IndigoHomme
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Maybe there's a thread for personal wishes, but i just come to share my dream about Daniel W. Fletcher for Burberry
Honestly, LVMH really f*cked Marc over with that post-pandemic business model. What's the point of skipping NYFW for a see now, buy now strategy only for them not to actually produce or sell the collection they've shown.Marc Jacobs at Chanel could also be an interesting proposition. Albeit his designs lately have been quite confused, he does have the skills and imagination to push the house codes forward and create buzz, and yet maintain simple and elegant clothes. Marc Jacobs collection clothes pre-pandemic have always been romantic, simple, and very well made.
Maybe there's a thread for personal wishes, but i just come to share my dream about Daniel W. Fletcher for Burberry
It’s more that LVMH, I must say Bernard Arnault, has real respect for Marc and did his best to have a strategy that works for the brand.Honestly, LVMH really f*cked Marc over with that post-pandemic business model. What's the point of skipping NYFW for a see now, buy now strategy only for them not to actually produce or sell the collection they've shown.
It would be nice to have him at Chanel (even though I'd rather have Ghesquière there by 1'000 fold), because he needs a structure to thrive. Unfortunately, his name is forever attached to LVMH, so that's never happening.
American luxury is a tough thing to sell. Bernard Arnault was very dismissive of Michael Kors’s business when he exposed his ambition for Marc Jacobs but it turn out that when you aren’t Thom Browne, Tom Ford or Rick Owens, it’s very difficult to sell the concept of luxury as an American brand.
American luxury fashion is unironically all about being very like Puritan New England in the discretion. Ralph Lauren is the king because 1k cashmere sweaters with no brand is the American look. kors collection is also a pretty serious label. That sort of workwear denim wild wild west pragmatic energy is American luxury. No flourishes at all just practicality. Its like Rolex - expensive because of the quality and manufacture not prestige pricing. No flourishes - Utilitarian Luxury. That is why so many fail at American luxury. Marcs own line was very UnAmerican in its kitchy sort of cartoony look and VERY expensive for what it was.
Ralph Rucci screams American luxury but he missed the mark with his fabric choices. They were too glitzy. Too many lamés and not enough ‘hearty’ fabrics like silk twill. Too much charmeuse not enough matte crepe de chine.
Now I'm thinking about it, America hasn't really produced any true visionaries in high fashion sphere. The ones who were unconventional (Tord Ford, Rick Owens, Thom Browne) had to build up a name in Europe. In the US, there's a luxury audience, but no high fashion audience.Arnault was dismissive of kors because his bread and butter department store line is/was basically knock off Dior: LV - any brand that was in the moment. I recall seeing 100% Dior inspired bags for MK and I knew their relationship wouldnt last much longer. And it didnt.
Dont forget Halston! He had his own look and lifestyle ideas. Prob the greatest American designer of all time.Now I'm thinking about it, America hasn't really produced any true visionaries in high fashion sphere. The ones who were unconventional (Tord Ford, Rick Owens, Thom Browne) had to build up a name in Europe. In the US, there's a luxury audience, but no high fashion audience.
Designers like YSL, Cardin or Courrèges couldn't have been based in America. Nor could designers like Alaïa, Mugler or Gaultier. The US fashion scene never had a "Japanese/British/Belgian Invasion" or a mass of old dead luxury houses to revive either.
Their labels don't seem to have the best workers either. I remember Peter Copping in an interview expressing frustration at how "rough" the work Oscar de la Renta's "ateliers" produced was compared to Nina Ricci's despite similar price points.
Buying a cashmere sweater to wear for one season - like in Paris - is a type of whimsical consumerism that doesnt really exist in America.
Does anyone actually believe this? It is manifestly wrong, and attempting to reduce a global consumer mindset into national blocs is as pointless as it is absurd.
For the record, I'm not American!
Now I'm thinking about it, America hasn't really produced any true visionaries in high fashion sphere. The ones who were unconventional (Tord Ford, Rick Owens, Thom Browne) had to build up a name in Europe. In the US, there's a luxury audience, but no high fashion audience.
Designers like YSL, Cardin or Courrèges couldn't have been based in America. Nor could designers like Alaïa, Mugler or Gaultier. The US fashion scene never had a "Japanese/British/Belgian Invasion" or a mass of old dead luxury houses to revive either.
Their labels don't seem to have the best workers either. I remember Peter Copping in an interview expressing frustration at how "rough" the work Oscar de la Renta's "ateliers" produced was compared to Nina Ricci's despite similar price points.
Youve been here like 20 years. Im sure you can manage something.No! I just don't have the time or energy to comment.
Im sorry but this is dumbest nonsense I've ever read.
Is this bait or
have you been to america? Or Paris?Does anyone actually believe this? It is manifestly wrong, and attempting to reduce a global consumer mindset into national blocs is as pointless as it is absurd.
For the record, I'm not American!
Now I'm thinking about it, America hasn't really produced any true visionaries in high fashion sphere. The ones who were unconventional (Tord Ford, Rick Owens, Thom Browne) had to build up a name in Europe. In the US, there's a luxury audience, but no high fashion audience.
Designers like YSL, Cardin or Courrèges couldn't have been based in America. Nor could designers like Alaïa, Mugler or Gaultier. The US fashion scene never had a "Japanese/British/Belgian Invasion" or a mass of old dead luxury houses to revive either.
Their labels don't seem to have the best workers either. I remember Peter Copping in an interview expressing frustration at how "rough" the work Oscar de la Renta's "ateliers" produced was compared to Nina Ricci's despite similar price points.
thank you for setting us straight in this matter.First of all, America has been the largest and most important market for high fashion (European or otherwise) since the 1920s. Jean Patou ruled the 1920s with an American clientele. Why do you think the French were even designing so much sportswear at that time? It was for the Americans.
This is why some of the best Dior and Balenciaga archives IN THE WORLD are in Texas, Philly, Chicago. It was the American heiresses who were the top clients and who were buying the most extravagant models. The 1950s couture boom was funded by American industrialists via their wives.
America’s answer to Vionnet, Dior and Balenciaga was Charles James who Balenciaga once praised as the “only one in the world who has raised dressmaking from an applied art to pure art.” His words, not mine.
America’s answer to Cardin was Rudi Gernreich who was actually more radical, innovative, and influential.
It also had Bonnie Cashin who is probably one of the most innovative designers of all time. Her clothes were so well made that Hermes sold them at their stores in Paris. Ghesqueire, Phoebe, JW Anderson have all knocked off Cashin at least once.
America could not have had an Yves Saint Laurent because it had Halston and Geoffrey Beene who were more technically advanced and skilled. Certainly their clothes are more modern. Especially Beene who could have cut circles around Alaia.
And America did have its “invasion.” It’s literally called the “Battle of Versailles.”
America has had plenty of visionary designers:
Charles James, Claire McCardell, Halston, Geoffrey Beene, Bonnie Cashin, Rudi Gernreich, Isabel Toledo, James Galanos, Adrian, Giorgio di sant Angelo, Pauline Trigere, Kos van den Akker, Mary McFadden, Zoran, Shamask, Yeoh Lee, etc.
Now I'm thinking about it, America hasn't really produced any true visionaries in high fashion sphere. The ones who were unconventional (Tord Ford, Rick Owens, Thom Browne) had to build up a name in Europe. In the US, there's a luxury audience, but no high fashion audience.
Designers like YSL, Cardin or Courrèges couldn't have been based in America. Nor could designers like Alaïa, Mugler or Gaultier. The US fashion scene never had a "Japanese/British/Belgian Invasion" or a mass of old dead luxury houses to revive either.
Their labels don't seem to have the best workers either. I remember Peter Copping in an interview expressing frustration at how "rough" the work Oscar de la Renta's "ateliers" produced was compared to Nina Ricci's despite similar price points.