The second day of Fashion Week in the French capital saw John
Galliano unveil
a Japanese-inspired collection for Maison Margiela, bold patterns from
Belgium’s
Dries Van Noten and Carine Roitfeld’s designs for Uniqlo.
Galliano also brought the “DIY” spirit to his second ready-to-wear collection
for Margiela, as seen att , with the designer wrapping a torn
cricket jumper in plastic wrapping and printing paint stains on the back of
a white pleated dress or black coat.
Men sported long dresses and necklines to the navel in his show at the
Paris Fashion Week, a nine-day fashion frenzy that marks the last stop for
the
2016 spring/summer womenswear collections after New York, London and Milan.
The second part of the collection takes inspiration from Japan, including
kimono jackets and belts where bows are replaced with small bags.
But unlike Courreges — and despite the pleas of the photographers —
British designer Galliano did not take to the stage, continuing the
tradition
of anonymity started by the brand’s founder, Martin Margiela.
A string quartet accompanied Dries Van Noten’s show in a huge hangar, where
the industrial setting contrasted strongly with the flamboyant colours and
patterns splashed across the Belgian designer’s creations.
The collection also played with contrast: grey checked trousers softened a
printed pink veil, a strict suit jacket was teamed with shiny trousers, a
top
that resembled a second skin met a sequinned bra.
Carine Roitfeld’s collection for Japanese giant Uniqlo meanwhile reflected
her classic sexy-chic style, with pencil skirts, fake fur jackets,
leopard-print silk blouses and vinyl jackets.
(AFP)
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