Sniffing nail polish 24/7 while playing with Labubus also could have affected him...
...Midlife-crisis gays LOL
Marc is clearly not in the same creative place now as he was as when he headed Vuitton. Unless there’s a huge clientele wishing to dress in caricatural tribute designs to Comme and Rick with a Fendi label, then he’s not the one for Fendi. Designers’ tastes change with time, and as neat as Marc’s Comme/Rick tributes are visually, it’s all still such clownwear— albeit gorgeously-made clownwear. You know, designers— even our personal favs, will have their time, and that time passes, and if they possess a self-awareness and humility instead of over-inflated ego, they will gracefully bow out before they’re revealed as simply coasting off their name, depleted of any creative vision that serves a customer other than their own whims. I’ve mentioned this before that I’m so glad that my fashion loves— Helmut Lang and Tom Ford, have wisely retired rather than overstaying their welcome. Just looking at Marc’s currentday sensibility while hawking cheap totes favoured by less than savoury types, this might be the right time to bowing out gracefully… Or, learn from someone like Thom Browne. Besides being maybe the only designer whose runway branding is so different from his RTW retail offering, he’s one of those designers that I end up incorporating into my wardrobe, not because of the label— but because (aside from the obnoxious 3 stripes merch) the separates that I’m drawn to are just straightup the fashion equivalent of premium, wholesome comfort food. His Prince of Wales and seersucker suitings are the most gorgeous version of the classics
ever.
Anyway, about Maria Grazia: Her designs are the fashion equivalent of wholesome comfort food in a politely-decorated restaurant. And I mean that in the best way. Ever since I was fortunate to see in-hand one of her fencing leather corsets, I was won over by the quality/construction/investment of her RTW separates. Understandable that her bland/traditional/conservative sensibility is too mundane for many that need fashion in all caps. At her best, her aesthetic is to not stand out but one of quiet confidence and a reserved investment to never dress a woman like a pageant clown/drag queen/brand walking billboard, and I suppose many customers also appreciate that in a fashion era that’s become so comically, desperately juvenile, her taste is one that will endure the fickle fashion times.
My issue with her Dior has always been the boring casting, even more bland styling and bloated looks, and the insufferable showings that look more a chore to get through than a creative vision experience: The only impression I have of her Dior shows resemble gormless private school girls and/or their mums all looking the same; in flat footwear; accompanied by the most wretched performance art nonsense distracting the runway. It’s unfortunate that the RTW gets lost in the mundane shows, the polite wallpaper that’s the campaigns and those matronly logo’d totes and merch. Hope that with Fendi, the casting/styling/presentation is renewed and worlds apart from her Dior— but doubt it, since her version of fashion for feminists will always be gormless schoolgirls/their mums in flat footwear and sensible styling that all look like they hate fashion. She and whichever team that branded her Dior needs to be barred from the Fendi. (Perhaps consider Fabien/Karl/Steven for her Fendi debut’s branding…???)
February couldn’t come soon enough for the inevitable TFS meltdown that will be far far far more interesting than Maria Grazia’s Fendi LOOL