liberty33r1b
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so unappealing why did they even bother
Ugh, I'm not even a Vaccarello fan, but if he's basic, then we don't even have a word for Slimane's countless parades of black skinny jeans, bomber jackets and little dresses with no twist whatsoever.. if it weren't for his name/the brands he worked for during the last 10+ years and the production that comes with it, no one would lose a word abt his clothes.Not to me. Vaccarello is the most uninspired and most basic designer ever, most empty, most “insta/aesthetic/generic thing and he has 0 substance. He doesn’t even try either. He can send 300 sheer skirts/dresses, all the same, in one show.
To me he is the insta designer, like if one of those basic insta girls that think they like fashion started being a designer.
Exactly. This is what I meant when I said I feel as though his work exists only for the catwalk, wearable or not. He’s most concerned with “the look,” and not “the woman.” But this is the same problem MOST designers working now have.I would say that my issue with his Alaïa is that I don’t know what it is trying to be or what he is trying to say.
The Alaïa woman was multifaceted because he dressed very different kind of women but also because some of those women evolved in their lives. Farida Khelfa did not wear Alaïa the same when she became the studio director of the brand to when she was a model. The same for Victoire de Castellane.
Even me, prior to Azzedine’s death, I was more leaning to his re-issues than the very beautiful expected dresses he did maybe from 2013…
When I see the looks on MariaCarla and Binx, I say to myself that this is a believable direction for Alaïa. It looks sexy, confident and right.
But the man loves to over design. Sometimes, an allure, an actual vision of a woman is enough.
Those spiral dresses screams design contest. I wish he went more on the Madame Gres, effortless route than that.
Let me put it this way Peter is creatively better than Ancora guy or even Jacquemuses, but at the capability level of Peter's his ALAIA is not great either also the house has far more RTW history and technique as part of the codes and its history.Indeed! But I get almost the same vibes from his TFS threads than the ones from Sabato’s trainwrecks.
I don’t like his Alaïa either, because it’s too lifeless and a little bit pretentious for me, but it’s also quite… neutral. Like you can’t say it’s amazing but I feel it’s also not fair to say it’s terrible, imo. It’s like maybe not in tune with the brand, too boring, too cold… but it’s not something extremely bad. It’s just there. To me it doesn’t bring any strong feelings, and I’m usually quite opinionated. Something that I appreciate from him is that I kind of see the effort, even if it’s not working, and effort is something that’s missing these days.
Maybe it’s because we live in a world of Pharrels, Jacquemuses, Sabatos, Vaccarellos… that these kind of clean/boring offerings do not bother me much.
he has had many seasons in alaia but is failing to sell a dream... the talent is there but theres no signature or dream being sold.
For example how in the world was he able to show at the Guggenheim and still the photos from the runway look as if they did it in some empty corner of a department store?
If Alaia is not about selling a dream (which we can have another discussion on this), but about creating.... technically acclaimed ideas then Peter is falling short on this end as well.Alaïa is not a lifestyle brand, it has never been about selling a dream but creating highly sculptural and technically acclaimed designs that were famously presented in a very low-key, private manner. With Alaia, it was all about the clothing and the only thing that created a spectacle was the stories of his famous friends who were seen wearing his clothes.
I beg to differ regarding technical finesse ...this all without reciting my CV :-)Say what you will on the matter of taste or how much it aligns to original Alaïa, but these designs are certainly not lacking in finesse or technical acclaim. It’s cut well, it’s not playing it safe and the pieces I mentioned about would look stunning when styled in the right context.
This idea of over-conceptualization is a bit overplayed. There’s more to Alaïa than cling-y dresses for glamazons, you would be surprised to hear how many women I served in my retail years, now in their 60ies or 70ies, own archival Alaïa that fits beautifully with the Yohji and Issey they have in their closets. Carla Sozzani would be a good role model for that.
To be genuinely kind means to have the courage to offend.No, but you generalized the Belgian school of design as being overtly conceptualized and in lacking of sensuality and feminity which I also found a bit lacking in taste, as that is very much an opinion based on cultural origin and socialization.
Pieter’s work is more austere, yes, as were Raf’s Dior and Jil Sander. It’s a very common idea to link that with coldness and a woman-unfriendly point of view. The point I was trying to make is that not every Alaia woman or design is about the allure of the curve. Alaia explored different territories in his career and the clothes I was shown by my clients were not at all what is most stuck with people as Alaia’s signatures.
I really hated those millefeuille pieces from Alaia’s last collection and much like showing latex coats, this is only about serving a stunt for the runway. But my background as a buyer taught me the importance of the bottom line, the clothes people actually buy from a brand, that really reveal the achievement of a designer.
That being said, there are quite a few pieces here that are very straight forward and worth keeping for many years. They aren’t difficult to wear and not very heavy-handed pieces. Are they very Alaia, I’m not sure - But they certainly look accomplished and not amateurishly constructed.