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An evening gown with a built-in corset glinted with golden crystals. It took 30 people working together two weeks to complete
-- the kind of embroidery work that demands much closer inspection than is possible as the looks go whizzing by in a runway show. Following Tuesday's media presentation, clients will get to give the collection a close inspection during one-on-one appointments with the label's couture coordinator Wednesday. Get out your magnifying glasses, folks. The looks were presented on mannequins dangling from a metal structure, like at an art exhibition
-- which was appropriate enough. A good, close look was all it took to confirm that outfits, born of the creative genius of designer Tisci and the skill of his seamstresses and embroiderers, were wearable art. STEPHANE ROLLAND It was a pared-down collection for Rolland, who last season delivered dresses that bristled with mosaics of plexiglass spikes, like a dinosaur's armor. Where that collection was all hard lines and edges, Tuesday's was about fluidity and liquidity. Floor-length capes that were built into the long-sleeve sheath dresses fluttered like gently running water as the models walked. The train on a slate-colored evening gown jiggled like liquid mercury. A short navy dress covered at the hemline and the cuffs by glinting black oblong shapes
-- made from rhinestone-studded plastic -- looked like the deep blue sea washing up on a volcanic beach. Rolland, who is among the most artistic of Paris couturiers, said he looked for inspiration to the rounded, hermetic creations of Indian-born sculptor Anish Kapoor, as well as to memories of a youth spent on France's Cote d'Azur. "As a kid, I collected everything, and I used to come back from trips to the beach with my pockets full of these round stones, whose smoothness I really liked," he told The AP in a preview in his atelier. Asked if a recent trip to the sea had brought back the childhood memories, Rolland responded. "It's in me, so deep inside me that I don't need anything to jog my memory." JULIEN FOURNIE Night of the living dead has rarely looked as good. With transfixed upward gazes and their smudged palms held forward like sleepwalkers, the models minced around the catwalk in long, lean gowns in translucent fabric, with strategically placed opaque paneling and covered in dark ink smudges. Scarlet Swarovski crystals glinted like fresh bloodstains dripping down the shoulders of one dress, while terrible scenes of Medieval torture
-- showing little figures on the stake -- enlivened its hemline. "It's about violence against women and the strength it takes to overcome that and turn it into something beautiful," Fournie told The AP. The young Frenchman, who's showing on the sidelines of the haute couture displays, was on-trend with his second-skin beige pants and a molded jacket covered in anatomical sketches that recalled Givenchy's skeleton jumpsuits and his palette was steeped in the same somber shades of navy blue and black as Stephane Rolland's. ARMANI PRIVE The man who's built an empire on his impeccable taste turned out yet more refined elegance. An army of blondes in identical honey-colored wigs minced their way down the catwalk in pencil skirts and second-skin evening gowns so slim they constricted the models' gait. Plain-front trousers in caramel, taupe and gray were paired with swingy daycoats in matching hues and artfully folded paneling embellished lean bustier dresses.
Though less blingy than in seasons past, when it seemed that every conceivable surface was smothered in Swarovski crystals, the collection had just the right dose of sparkle. Rhinestones dressed up the collar of a cropped blazer
-- its shoulders standing at attention in the hallmark Armani salute -- and a black A-line dress shot through with silver Lurex gleamed blindingly under the spotlights. Still, the downside of a collection that stayed so close to the label's hallmark style was that it was absolutely lacking in surprise: There was not a single look that could have raised eyebrows
-- even if there had been a non-Botoxed eyebrow still capable of being raised in attendance. (It appeared there was not.)
[Associated
Press;
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