beetlejuice said:(to other photos I don't have close-ups)
PS. People please don't ask me to send photos in original size - the whole collection is almost 400MB and there is NO WAY I'm gonna send it by email!![]()

beetlejuice said:(to other photos I don't have close-ups)
PS. People please don't ask me to send photos in original size - the whole collection is almost 400MB and there is NO WAY I'm gonna send it by email!![]()

Mutterlein said:Those particular looks you posted are quite nice. This isn't a bad collection and is far superior than last season, but looking at Dior Homme in it's entirety this collection falls a bit short. While there are many impeccable pieces, there is nothing inherently special about them that Raf Simons hasn't already done several seasons ago. The long and narrow shouldered coats, the wide pants, the refreshing boyish yet mature tailoring...i've seen it all before. Many of the elements echo earlier collections such as Solitaire and Reflection, and they were done better then. Hedi didn't invent the cummerbund, nor was he the first to use cropped jackets (Simons beat him to this again). His uber-cropped jackets and boleros still smack of the gimmicky aftertaste they had last season. This was a good collection but I wouldn't call it strong. The pieces that did entail some tailoring ingenuity were cool, but do they even look that nice? I prefer what he did in A/W 04 and S/S 05 over this, and certainly collections like Solitare and Reflection still maintain their relevance. He needs to hire better assistants to design his collections.
pillarist said:Fadetoblack, I seem to agree with what you saying. Face it, Hedi Slimane has become a celebrity designer if there ever was one. You've got to hand it to LVMH, their branding strategy was perfect! Through Dior Homme, they've managed to tap into the once untouched market niche of rich indie kids who wish to mimic their rock-idols; hell, with Dior, they sold them a whole branded lifestyle no less just clothing.
Now you've got hipster-cum-rocker wannabes lined up around the corner just to get a piece of the Dior Homme action... that is, in order to dress like their favorite indie rock bands (and not only rockers mind you, you've got members of the Black Eyed Peas to Justin Timberlake dressed in Slimane's garments, quite an eclectic mix I'd say). I mean, just a couple months ago, you hear this joke of a VJ on Much Music endorsing Dior Homme on national television in his interview with Franz Ferdinand; you see kids everywhere who have never even heard of collections like "solitaire" or "reflection" totally buying into what menswear magazines dub "the hottest menswear label out there", the list goes on...
Hedi Slimane has certainly come a long way from the iconic collections that first established DH's identity (Solitaire, Red, Luster...). Which is why i absolutely welcome what looks to be a solid collection that seems to recall the better days of Dior IMO. Though not exactly up to par with the classics, I certainly prefer what I see in the pictures Winston and others posted as opposed to the lacking collections as of late.
Though then again, this may simply be the case of lowered expectations on our part. Since having seen the recent lackluster collections that have left many of Hedi's loyal fans shaking their heads, we'd now be impressed with anything that even remotely reminds us of the Dior Homme aesthetic we once knew and loved.
Zazie said:When I was 18, pale and skinny, I threw together the most extravagant looks at Wasteland, Canal Jean and The Garment District, and I looked good in all of it. I couldn't find any "designer" who could ever satisfy my lust for extraordinary clothes more than the mountains of fashion history.
To me, when someone is 18, one honestly doesn't need Dior, and people will still be beating down the door begging for dates.My saved pocket money went to travel in far flung places.
lordevan said:how much do you think they'll relax fit on the fw06 stuff for the retail version?
faust said:I'm diagonally across from you B)
fashionken said:To those of you who're discontented with the collection, I understand what you're saying. But I think we have to look beyond all the tuxedos and try to judge the collection on the essentials.
There's a lot of evening/formal wear and obviously, nobody's going to go to work in a tux, but one could easily wear some of the essentials and still look casual.
You're more than welcome to disagree, I'd like to get some feedback.
