tourbillions
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glorifiied stylistAlmost anyone can be more interesting than Hedi. He’s not designer
Share with us... Your Best & Worst Collections of Haute Couture F/W 2025.26
glorifiied stylistAlmost anyone can be more interesting than Hedi. He’s not designer
glorifiied stylist
Hedi is a very respected designer afaik, he got both the zeitgeist hype and compliments from other BIG designers like Yves, Karl, Armani. He might not be everyone's cup of tea but his contributions to fashion is not to be underestimated.glorifiied stylist
I would also argue that, given the fully fledged post-modern era we are living in, originality is a word that has somewhat lost its meaning, maybe we have to wait for another couple of decades for something truly new to come up...It's a valid point of view to seek for a different aspect in art and design but it doesn’t make one a lesser designer than the other.
A genius menswear designer, a glorified stylist in womenswear, a decent photographer but above all, he is a fantastic Art/Creative Director.glorifiied stylist
A genius menswear designer, a glorified stylist in womenswear, a decent photographer but above all, he is a fantastic Art/Creative Director.
I would also argue that, given the fully fledged post-modern era we are living in, originality is a word that has somewhat lost its meaning, maybe we have to wait for another couple of decades for something truly new to come up...
I am really surprised by the reactions Rider's debut has elicited, like people were expecting to be in the wake of a revolution. To me, he made the sensible thing to do: create a collection that put together the different identities Celine has embodied over the last twenty years, while being faithful to his own history as a designer: he had a central role in creating that specific late Phoebe-era silhouette and he reclaimed it, while also scattering hints of Hedi's time as a CD and, at the same time, staying true to Celine's bourgeois core aesthetic.
Many seem also oblivious to the fact that this was in fact a pre-collection, so wearability has to be crucial - interesting that he decided to start with a pre-collection, same as Phoebe did.
Can we give the guy at least the time of another two, three collections before we crucify him?
I think these conversations (here and elsewhere) tend to take on a "Is Hedi The Best™ or does he suck?" form because it's less personally exposing than discussing individual preferences. "Hedi is boring" tells us something about Hedi, grammatically. "I'm not interested in Hedi" tells us something about the speaker's personality.We are comparing different genres and taste
cant agree moreA genius menswear designer, a glorified stylist in womenswear, a decent photographer but above all, he is a fantastic Art/Creative Director.
I wonder what Hedi learned from his five year absence from the fashion world before returning as a designer (stylist) at Saint Laurent and later at Celine. I'm not sure if anyone has ever interviewed him specifically about this period, as he tends to focus on the present. At Saint Laurent, he spoke about building a strong world and bringing it down to Rive Gauche. At Celine, he declared that “privacy is the only luxury now.”For me, Hedi Slimane behaved like a designer at Dior Homme...but at YSL and Celine he behaved like a glorified stylist.
I wonder what Hedi learned from his five year absence from the fashion world before returning as a designer (stylist) at Saint Laurent and later at Celine. I'm not sure if anyone has ever interviewed him specifically about this period, as he tends to focus on the present. At Saint Laurent, he spoke about building a strong world and bringing it down to Rive Gauche. At Celine, he declared that “privacy is the only luxury now.”
So I'm not quite sure what led to such a transformation in him, especially compared to his time at Dior Homme.
Which materialized in the shift between SS2004 and FW2004.I think he said it quite clearly during his lengthy interview he gave to a french newspaper, I forgot which one it was.
He basically acknowledged that halfway through his Dior tenure, he saw a necessity to recalibrate his approach to design - A departure from a more conceptual, novelty-oriented approach in favor of something grounded in realism and telling a narrative derived from the scenes he had documented in his photography.
Don't tell the truth :-) people will find ways to still not believe or understand he said and explained it already years ago in his own words.I think he said it quite clearly during his lengthy interview he gave to a french newspaper, I forgot which one it was.
He basically acknowledged that halfway through his Dior tenure, he saw a necessity to recalibrate his approach to design - A departure from a more conceptual, novelty-oriented approach in favor of something grounded in realism and telling a narrative derived from the scenes he had documented in his photography.
But to play devil’s advocate, I will say to you that for the majority of Hedi’s career, we lived through the promise of what his womenswear would have been.Don't tell the truth :-) people will find ways to still not believe or understand he said and explained it already years ago in his own words.
In a way Phoebe whent opposite from reality vintage fantasy at Chloe to design at Celine...... yet we have peace with that , but not for Hedi.
honestly i like his women's wear at ysl and celine you can get a hot sharp suit to a sexy dess to a very old school formal dress , i think mostly what people cant relate with hedi is the rock and roll /indie /punk /wave/glam rock etc ...side of his clothes because music/that style for most people have moved on to other things.But to play devil’s advocate, I will say to you that for the majority of Hedi’s career, we lived through the promise of what his womenswear would have been.
Maybe we were naive!
But turns out that we never experienced the possibility of a greatness in womenswear in the first place to be prepare to a transition from a design standpoint.
I think most of Hedi fans have been fans since the late 90’s or at least the early 00’s.
From a womenswear aspect it was a frozen shower, really.
Overtime we got used to it but his body work in womenswear has always been a challenge to me…really.
Yes it’s supported by a strong vision and extreme coherence but yeah, your point of reference was Solitaire…For us, it was that Saint Laurent collection.
And to add insult to injury, he teased us with fabulous photos of Anja Rubik in B&W.
And I think the discourse around Hedi always comes from that. Most of his fans loves him
for his menswear. Some women and men have a different appreciation of his womenswear.