Originally posted by Fashion Wire Daily@ October 06, 2003 - Paris
Undercover Twins: Takahashi's Mirrored Moment
By Karl Treacy
Last October, Undercover designer Jun Takahashi wowed Paris with a hard-edged but meticulous and highly labor-intensive collection. Last season he swayed a bit with a dressing-up-dolly theme, but Monday evening his front row was still filled with fashion's heavy hitters as Takahashi sent out a clever, if slightly unsettling collection, based on twins.
Twins? Well, one good and one bad -- or at least one whose path through life has been a little more marked by hardships. With asymmetric hairstyles, leaden expressions and a monotonous gait, the couples bore a remarkable resemblance to that evil dead girl in the Japanese chiller "Ringu".
The presentation may have been vaguely disturbing but the clothes it delivered -- the one nice neat outfit, and the same outfit morphed and distressed beside it -- showed clothes that were simple and wearable when they were as intended, and dark and exciting when they were traumatized.
"Que Sera Sera," Doris Day belted out from the speakers as one girl wore a buttoned-up white shirt with simple black pants and braces, her twin's shirt buckled and sagged, the braces rippled, and pants peaked high. Satin appliqués on one top were sweet, but on its sister they slid and puddled off the fabric in streaks. You get the picture.
Takahashi is adept at skillful cutting and construction as was evidenced in a smocked top, or another in ruffled tiers of satin panels whose twin flowed long and languidly over a simple pair of jeans.
This wasn't all introspective, arty stuff though, as an ode to good taste featuring belted macs and rip-off Hermes Kelly's slung around the body provided a moment of comical lightness. And as models with huge blonde Afro wigs dashed out at the end in white t-shirts bearing peace-and-love messages, it was clear that Takahashi has a unique fashion voice worth paying attention to.
No pictures yet, but will post them if I find them.

Thank you.
