Vogue acquires the Privilege of Shooting Full-Length Images of Tom Ford’s First Namesake Women’s Collection

November 16th, 2010

September 12th marked Tom Ford’s return to womenswear, following a six-year “pause,” with one of the most strongly guarded presentations in modern fashion memory. He turned the traditional fashion show formula on its head by banishing the standard hordes of photographers, Twitterers and bloggers who offer same-day coverage on the internet, and invited only pinnacle fashion editors and one photographer, Terry Richardson, inside the walls of his spring 2011 presentation.

Mr. Ford (as he now prefers to be called) also did away with traditional runway models, as an alternative handpicking some names you might be more recognizable with–Beyoncé, Julianne Moore, Lauren Hutton, and Rita Wilson–to showcase his garments. He told the media that they’d just have to remain for the photos: Richardson’s photographs would emerge on the newly relaunched TomFord.com in December, when the clothes were prepared for his stores. Currently Vogue is running the first images of the collection in their December issue, which hits newsstands in New York and Los Angeles this Tuesday.

“I do not recognize everyone’s requiring to see everything online the day after a show,” he explains to Vogue. “I don’t think it at last serves the customer, which is the whole point of my business–not to provide journalists or the fashion system. To put amazing out that’s going to be in a store in six months, and to observe it on a starlet, ranked in US magazine next week? My customer doesn’t desire to wear the similar thing she saw on a starlet!”

In the time as Mr. Ford left Gucci in 2004–a dark period where “My values were in the incorrect position and “I didn’t know if I cared if I lived or died”–he discovered Daoism and co-wrote, financed, directed and edited the seriously acclaimed “A Single Man,” a film which earned Colin Firth an Oscar nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role.

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Indonesian Fashion Designer Meets First Lady

November 13th, 2010

This was a big week for Indonesian fashion designers and not only did the President Obama build a stop in Jakarta, although he touched down right in the middle of Jakarta’s fashion week. While the President was gratifying the ideals of democracy and development at the University of Indonesia, local designers were sending a parade of pieces down the runways eager to found Jakarta as a fashion hub in Asia. Backed by the Indonesian Fashion Designers Association, the objective is to catapult Indonesian designers to the international stage.

The theme of Jakarta fashion week was styling conventional wear with a modern touch. The week kicked off with a compliment to the kebaya (derived from Arabic word for clothing “abaya”), a traditional blouse and skirt combo that most Indonesian women wear. Designer Defrico Audy varied a batik print with metallic silks and red velvets (pictured below).

Other designers wedged with modern designs. Sebastian Gunawan, another designer who got to meet Mrs. Obama, presented a 92-piece collection enthused by old icons (Lauren Bacall, Marilyn Monroe) and new (Rihanna and Victoria Beckham). He showed gowns with high shoulders which he said look mostly excellent on petite women.

Modernity was not mislaid on other designers either. The rash of territory waist dresses paired with platform shoes were every bit worthy of catwalks in New York and can’t you nearly see Beckham in the seam by designer Ninik Darmawan.

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Blend of creativity, contemporary slices at Pakistan fashion week

November 12th, 2010

Karachi Designers researched with silhouettes and drifted away from their staple long kurtas and palazzos on the second day of the Pakistan Fashion Design Council-Sunsilk Fashion Week (PFDC-SFW) here to throw up a blend of creativity and contemporary cuts even as a vast blast close to the venue unsuccessful to cast a shadow on the event.

The blast, close to the Sindh chief minister’s residence, compressed a police building and killed minimum of 19 people. It did result in a minor rescheduling and back-to-back shows, leaving slight time for the models to alter their outfits and hair but the backstage crews managed to pull off the exercise pretty well and everything went efficiently.

The designers who stood out Thursday were Moeed Yousaf and Farya Aftab of label Muse as their 1940s-inspired collection had tailored splits, high-waist pants, skirts, glamorous dresses, jumpsuits and tunics minus leggings as Pakistani women shy away from presentation off their legs.

The spotless cuts and edgy dressing brought in a breath of fresh air to the fashion week.

Students from the Pakistan Institute of Fashion and Design (PIFD) also left a spot with their hoodies and micro skirts teamed with leggings, umbrella-cut tunics, irregular buttoned tunics and ruffled dresses in hues of metallic green, turquoise, fuchsia and bright yellow.

For the foremost time, one also got to observe the sari on the ramp and credit for this goes to Sehyr Saigol of Libaas, who is also the PFDC-SFW chairperson.

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