AlexN said:I think it's creative and interesting, but very ugly. The pants and especially the jeans strike me as terribly unfashionable. They look like these old, light, grandma-looking, ill-fitting jeans my stepmom wears from Walmart.
metal-on-metal said:^ Well, the Japanese will buy anything if it's ugly enough. And this certainly fits the bill.
metal-on-metal said:^ Well, the Japanese will buy anything if it's ugly enough. And this certainly fits the bill.
i dont think that the Japanese will buy anything if its ugly, i believe they will buy anything if its unusual and Ann's work sure fits their esthetics, i dont see why everyone needs to fall into mainstream acceptable lines, breaking up rules of what is beautiful is a part of the creative proccess.
metal-on-metal said:^ Well, the Japanese will buy anything if it's ugly enough. And this certainly fits the bill.
Well with that logic you can defend almost anything and everything. "Oh, Dsquared isn't that bad. They really believe in it, so it must be good! I love Dsquared!" I'm sorry, Lena, but I think far too few people in the fashion business voice their negative opinions. If something is trash, why not call it that? I don't care if she's living out her life dream or whatever. I care about what the end product looks like. And the end product here is trash. It's this kind of cheerleading that only spurs on people like Ann-Sofie, Tara Subkoff, et al.Lena said:of course she's no Margiela, she's no Junya but at least she's trying her thing, which is both brave, interesting and worthwhile in my book.
even though i wouldn't wear most of her collection, i can't see why designers should be bashed for projecting their personal original esthetical concept?
That's exactly what I meant. Sorry to everyone if I sounded a little extreme.kit said:I take what you mean here , M-O-M , to mean that the Japanese love anything ' quirky and idiosyncratic '.
metal-on-metal said:Well with that logic you can defend almost anything and everything. "Oh, Dsquared isn't that bad. They really believe in it, so it must be good! I love Dsquared!"
.....I think Bernhard Willhelm and Miuccia Prada have explored these concepts a little bit, yet their product is worlds apart. High-minded ideas about beauty and style should ultimately return to earth in the form of desirable clothing. But Ann-Sofie fails to deliver.


Scott said:Neither can I,really. Really,alot of her stuff resembles what people like Bernhard and Wendy & Jim are doing. And they've all been around since about the same,btw. So she developed this style when they were just beginning as well. Bernhard I think just has better technical skills otherwise the execution is absolutely the same to me.
)Anne-Sofie Back showed a quirky sense of humor with an inspiration from mail-order catalogues. The clothes were worn as if just unpacked, sometimes with tissue paper attached and with jewlery still on its display templates, so that pearl earrings nestled on a cardboard base. But the designer did not let her joke go too far and presented pretty wearable clothes.
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Lena said:suzy menkes on Ann_Sophie ..explaining the concept and finally making sense

faust said:Sorry, she is no Chalayan![]()
