Posts in Eveningwear
Highlights from London Fashion Week Fall 2019 RTW

Valentinoesque Volume sweeps the Runway in London

Who’d ever think that a flyer for discount furniture could inspire a fashion collection. Hear what designer Matty Bovan had to say about it: “It had this headline, ‘In Uncertain Times, This Is a Cert!’ which I thought was so disgusting and perverse and hilarious, I had to use it for this collection.” He added, “It’s an ode to England, really,” harking back to the superstitious days of the 17th century.

Today, there are known to be 92 naturally occurring elements. In the days of the Greeks there were only four: Earth, Air, Fire and Water, all of which Mary Katrantzou uses as inspiration for her collection, “The Elemental, ” which reflects the creation of the universe.

A few quotes from Mary Katrantzou’s website help describe this stunning collection: “Clothes consume the body, fusing form with fabric, the woman with the elements.” Some look like “nebulous supernovae” surrounding the woman in “balls of energy.” “Ombré effects romantically evoke dawn and dusk, the shifting of the moon and sun, a shimmering horizon . . . compressed into tailoring and expanded into cumulus gowns.” “Hyper-real collages, combining flora and fauna” remind us of the creation of the earth. “Ostrich-feather appliqué like comets’ tails trailing away from the body . . .vaporous trails of organza that frame the form shaded with an aurora borealis of rainbow hues, and finally the subdued shades of midnight black and a twilight grey,” bring to mind “the quintessential beauty of celestial bodies divine.”

Mary Katrantzou Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Mary Katrantzou Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Principessa Orietta Doria Pamphilj (1920–2000) inspired this collection by Erdem Moralioglu. He was deeply moved by the story of her family, who stood against Mussolini in the days of Italian fascism and paid dearly for it. After visiting the Principessa’s Palazzo in Rome, one of the three largest palaces in the Eternal City, he studied its beautiful furnishings, paintings and wall coverings, rich with brocades and florals, and drew from them when creating his designs.

Richard Quinn Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Richard Quinn Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Think florals, think England. Think corsets, think Dior of old. Add these two to latex body suits, tights and opera gloves and you must be thinking: Richard Quinn.

Once an intern at Dior in Paris, Quinn tells about how that influenced his designs: “A lot of the Dior archive pieces had a corset within the dress. All of our dresses have a corset, so you really get the extreme waist.” He goes on to say, “We wanted to keep it classic, but with a darker element, and we wanted to be more extreme this time, and more elevated with location and atmosphere. We wanted to have a world.”

Toss in some marabou feathers, tulip-covered jackets, and maxi dresses, and you’ve got quite a world.

In this season’s collection, Roksanda Ilinčić aims at contrast, saying, “We live in a time that plays on contrast and I’m sure I’m not the only designer who is addressing this. There’s a sort of anxiety we are all feeling about the time that we are living in. That’s why there’s a contrast at the beginning of the show, which is more sober and minimal, and the end, which is more dreamy.” Her evening dresses are opulent, yet modern.

“Even though you’re entering this fantasy world, it should be wearable,” remarks Emilia Wickstead on her Fall collection. Inspiring her fantasy was Francis Ford Coppola’s Godfather trilogy, which, among other things, was filled with marriage celebrations, tragic deaths and family reunions. “I wanted to draw people into the nostalgia of that world,” she says. In doing so, she creates voluptuous designs, glorious gowns of scarlet, black and white, many with a couture-like finish.

Set against Ryan Driscoll’s backdrop portraying the gods and goddesses of Greek mythology, Hannah Weiland’s girls walked out, as Weiland says, “looking like myths.” Such was her inspiration for Shrimp’s fall collection.

Molly Goddard describes her new collection as “Dressed For The Storm.” And so it was, with wind machines blasting at gorgeous tulle dresses covering gray trousers and feet shod with knee-high walking boots.

David Koma Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

David Koma Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Designer David Koma draws on Shakespeare in his latest collection. “The narrative in Shakespeare embraces power and regalness,” he says. “I wanted to communicate the same sense of confidence in this collection.” And so he does, drawing on designs from the Edwardian period to create a series of gorgeous dresses, some of which were embellished with snakes and butterflies of real silver threads and beads.

Peter Pilotto Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Peter Pilotto Fall 2019 Ready-To-Wear

Peter Pilotto and Christopher de Vos found their print inspiration for this season’s designs in the iridescent ceramic creations of Zsolnay. A series of gorgeous metallic plissé maxi dresses added to the sparkle.

Victoria Beckham calls her latest fall collection “an A-Z of a woman’s life. She’s a lady, but she’s not ladylike. She’s proper, but she’s not prim.” Here we see small, snug argyle sweaters undergirded with blouses having big pointed collars. And chain prints. And pencil skirts. And not to forget, the Beckham dresses, which pop with vermillion and 40s to 70s silhouettes.

Meaning to reflect “contrasts in British culture and weather,” Riccardo Tisci aptly calls his second collection for Burberry, “Tempest.” Nevertheless, Tisci aims his designs toward Burberry’s international market, stating his intention to be “including, not excluding.”

Haute Couture Week Spring 2019 Paris

Rainbows, Mermaids and Marie-Antoinette

To my great delight, there was a plethora of rainbow colors as well as inspiration taken from my favorite period, the Rococo. Rainbows were seen in many collections, subtle-colored sparkling sequins in the case of Ralph & Russo - or more obvious in the collections of Schiaparelli, Georges Hobeika, Jean Paul Gaultier, Rami Kadi and Givenchy. Lagerfeld’s creations came in pastel rainbows. Alexis Mabille even named his show “Rainbow Splash.” Zuhair Murad, Elie Saab and Jean Paul Gaultier dove into the sea for inspiration, while Giorgio Armani and Stéphane Rolland looked to the Art Deco period.

Karl Lagerfeld invites us to the Mediterranean style “Villa Chanel,” a world he calls “lux, serene and calm, not like [the world] now.” Here we celebrate the joy of beauty and of nature.. Inspired by the exhibition “La Fabrique du luxe: Les marchands merciers parisiens au XVIIIe siècle,” Lagerfeld gives us a modern take on the 18th century world of King Louis XV and his mistress, Madame de Pompadour. Here we see sumptuous embroideries of resin-preserved flowers, sequins carefully painted by hand, and delicate lace, hand-painted or iced with silicone whorls, giving it the look of Meissen porcelain. Full skirts contrasted with small-bodices remind us of the days of Marie Antoinette.

Stéphane Rolland describes his collection as being “inspired by the 20s and art deco. I started with the era after the war of 1914/18 when there was freedom of expression. People wanted to live. When we see what is happening today, we want to rediscover this freedom. It's this that drove my collection and my way of thinking. I entered inside the Champs-Elysées theatre and voilà, here is the message. All the shapes flow, the body is free. It's not too sexy, its sensible, and very sensual, but at the same time super fragile and with an extreme sensibility and femininity. This is what I truly wanted. ”

Georges Chakra describes his collection as “a fairy-tale. it’s funny, its romantic, it’s poetic, it’s sensual, perfect to escape from everyday worries. The clothes have to have a very well done and excellent finish. There are dresses that use kilometers of tulle, there are frills and bows, so I think that everything that is romantic and sensual is seen throughout the show.”

“I don’t believe in modernist couture,” says Pierpaolo Piccioli of Valentino, “I love couture for what it is—the lightness, the uniqueness.” And that is what we see in Piccioli’s collection, the lightness and uniqueness of flowers. “I have asked the seamstresses of the Atelier to personally name each dress with a name of a flower,” says Piccioli, “or with the emotion brought by the flower itself. I was inspired by the Abécédaire de Flore.” Even many of the models’ eyes are framed in petals to transform them into flower fairies of the 19th-century French artist J. J. Grandville and the 1960s makeup artist Pablo Manzoni. The collection of 65 looks recalls all that we know of Valentino, from the voluminous ball gowns, to the ruffles, to the lace and wallpaper florals, all made relevant for today.

Schiaparelli Haute Couture

Bertrand Guyon of Schiaparelli describes his collection as “almost futuristic, even, because I wanted to work on totally different color combinations inspired by the porcelain of Sèvres, Chantilly and Meissen for the floral section. It’s also very humorous and optimistic.” His embroideries incorporate antique porcelain designs, as well as an astrological pattern from a 17th century star atlas. For futuristic, take a look at his “Meteroid Swarm Cape” or his gigantic, tiered, pink tulle gown.

Giambattista Valli’s trademark tulle explosions, extravagant trains, and fez hats mark his latest collection. Thousands of sparkling Swarovski crystals that crunch under your feet create a feeling of lightness and of Paris at night. Valli describes what led him to become a couturier by reflecting on a photo he’d seen by Helmut Newton, one of models lounging in the couture salon of Yves Saint Laurent. “He captured the atmosphere of the French maisons de la haute couture I was dreaming about when I decided to move to Paris to become a couturier. That attitude only exists here in Paris, a sort of posture of the mind, a nervous silhouette, décomplexée.”

Chanel Haute Couture Spring 2019

Pearls, pearls and more pearls mark the revival of the House of Balmain’s haute couture atelier. Giant orbs encircling wrists and carried by hand were emblazoned with the Balmain name, signifying the house’s return. “Here, it’s all about bringing back Balmain to the elegance of la France,” explains designer Olivier Rousteing. “Of course, the house is known for being edgy and sexy and glamorous. Everything you see will give the sense that it’s taken from the ideas of Mr. Balmain,” he continues, adding that the maison’s archives were essential.

“Every color has its own energy,” says designer Alexis Mabille, as he presents his spring collection, appropriately named “Rainbow Splash.” “It’s a rainbow in every sense — freedom of color and freedom of expression.” He completes his rainbow with the full spectrum of colors, from black to neon by way of turquoise, emerald, navy and gold.

Zuhair Murad Haute Couture


For its Spring-Summer 2019 Haute Couture collection, Maison Georges Hobeika evokes the timeless essence of the Château de Versailles and the passionate myth of the legendary Marie-Antoinette.

In his Armani Privé collection, “Laquer,” Giorgio Armani brings us the Art Deco aesthetic of the Jazz Age fused with the beautiful red lacquers that are a hallmark of Chinese art.

Zuhair Murad’s “Aquatic Serenade” makes the greatest splash at Haute Couture Week. “The inspiration was all about the sea, the world of the deep sea, the sea from the beaches, from inside and outside,” he explains, adding that his colors are meant to “evoke the feel of ripples on water.” Murad’s palette includes the whole range of ocean colors, from shades of blue dégradé to turquoise to mother-of-pearl.

“I wanted to celebrate the magic of femininity,” says Elie Saab “Oui, c’est le rêve! It’s a dream of luminous mermaids emerging from the waves and promenading along the sea.” Sequins of ocean-blue remind us of the shimmering surface of the sea.“ I wanted to express the brilliance and the glamour of women; I try to enhance their charm with my creations: I look at femininity with my utmost respect. I bring to French haute couture my Mediterranean sensibility, a vision of a woman almost regal in her demeanor.”

Giambattista Valli Haute Couture Spring 2019

Halpern - Glamour Returns In An Explosion Of Multicolored Sequins

People are celebrating the discovery of the 30 year-old designer Michael Halpern who is selling through at Bergdorf Goodman in his first season. “I’m not really quite sure I’ve seen this happen, straight out of the gate, for a designer who isn’t known,” said Linda Fargo of Bergdorf Goodman. “That is special.” Born and raised in New York, Halpern studied fashion design at Parsons School of Design, before working at J. Mendel and Oscar de la Renta, and later studying at Central Saint Martins in London. His MA collection at Central Saint Martins in 2016 won him the attention of everyone from Donatella Versace (Halpern now consults on Atelier Versace’s couture collections) to US Vogue’s Sarah Mower and Beyoncé. His debut presentation followed in February 2017 – a hot ticket at London fashion week. (Excerpts from Vogue and MatchesFashion.com)

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“When the world started going a bit crazy, that’s when I started doing more colour ... I felt like it needed to be there”

Halpern's rose-gold sequin-embellished trousers are the perfect fusion of disco glamour and couture-salon sophistication. Under artificial light at night, his clothes come alive. The collection is now available at Bergdorf Goodman and MatchesFashion.com.

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"To be able to put something shiny on, it’s almost like armour" 

"I love Bob Mackie, I think he was super revolutionary... The collection is absolutely very niche, you have to have a certain look and mentality to wear it for sure... it has a chintz factor, but it’s meant to be subversive and not so literal. In London, NYC and Los Angeles, I see people wearing the pieces with a vintage concert T-shirt and sneakers – I think that would be great. Or wearing a jumpsuit with a denim jacket over it, that would be cool."

The Halpern Spring/Summer 2018 RTW collection was shown in the London Palladium during London Fashion Week:

Images Sources: Vogue.com and MatchesFashion.com