will be copied many times: the Beckett sneaker. A sneaker with velcro, whose wedge heel is hidden in the design of the shoe for a trompe-l'oeil effect.

Launched a few seasons back at the time, the "balmainmania" is still present in 2010. Structured shoulders and a slim silhouette define the codes of Christophe Decarnin's wardrobe, then Balmain's artistic director. The khaki fracs and the officer's jacket with the glittering shoulders of the spring-summer 2010 parade will strongly contribute to the army trend.

But the green colour is not the only one to be at the top of the list in early 2010. Under the influence of the ChloƩ parades by Hannah MacGibbon, camel also colours the streets of fashion capitals. The creative director will also give desires of large beige capes and long nude coats.

In the semantic field of comfort: Celine's new creative director joins the iconic luxury house: Phoebe Philo and her minimalist, cerebral and demanding lines. The refined contours of her silhouettes, as well as those of her accessories, will be copied by all the major ready-to-wear chains. The English designer will notably make Celine leather goods a commercial success. Among the iconic bags: the Classic bag (created in 2009), a compact size, free of frills.

Photo : via adidas.com

2012 - 2014: Stan Smith, leather perfecto jackets, and cerebral minimalism

In 2012, the equipment manufacturer Adidas announces the end of the marketing of its unisex sneaker: the Stan Smith. The model, which has been renewed every season since its creation in the 1960s, hasn't had its last word, however. In 2014, the brand will relaunch its marketing and offer it the destiny we know today. Reinterpreted in a white version, punctuated by a green tongue, the shoe is unanimously acclaimed and definitively bury the ballerina model. From now on sneakers can be worn with everything, jeans, skirts as evening dresses.

For the top half, the leather jacket has become a must since Hedi Slimane took over the reins of the House of Saint Laurent. The rock aura and the androgynous allure of the influential designer materializes in a mass market version in this small leather piece, short and with a bias zip. Note: the high waist slim jeans, characteristic of Slimane's narrow silhouettes, are also making their mark.

In 2012, the artistic duo Humberto Leon and Carol Lim, newly arrived at Kenzo, will launch the tiger sweatshirt. A success. Their surrealist and whimsical vocabulary, illustrated with wild animals or with an esoteric eye will be a recipe for success.

Another cosy piece of the moment: the plaid scarf. Its ample and long format is closer to that of a blanket than a clothing accessory, but it is nevertheless wrapped around the neck that this piece of great cold is seen in the metropolises. A look similar to the one that model Werner Schreyer wears on the Louis Vuitton autumn-winter 2012-2013 campaign.

As for footwear, the comfort imposed by the unanimous wearing-of-sneakers finds a new formula in the combination of Birkenstock sandals worn with socks. Combined with a long, flowing trench coat, the bold association will be immortalized in a fashion series published by the Paris edition of Vogue magazine in 2013. From then on, the trench coat with the airy drop becomes an "it".

2014 - 2016: Kanye West, streetwear and fur moccasin

In 2014, fashion is blurring the codes even more and mixing casual and dressy wardrobe. Jogging becomes a suit, worn at the office, paired with a pair of white Stan Smith. In wool, mottled grey or chic fleece, the new piece is called jogging pants. It introduces one of the most important turning points in fashion since the beginning of the millennium: the popularisation of streetwear and its introduction into the luxury sector.

Photo : Adidas Originals x Kanye West

Rapper Kanye West's first collaboration with Adidas in 2015 also helped lay the foundations for the streetwear era. This collaboration, entitled "Yeezy Season 1"mainly consisted of pieces in the army style and large sweaters with holes.

Present in the 2015-2016 winter collection of Saint Laurent Paris, the bomber succeeds the perfecto. Ample and enveloping, satin or matt, its comfort and its reference to the military style seduce.

At Gucci, in January 2015, a designer entered: Alessandro Michele. Its heterogeneous universe will notably give birth to the reinterpretation of the Gucci moccasin, trimmed with fur.

2016 - 2018: pleated skirt, bulge and corduroy

Dior AW19

In 2016, Dior appoints a new artistic director: Italian Maria Grazia Chiuri. Her style will breathe freshness into the French luxury house, and she will be the subject of much criticism - notably for the lack of a couture spirit in her collections and the mercantile use of feminist slogans displayed on her t-shirts. Anyway, her dancer silhouette composed of a long pleated tulle skirt + casual t-shirt works. The look may not revolutionize fashion, but her princess outfits with a marked waist will influence the mass market. The pleated skirt will also be reviewed and corrected by Alessandro Michele in an iridescent version before becoming, for a while, an essential classic.

The straight cut, even loose, thick ribbed velvet trousers will become a gimmick for the winter 2017 season. Marc Jacobs, Nina Ricci and Dries Van Noten, among others, are incorporating the cozy material into their collections.

During these years, fancy faux fur coats reach the dimension of a trendy piece. Young brands such as Shrimps set the trend with coloured and/or printed pieces for a guilt-free wear, far from the rock-bohemian fur proposed by Isabel Marant at the beginning of the decade.

Photo : Celine PE20, Catwalkpictures

2019: micro-bag and neo-bcbg trend

In 2019, the scale of accessories will shrink to midget sizes. The initial idea came from Jacquemus, the French designer and founder of a flourishing fashion house. A micro version of his "Chiquito" bag, the accessory is closer to a pendant than a handbag, but the formula is convincing and is being emulated. Many other brands will copy the idea with varying degrees of success.

When he arrived at Celine in February 2018, designer Hedi Slimane struck again. In recent seasons, the designer has made a name for himself by proposing a neo-bourgeois clothing vocabulary tinged with the 70's spirit: culottes, lavaliere shirt, wide-brimmed hat and turtleneck.

This article was originally published on FashionUnited.FR, translated and edited by Kelly Press.

Photos : Gucci - Acne studio - Balmain - Celine, Isabel marant - kenzo Facebook - Prada par CHRISTOPHE SIMON, AFP - Dior - H&M Facebook - Saint Laurent Facebook



* This article was originally published here

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Five fashion ASMR campaigns from 2019

Undoubtedly one of the most surprising marketing trends of 2019: Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response, ASMR for short. ASMR describes the tingling, tingling skin sensation - a bit like goose bumps - that is a reaction to certain audio and visual effects. Think, for example, of images of slow and monotonous actions such as eating, fine painting (think: Bob Ross) or brushing hair, with accompanying smacking, crackling or tapping, and often accompanied by commentary on whispers.

The term ASMR was introduced in 2010, around the time ASMR took flight on YouTube. Over the past decade, the channel has been flooded with videos in which self-proclaimed 'ASMRtists' such as SAS ASMR (7.84 million subscribers), Gentle Whispering (1.76 million subscribers) and Heather Feather (500,000 subscribers) spend minutes cutting hairs into a microphone, tapping phone covers or brushing their hands with make-up brushes. A video by SAS ASMR, in which the YouTube YouTube is tantalizingly slow to bite into pieces of sticky honeycombs for twelve minutes, is the most watched ASMR clip on YouTube, with over 40 million views.

What makes ASMR so incredibly popular? Earlier this year, FashionUnited spoke to trend analyst Pernille Kok-Jensen about the love for ASMR that seems to cherish millennials and Gen Z, born between 1980 and 2010. Kok-Jensen believes that these generations suffer from an abundance of visual information. ASMR is relaxing for them because of its quiet pace and because it also appeals to other senses: the hearing and, indirectly, the sense of touch. Because of its great appeal to young people, Kok-Jensen predicts that ASMR will increasingly appear in marketing campaigns in the coming years.

Several international companies have already embraced the phenomenon. Famous is Ikea's ASMR campaign 'Oddly Ikea', in which a woman's hand touches all the elements of an Ikea student room for twenty-five minutes. In the background, a soft voice describes the structure of the linen sheets and the soothing effects that a modular wardrobe can have. In addition to food and interior design, clothing is also ideal for creating ASMR campaigns. In 2014, Cos made the ASMR video "The Sound of Cos", in which two men in a studio provide Cos garments with sounds. The storage of a collar is imitated with the unfolding of umbrellas, the closing of press-studs with the snapping of bubble plastic.

Also in 2019, several major brands produced high-profile ASMR campaigns. FashionUnited selected the five most exciting examples.

February 2019: Givenchy

For the spring campaign of 2019 angled luxury fashion house Givenchy photographer Steven Meisel inside. Under the direction of head designer Clare Waight Keller, he created the campaign I Am Your Mirror, in which Givenchy models slowly eat juicy apples,

Squeeze grapes under their pointed heels, slide metal chains through their hands and rub sensually on their leather Givenchy accessories. The campaign video caught on, with Givenchy launched a competition in April for new ASMR talent to work with Givenchy in the future.

March 2019: Liam Hodges

Perhaps the most bizarre ASMR campaign comes from men's clothing brand Liam Hodges. In the spring of 2019, this brand presented a capsule collection consisting of a pair of trousers, shirt and T-shirt, each printed with a large red lobster and the text 'Come & Enjoy!'. So said, so done: the campaign video shows a man, dressed in Liam Hodges' shirt, crunching and smacking for a good minute, feasting on a yolk of a lobster.

July 2019: Gucci

In July this year, Gucci presented the second edition of the #24HourAce campaign, for which the brand invites several artists to create audiovisual work around the Ace tennis sneaker, which is then published on the brand's social media pages within 24 hours. This year's theme of #24HourAce was ASMR. The result are movies of Ace sneakers attached to ticking metronomes, a 'wet unboxing video', lucid 3D animations of Ace sneakers being sliced and a movie in which an Ace sneaker with the nose is pushed into a colourful slimeball.

September 2019: Coach

American leather goods brand Coach tackled the classic: it presented the new bag line Coach Originals this autumn with a series of short Instagram films in which leather is cut out by hand, hands are gently stroked over a Coach bag, a bag is immersed in a tub of suds or a twist closure is gently clicked over. The caption invites the viewer to experience the bags multisensory: "See it, feel it, hear it: authentic American leather craftsmanship".

November 2019: Weather Gucci

Not quite fashionable, though, Gucci. Since 2018, the brand has its own 'osteria' in the centre of Florence that serves hamburgers as well as chic pastas. The citizens of the restaurant were featured on the Gucci instagram page in November with a series of videos in which different people, whether or not dressed in colourful Gucci outfits, bite into a Gucci burger. "Crackle. Bites. Slurp. Smack. Enjoy", is written in the caption.

This article was originally published on FashionUnited.NL, translated and edited by Kelly Press.

Homepage photo: screenshot of Liam Hodges' ASMR campaign "Come & Enjoy!" in which a model in Liam Hodges clothing devours a lobster, via YouTube.



* This article was originally published here

Monday, December 30, 2019

Best of: Opinion pieces in 2019

LOOKING BACK

The year is coming to an end again, which means that FashionUnited traditionally looks back at the stories from the past year. A selection of opinion pieces worth reading published in 2019.

From oldest to newest, from the archive:

Is fashion week no longer in fashion?

February 2019 - The format of the shows, whether they are co-ed, held be in host cities or take place in accordance with the retail calendar, is not, however, the main issue in 2019. While the Instagram generation expects to be able to scroll through endless images of catwalk shows or haute couture photos, it's the abundant fashion weeks that get lukewarm reviews. Like a fashion connoisseur jokes, there's always have a fashion week somewhere, and it has little to do with a structured fashion calendar. However, it is not only the journalists alluding to problems for fashion week. From new surveys have shown that consumer interest in the global fashion weeks have declined significantly in the last five years.

Read the full article here >>

Photo: courtesy of KCD Worldwide

Is threat of a recession driving designers to go more minimalist?

April 2019 - Maximism has been admired for almost a decade now. In 2010, when the world began to recover from the fiercest economic downturn. crisis since the great recession, fashion designers returned to a maximalist aesthetics. Embellishments, bright colours, prints and the idea of wealth were celebrated again. And then Alessandro Michele came to Gucci, and voilĆ”, maximalism was once again extremely popular. All Trends come and go, and also to the development of maximalist fashion must eventually come to an end. However, it's not just a question of coincidence that designers, particularly in New York and Great Britain, just now opt for a minimalist approach. Trump's policy and the Prime Minister Theresa May's continued failure with regard to the Brexit may hit both locations in a downward spiral.

Read the full article here >>

Photo: FashionUnited

How Japan mastered the art of experiential retailing

July 2019 - The future of shopping is at stake for retailers in embracing meaningful experience concepts, retail managers say. On a recent trip to Tokyo, Japan, I witnessed for the first time of retail with a soul. Inspiration and innovation were visible everywhere, or it was now in small boutiques in remote locations or at large boutiques. chain stores with huge budgets to innovate and surprise. In unlike other great fashion meccas, the Japanese breathe experiential retail. At department stores, fashion becomes fashion in a different way than the Western standard of shop-in-shops. At Beams it's offer professionally presented on the basis of colour and appearance, not on basis of brand. That's more in line with how consumers prefer shopping. And while you still have the same brands at different stores shops near the Prada monobrandstore will be located in the area. articles of the luxury brand not in one room, as a brand story, present.

Read the full article here >>

Photo: Ronald van der Kemp AW19 couture by Marijke Aerden

Why Haute Couture is more relevant than ever

July 2019 - The breeze from the couture week determines the wind direction of the fashion. That makes haute couture the ultimate creative ground for designers to show their craftsmanship and expertise without restrictions in terms of budget, time and commerce. Couture is at the heart of the ecosystem of the The FƩdƩration de la Haute Couture et de la Mode states that the fashion industry (FHCM). Craftsmanship is a permanent access route between excellence in expertise and modern creativity - that innovation of production techniques embodies.

Read the full article here >>

Photo: dispersion of Christian boltanski (1991-2015) Ć  la monnaie de Paris.

France to prohibit the destruction of unsold stock: who is going to pay for that?

August 2019 - The French government wants the destruction of unsold ban non-food products in the next two to four years. Premier Edouard Philippe announced the news in June and proclaimed it "an uniquely". The measure is a logical continuation of a roadmap that came about last year; a roadmap for a sustainable economy aimed at reducing waste and converting waste into new products. raw materials. The fashion industry is particularly affected by these measure. The destruction of unsold items is a common approach within the sector. An approach where luxury brands and large fashion conglomerates have always been very discreet about, and now always is being condemned more often after several scandals in recent years. light came.

Read the full article here >>

Photo: Isabel Marant menswear

Womenswear designers are launching men's collections: Will it work?

August 2019 - Women wearing men's garments has been longer just time. What hasn't been done that long is designers who make women's collections and now launch a line for men. Earlier had fashion labels that 'sounded' feminine or were named after their female founder no chance of (commercial) success on the men's modem market. But that time seems to be over. Designers like Stella McCartney, Isabel Marant, Nanushka, Lululemon and even Celine, The Row and Chanel have launched (or are going to launch) a men's line for the season autumn/winter 2019. And there's no question that they never would do if it didn't bring any financial benefit.

Read the full article here >>

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Forget G7, slow fashion is the fast track to a bright future

August 2019 - FranƧois-Henri Pinault, CEO of luxury conglomerate Kering, this week unveiled the G7 Fashion Pact, an alliance of 32 fashion houses like Prada, Tapestry, Nike, Adidas and Burberry. The pact is committed to protecting the climate, biodiversity and the oceans. However, it remains to be seen what will become of the spectacular announcement. However, the truth is that we, as consumers, do not need committees, foundations or coalitions to take action. undertake. We can make a personal fashion pact, while those in the covenant is concerned with a blueprint for the future: we can embrace slow fashion. The term 'slow fashion' came up at the beginning of this century. the time the slow food movement broke through. Smaller collections, less seasons, less consumption: the answer to problems in the fashion industry seems to be in downsizes.

Read the full article here >>

Picture: Lululemon

Epstein affair: Unanswered questions left in the fashion industry

August 2019 - The Harvey Weinstein case has triggered the social “Me Too” movement that has barely faltered during its two year run since the scandal broke. However, this year the allegations against and untimely death of Jeffrey Epstein breathes new life into it, as well as leaves a lot of questions unanswered and justice not served. In this opinion piece, FashionUnited looks into some of these questions that the fashion industry need answers to.

Read the full article here >>

This article was originally published on FashionUnited.NL, translated and edited by Kelly Press

Main image: Chanel picture: Bertrand GUAY / AFP



* This article was originally published here

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Retail inspiration: 6 international store concepts from the past 6 months

IN PICTURES A look at the competition, almost everyone does. How do they set up their shop, how is the routing and which style is chosen? Although some retailers are convinced that you should never look at someone else, the FashionUnited article 'Retail inspiration: 9 new store concepts of recent times' from July did well. That's why it was repeated: the same article format, but with the latest stores. For those who are looking for inspiration or simply want to look at pictures.

Nishi in Rotterdam

A striking store that opened in the last month of 2019: Nishi. The ant-sweet colours in the concept catch the eye and are above all Instagram-worthy. Nishi is decorated with 'kawaii' in mind, the Japanese style whose name literally translates to 'cute'.

Nishi doesn't just sell clothes, it has to function as a 'mini Japanese department store'. Beauty products, books, crockery and homeware are also part of the assortment. Besides shopping, you can also visit the bubble tea bar, the snack corner, the photobooth and a hairdresser.

Photos: Nishi / Wijnand van Till

Adidas' most digital shop ever

Adidas zooms in on the digital store. In London, the store was given a makeover and the brand renamed the store 'most digital store ever'. There are more than a hundred digital touchpoints, such as interactive mirrors in the fitting rooms, LED screens and a hypewall. The interactive mirrors allow customers to request information about the garment, as well as a request for another size that is sent to one of the employees.

Photos: Adidas/ Adidas LDN

Hot:Second

A physical store that only promotes digital products: Hot:second is that store. Unfortunately it was a temporary store in London, but the concept is definitely worth it. The aim of the pop-up was to remove the need for physical clothing and to test business models with digital clothing. By donating a physical garment, visitors are given a token with which they can try out garments in futuristic pods by means of a digital tailor.

Photo: Via Hot:Second

H&M

H&M again carried out various tests in the second half of the year. First of all there was Mitte Garten, the Swedish retailer's 'hyperlocal' new store. The store in the Mitte district of Berlin will open in October and offers a curated H&M range, as well as third party products and even vintage items. Seminars and yoga classes will also be held in the building, all to be as relevant as possible to the local resident. A month later the new Sergel Torg store opens in Stockholm. Here too, H&M has looked at the local customer and how she can serve them. Here you can find a beauty bar, repair service and even a clothing rental service, among many other things to make it as easy as possible for the customer.

Photos: H&M

Wood Wood

Danish brand Wood opened the very first international store at the end of the year. The brand already had five stores of its own in its home country, but chose London to make its international debut. And how? The store was designed by Spacon & X and draws inspiration from the streetwear culture. The store is full of playful features, such as a partition made of fringes or bricks on metal bars. Small intimate spaces are created in the large space and the Wood Wood store is worth a visit just for the store concept.

Photos: Via Wood Wood

Burberry

Who says logomania is over? At Burberry, partly due to the new logo, it's more topical than ever. It may not be Burberry's own shop, but it is the concept space within Nordstrom that the British brand has taken over. It is unfortunately only on display until the end of 2019, so interested parties should be quick. Burberry has five spaces in the department store at its disposal and has one space completely immersed in the new Thomas Burberry Monogram and the cafe covered with Nick Knight's Portrait of a Rose print.

Photos: Burberry newsroom

This article was originally published on FashionUnited.NL, translated and edited by Kelly Press



* This article was originally published here