
There's another queen, too - Riccardo Tisci! LOLOL
The more you dig, the more you realize that most of his designs are pretty cheap knocks of Helmut Lang.
ink:
There's another queen, too - Riccardo Tisci! LOLOL
The more you dig, the more you realize that most of his designs are pretty cheap knocks of Helmut Lang.



Totally! His menswear is quite obvious but every season, you have an Helmut vibe ( and actual designs) in his womenswear.
+ Don't forget Gaultier! Riccardo also copies Gaultier.
Here's my list of the most copied designers in the past 15 years:
-Nicolas Ghesquiere
-Helmut Lang
-Gianni Versace
-Martin Margiela
-Tom Ford
-Azzedine Alaia
-JP Gaultier
-Miuccia Prada
-CDG
-Yohji Yamamoto
Every season, we literally see obvious copies of those designers. The funniest part is that NG who is one of the most copied designer has also borrowed a lot from the people in that list. But i think it's mostly because those designers were influencial in building his own aesthetic.
The funniest part is that NG who is one of the most copied designer has also borrowed a lot from the people in that list. But i think it's mostly because those designers were influencial in building his own aesthetic.
^It's remarkable that Ghesquière's outright theft of distinctive designs doesn't get more flack. Things like this and that leather jacket with the bird inset....
Me personally, i don't have anything against copying in a way. Everybody copies.
Even the great masters copied.
I don't find anything wrong with those two copies (and that has nothing to do with the fact that it was copied by NG). I think that copy is a part of a creative process.
I have more problems with "lazy" copies. When Phoebe Philo copied Balenciaga's fw2003 boots for her FW2013 collection, i found it lazy because she is copying something recent in times and fresh in our minds.
The same for Zuhair Murad who is a master in that. I had a hard time with Olivier Rousteing and his obvious love for early 90's Chanel.
The same for Altuzarra and the NYC Guard . Their references are too obvious.
For me, a good copy is when it transcend the original.
I like when the hommages are assumed or when the inspirations are kinda unexpected. Miuccia Prada copying a Courreges piece and making it her own or Tom Ford copying an original Balenciaga piece are the kind of things that i find fascinating.
I feel like we are sometimes too harsh about outfits that look alikes because we assumed that those "new" ideas are always new when in fact the exercice is to make it "fresh".
The problem with NG is that he didn´t admit he copied from Kaisik Wong when he launched that 2002 collection. He admitted it when he was caught red-handed. He tried to pass Wong´s designs as his own.
Before that Kaisik affair, designers didn't have to justify themselves on their inspirations or vintage clothes they copied.
NG was the hottest new designer AND, it was the beginning of the incursion of the internet in the fashion industry.
Everything is a matter of context as Dior_Couture said.
Today, copy is not so much of an issue (look at Zuhair Murad career). The Balmain/McQueen for Givenchy happened because it didn't felt like it was done with conviction.
Peter Dundas's first Cavalli collection was almost 70% copied from Azzedine Alaia 80's work and the only person who had an issue with that was Azzedine himself who talked about it in a french magazine.
NG copied the top but that top was also a starting point for a dress, a vest and it did influence several pieces in the collection.
For his first Vuitton collection, he copied a look styled in a magazine but that look make sense in the context of the entire collection.
Maybe i'm more lax about it in certain cases.