Calvin Klein Resort 2015

marcBarna

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If the late Sixties/early Seventies is not the fashion era most closely associated with the house of Calvin Klein, it is where it all started. Francisco Costa worked from that point of view for resort, mostly in terms of silhouette, punching up shifts, cropped biker jacketsjacketsjackets, A-line skirts and rubber Chelsea boots in technically driven, ultramodern fabrications. There was a luxe athleticism to the lean cuts with sporty, sleeveless shoulders, robust zipper details and the use of scuba fabric for the opening trench and compacted nylon on single-shoulder tops that brought to mind swimwear.

The shapes and colors started out minimal with the latter building from neutrals — black, navy, white, beige — to bright and buoyant. Cerulean blue and pink introduced an artful finale that playfully drew on the cutout work of Matisse (Vanessa Beecroft and Laurie Simmons were also references). A navy-and-white sleeveless dress flaunted an optical tree print and a similar silhouette featured Lucite flower embroidery that channeled the “youthful fun” vibe Costa was going for.



WWD
 
JUNE 05, 2014
NEW YORK
By Nicole Phelps

Resort marks a timely reversal for Calvin Klein Collection. After two seasons of cozy, even crafty shows, designer Francisco Costa has embraced a more linear, streamlined silhouette. Backstage afterward, he claimed Matisse's collages as an inspiration. "Fall was very organic; it was time to offer women something else," he said. That something else boiled down to a vaguely late sixties, early seventies silhouette—sleeveless A-line dresses, cropped zip-front jackets, and flares chopped off above the ankle, their retro associations heightened by the see-through plastic Chelsea boots with which they were paired. Brushed-metal bibs built into some of the shifts added to the space-age vibes. Where last season's materials were furry or fuzzy, Costa's technical fabrics for Resort were flat, exuding a modern cool. The palette was equally precise in shades of black, white, blue, and sand. Curving plastic zips inset at the hips were among the collection's few embellishments, save for the flat Lucite flowers embroidered with grid-like rigor on the hem of two dresses at the end.

These developments situated Costa in Resort's developing story line—a good place to be. Clothes are getting leaner. Round, enveloping shapes are fading away and sharp angles are taking their place. The Calvin Klein legacy is a sensual one. In the end, fashion that obscures the form probably doesn't make as much sense for the brand as form-fitting pieces like these. Costa also pointed out that short, above-the-knee lengths sell well for the company. "We imagine the average height of an American woman is 5'10". Well, it isn't, it's 5'4". And short lengths work for her." Short or tall, the collection's best look was a tunic-length top layered with a tank and teamed with cropped flares.

style.com
 

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