Is fashion too safe?
  
		
		
	
	 By Vanessa Friedman
 
   
        ‘Fashion is predicated on giving people what they did not know they wanted’ 
 Is fashion  too safe? Not fashion that you see in stores (though that is part of  it), but Fashion the industry. Fashion writ large.
 Sitting at the side of the catwalks as the New York shows get under  way, kicking off the autumn/winter womenswear collections that will run  until March 5, it’s the whisper I hear in the background; just audible  under the stomp of the models’ perennial motorcycle boots. It’s what you  might call a thought-trend.
   
Word  is that retailers will no longer take gambles on new designers, or on  old designers with new looks, or on any look that doesn’t look like the  last look that sold well, because they make their buy according to the  buy that worked the season before – because it is (say it with me)  safer.
 Black pea coats flew off the shelves this autumn? Whatever you do, do  not order floral-patterned car coats – even if it’s spring. More  minimal pea coats (albeit maybe not in wool); that’s what everyone  should buy! X designer’s narrow trousers were popular, but not so his  flouro knits? Stick to the trousers, even if the new skinny knits look  kind of tempting.
 Designers don’t push their ideas, because a complicated idea is  actually too complicated to explain: the listener stops paying attention  somewhere in the middle of “then I went from thinking of Napoleon to  The Beatles and Sergeant Pepper, which made me think of 
Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell, and then I started thinking about ice hockey players ... that’s how I got to lamé silk boxers”.
 Er, OK. Easier just to seize on the most accessible form of  inspiration: a film or a song, and express that in various permutations  on the catwalk and in those endless “what inspired me” pieces in  magazines: “I was thinking of 
The Great Gatsby.”
 Open any glossy magazine and there, staring from advertisements and  editorial alike are Christy Turlington, Kate Moss, Stephanie Seymour –  old models and proven sales vehicles. The same goes for all those  celebrities whose contracts get bigger and bigger even as the viewing  public declares itself to be over the stars-sells-stuff idea. No matter:  go with the known.
 There is no room for risk or new ideas or new faces, because new is  risky and we’re in a no-risk period. As with the banking system, so, too  the fashion system.
 There are of course outliers, designers for whom writing their own  rules is the rule – Rei Kawakubo, Jun Takahashi, Hedi Slimane (it is  possible the risk, both financial and critical, that Kering took when  they installed the latter at Saint Laurent and gave him 
carte blanche  to up-end all aesthetics and communication is the riskiest thing to  have happened in fashion in years). But generally: safety first. Ask  why, and everyone passes the blame.
 
. . . 
 It’s the darn retailers’ fault, goes one version, because they demand  new stuff all the time. Which means designers have to do 10 collections  a year, which means they don’t have time to work out new ideas, which  means they might get stuck with bad ideas, so best avoid the danger  entirely, and redo the old good idea. Or it’s the money guys’ fault  because they need to show revenue growth, and that means they dare not  try something unknown. What if it doesn’t work? Better to fill shelves  with what already sells, because, well, it already sells!
 Or it’s the mass marketers’ fault, because they are schooled to put  all their faith in market research, and market research loves what it  has already seen, and there is no market research on that new girl in  the corner. After all, how do you assess the potential of a weird,  left-of-field viral video, which would only work because no one has done  it before, if no one has done it before?
 
But here’s the thing: all this safeness, and risk-avoidance, all the  stuff we think we want when it comes to the City and Wall Street, is  antithetical to the way fashion should work. Fashion – at least the  fashion of the show system; the fashion that drives changes in clothing,  or at least expresses them – is predicated on giving people what they  did not know they wanted. In fashion, there is no such thing as too big  to fail. You have to be willing to fail in order to really succeed.
 It is what makes you want to buy something: the shock of seeing a  dress or suit or sweater that exactly describes how you’ve been feeling,  in a way you didn’t even articulate to yourself until you saw it.  That’s why Dior’s New Look, and Armani’s suits, and Chanel’s little  tweed jackets, and Thom Browne’s truncated men’s silhouette caused such a  ruckus, and ended up in museums everywhere: they defined a moment in  social and political identity.
 And that requires risk, because until they gave it form, no one  really knew what form that amorphous feeling they were feeling should  take. 
To give up on that possibility – to avoid it in favour of the  familiar – is to circumvent fashion’s reason for being (it is to turn it  into clothes). And that leads, soon enough, to obsolescence. Yet here  we are.
 The fact is, for fashion, that playing it safe may be the greatest  risk of all. Here’s hoping this season will be different. I dare you.
ft.com
*i'm pretty sure there's another thread where i talked about exactly this- about originality and new ideas, etc...
and buyers playing it safe and afraid to take risks, etc...
but i don't know which one it is....
if a mod knows better- please feel free to move or merge...
thx
it's all related anyhow...
i think we have a few threads that could be merged on this basic topic of unoriginality and whether the wheel moves to fast, and such...
it's all part of the same discussion and cannot really be had in separate threads without some overlap