Author Archives: Kevin Li

Paris Men’s Fashion Week 2016

Though many have grown to expect the darkness of the avant-garde style normally displayed during Paris Fashion Week, recent years have turned away from this, focusing on lighter themes and colors. This year has continued moving away from the edginess of tight blacks and whites, instead looking to colors and flowing silhouettes. These are two of my favorite shows from over the past week.

Dries Van Noten was the only member of the famed Antwerp Six to present a collection this week in Paris (Ann Demeulemeester’s eponymous label did have a show, but the label is currently headed by Sebastien Meunier). Unlike his colleagues, Van Noten’s energy has not shown any sign of slowing down since his graduation from the Antwerp Academy in 1980, and certainly shows none this year, as he presented a Men’s’ Fall/Winter 2016 collection full of eye-popping eccentricities and flair. Patterns and embroideries snaked and crept across coats, jackets, pants, and shirts, drawing attention with their variety of colors and shapes.

Interestingly, military patches were sewn on sleeves chests, but were turned and mirrored to create new patterns, giving a playful twist to what is normally a symbol of serious authority. Most notably, something closely resembling a bulletproof vest was adorned with a number of colorful patches, giving it the appearance of a majestic knight’s armor. Slim and loose trousers alike found their way on to the runway, sporting a variety of silky, starched, gleaming, smooth textures. While the show seemed like a mixing pot of colors, details, intricacies, and ideas, it seemed to boil down to a wearable fantasy. The beautiful uniqueness and details Van Noten adds fit with the standard format of pea coats, bomber jackets, trench coats, and button-down shirts to create something amazing and new.

Swedish brand Acne Studios has always ridden the fine line between contemporary wear and high end fashion, with their minimalistic and highly wearable basic pieces next to their more innovative and runway-esque designs. This season continues with a blending of the two styles, showcasing simple coats, suede button-downs, wool cardigans, and pants decorated with oversized buttons, extra buttons, and buttons as seams. On top of what seems to be a button motif, there were stitched on strips of fabric and a few intentionally undone extra long cuffs on the wrists of shirts.

Boho chic inspirations were obvious here with the loose and relaxed vibes of each silhouette. Large sections of uninterrupted fabric showed off the rich textures on each garment: the visible fuzziness of a navy oversized wool coat, the softness of a casually unbuttoned suede vest, the shining smoothness of bright green pair of leather pants. Long hair, often covering eyes, and bandannas adorned heads and necks, following the hint of 80’s resurgence set by the high-waisted and loose pants many looks featured. One thing that may surprise those familiar with Acne Studios is the lack of a heavy androgyny focus the brand displayed in other recent collections. Regardless, the show stayed true to the core characteristics of the brand, with its minimalistic but unique focus.

Posted in fashion industry buffs, menswear | Tagged , | Comments Off on Paris Men’s Fashion Week 2016

Fear of God at Pacsun

For menswear.

A few weeks ago I took a look at the latest collection from cult brand Fear of God (“God’s brand”, according to founder Jerry Lorenzo), known simply as Fourth Collection, as the brand does not operate on the same two collection Spring/Summer and Fall/Winter schedule as the rest of the fashion world. Even more recently, Fear of God announced an upcoming collaboration with California lifestyle clothing retailer PacSun where they would release their lower-priced diffusion line, known simply as “FOG”. Lorenzo had mentioned in the past the desire to create a cheaper alternative for the high-end Fear of God that he intended to be more accessible to his teenage audience. Today, images of the pieces the collection would feature were released in a lookbook format, along with a rough number from Lorenzo about pricing. Around $40-100 for shirts and hoodies and $300 for outerwear is what we can expect from from the line, relatively affordable compared to $190-495 and $1.5k+.

The line’s lookbook mostly featured the staples Fear of God has come to be known for: basic side-split hoodies, oversized tees, lounge pants with long dangling drawstrings, bomber jackets with bunched sleeves, red checkered flannels and other wardrobe essentials. Upon glance, the collection seems nearly indistinguishable from mainline Fear of God simply from pictures, but the lower-end status is betrayed by the choice of footwear shown with the pieces. Some outfits were paired with black combat boots, indiscriminate of cost, but others found themselves with a skatewear classic: Vans Old Skools.

The quintessential skater shoe seems to be far from the vibe that Fear of God as a brand seems to give off, but at the same time feels coherent with the message Jerry Lorenzo delivered in the video he released with the Fourth Collection lookbook. The message was one of appreciation for the simplicity in life, told through models who performed simple actions and movements with the words “How great is our God” ringing in the background. The Old Skool is a simple shoe, but versatile, iconic, and appreciated by all. This seems to be Lorenzo’s aim and reason for the diffusion line’s accessible pricing; widespread appreciation. These prices open up the ability to appreciate Fear of God in everyday life to an entirely new demographic of young people. Whether or not the line will live up to this is another story, one that depends on the materials and craftsmanship. This is one of Fear of God’s best touted features and we will not know how its little brother lives up to this legacy until the collection drops December 5th.

Posted in menswear | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Fear of God at Pacsun

The Lowdown on Fast Fashion

For menswear.

As high-end fashion’s popularity with rappers, pop stars, and actors has grown exponentially in recent years, so has its popularity with the youth who idolize these figures. Especially among the fan bases of rappers involving themselves deeply in the fashion industry, more niche designers, aside from your typical Louis Vuitton, Gucci, and Prada, have gained significant recognition. Unsurprisingly, many fans moved past simply idolizing the rappers wearing these designers and became fans of the designers themselves. Though several of these designers already had their own cult following, their appeal has grown to be more mainstream as rabid Kanye fans excitedly discussing Colombian designer Haider Ackermann’s latest collection, or millions of A$AP Rocky loving suburban teenagers gleefully replying “Rick Owens, Raf Simons” when asked what they normally dress themselves in.

However, much of this fanbase is within the age range of 15 - 21 and lacks the income for $800 Haider Ackermann sweaters or $1300 Rick Owens Geobasket sneakers. This is where the fast, cheap, and easily accessible solution of fast fashion comes in. Fast fashion aims to bring popular designer aesthetics to the masses for affordable prices ASAP. This allows these income-limited youth to dress somewhat like their favorite rapper or actor without saving for months. It gives options to those who want to dress differently from those around them, but lack the income for actual designer pieces. However, fast fashion takes heavy, heavy “inspiration” from trending designers and will often copy their signature designs so blatantly that fans often refer to the fast fashion pieces by the designer name.

Take the H&M twill ankle-zip pants for example, which are almost exclusively referred to as H&M FoG pants on online fashion forums. FoG stands for Fear of God, a high-end brand focused on high quality basic clothing with small unique details. Fear of God’s iconic ankle-zipped drawstring trousers feature an appearance very similar to the H&M version (which launched soon after FoG was endorsed by Kanye West), only with a skinnier leg and a softer appearance due to cotton as the material of choice instead of twill. Of course, it doesn’t need to be mentioned that the quality in the FoG trousers was astronomically higher. Another strong example would be the overdyed crewneck sweatshirt that H&M produced shortly after Kanye was spotted wearing a similar looking piece. Only, Kanye was wearing the $905 Haider Ackermann version of the sweatshirt, featuring Ackermann’s signature ribbing and oversized fit. Both these traits appeared on the H&M version. In fact, its appearance was so similar to the Ackermann version that many fashion forum browsers mistook it for the actual Ackermann sweatshirt when it first emerged. Of course, the quality difference was still obvious and H&M was not able to replicate the full uniqueness of the Haider Ackermann fit due to cost constraints on material and cut, but overall it was very, very similar to say the least.

Many were of course very excited about being able to own pieces so similar to designer for a fraction of the price, but many fashion purists looked at this heightened accessibility as a tasteless devaluation of valuable creative output. While it is easy to write this off as obvious pretension, the level of blatant copying must be taken into consideration when determining whether this is positive or negative for the fashion industry as a whole. While it does bring a unique and previously inaccessible offering of garments to an entirely new demographic, it damages the uniqueness of the actual designer piece by oversaturating the market with what are essentially cheap knockoffs. Some go so far to argue that it is a personal offense to the designer to “steal” their ideas in such a way purely for profit.

Regardless of whether it is or is not fair to designers, fast fashion has been very successful thus far and is only becoming more and more successful as interest in designer fashion grows among the youth. It is here to stay and it is up to each individual to decide for themselves whether to support or not support fast fashion and all it represents.

Posted in menswear | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on The Lowdown on Fast Fashion

Fear of God - The Fourth Collection

For menswear.

A few days ago, young cult brand Fear of God delivered their Fourth Collection lookbook. Unlike the rest of the fashion world, Fear of God does not follow the typical two season spring/summer and autumn/winter collection release schedule that we have grown used to. Instead, each year FoG drops a single collection between October and November and names it numerically, with their first collection in 2012 being called First Collection, their second in 2013 called Second Collection, and so on. In the film released alongside the Fourth Collection lookbook, creator Jerry Lorenzo says that “This is not a streetwear brand, this is not a contemporary menswear brand, this is not a designer brand… This is God’s brand”. Because of the creative direction of the brand refusing to identify with a single aesthetic, it is hard to describe what sort of brand FoG is. In the part, the brand has been known for high quality essential pieces with unique additions, and has generally stuck to that in this season.

Fear of God’s Fourth Collection has been the most expansive yet, as well as the most different from its others. The brand brought in their first pant offering last year with a pair of harem pants. This year they followed it up with their first pair of jeans, as well as their first denim jacket, first denim topcoat, first button-down collar shirt, and perhaps biggest of all: first pair of shoes. The first ever Fear of God footwear manifests itself as a pair of bulky, black, high top sneakers, reminiscent of Rick Owens’ signature Geobasket silhouette. The lookbook itself is shot in a very loose and almost careless way. The models stood in odd positions, often with a lean or hunch. Every single one bore an emotionless expression, typical of models, but with almost the slightest hint of a smile if you looked hard enough. To understand this, I watched (and I recommend anyone interested watch it as well) the short film on Fourth Collection (currently watchable here: http://fearofgod.com/).

What it showed was first a short monologue on how Jerry Lorenzo thinks of the brand and the vision he created it around, and then for the rest of the video (hard to estimate because there is no timer showing length of the video), about ⅔ of it, is footage of the models with the song “How Great is Our God” by Bishop Paul Morton sung by a church choir in the background. What it really is though is a thesis for the Fourth Collection. The footage itself is a number of simple movements from the models: turning their heads, jumping, moving their arms, spinning a chair, all while holding the same indifferent expression holding the hint of a smile. Several shots simply consisted of the wind blowing in their hair as the camera panned closer. Some involved the models standing still and making small movements. What these all reflected on is the simple beauty and greatness of humanity, showing appreciation for small and ordinary movements that people normally fail to notice. It puts the attention on things as simple as spinning a chair or turning your head and made me feel the need to slow down and really pay attention to my smallest movements. It let me recognize seemingly pointless things I do, such as sliding my hand across a desk or looking up at the ceiling, in an inexplicable sort of way. The clothes featured support this with their simplicity.

This wasn’t the skinny rockstar-esque look of Saint Laurent, nor the dark, avant-garde look of Rick Owens. It was simple clothing, not minimalistic. The tops were oversized and featured well known and everyday materials; puffy nylon bomber jackets, rough-edged cotton flannel shirts, heavy wool overcoats. The jeans were slim-fitting, but not quite what most would call skinny, and featured ripped knees and tears along the thigh. The styling was intentionally careless, buttons were left undone, shirts and jackets were left open and billowing, sleeves were hastily rolled. Despite all this “unaesthetic” styling, I found the pieces and silhouettes very appealing after taking in and understanding the film. Jerry Lorenzo has not only succeeded in helping me to appreciate his clothing, but my own self and others around me in the most ordinary settings.

Posted in menswear | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Fear of God - The Fourth Collection

The Rockstars of the Hedi Slimane Band

For menswear.

French designer Hedi Slimane has been compared to Yves Saint Laurent himself for his remarkable ability to move separately from seasonal trends with his collections, instead finding and portraying his own voice and style each year. Perhaps this was the main reason behind the decision to make Slimane the leader of the YSL label’s revival in 2012. Since the label’s re-branding to Saint LaurentP Paris, Slimane has been behind every single show coming out of the collection. Over the past two or so years, SLP’s popularity with both celebrities such as Justin Bieber, Kanye West, and A$AP Rocky, as well as the internet fashion forum crowd has skyrocketed, mainly in the realm of menswear. Though wildly expensive, ordinary people with rent, bills, student loans, and other obligations still try to save up for the $2300 varsity jacket or the $1200 harness boots or the $1000 sweaters, or the most coveted and iconic of all; the $5500 double rider leather jacket. The effects of this are seen in the doubling of the French house’s profits since the hiring of Slimane and the 27% profit increase in 2014. Despite financial success, many critics still feel that Slimane’s time at Saint Laurent is similar to what he had done during his famous years at Dior Homme (2000 - 2007), which critics claim was the throwing out the traditions of the house to create his own aesthetic. Many further argue that Slimane’s collections at SLP are identical to his DH days, claiming he is unable to deviate from the same iteration of the same aesthetic.

I’m here to argue against this. Boom.

Hedi Slimane has always stated that he wishes to redefine masculinity with his clothes, explaining that with his clothes he creates heroes who do not embody traditional ideas of masculinity. At Dior Homme, Hedi Slimane was of course known for pushing forwards menswear with his cutting edge slim and rockstar look, but was a different flavor entirely than the rockstar look of Saint Laurent Paris. To illustrate this, I will compare the standout points and theme of Dior Homme AW07 “Navigate”, Slimane’s last Dior Homme show, to those of Saint Laurent Paris AW15, his most recent Saint Laurent menswear show.

W07 “Navigate” is one of my personal favorite Hedi Slimane collections, because it seems difficult to perfectly describe it with a single word other than “cool”. Set to the soundtrack of a song written specifically for Slimane and his show, “Navigate, Navigate” by British band These New Puritans, the show kicked off with the first skinny young rockstar of the evening wearing a draping black marble blazer with a silk shirt underneath that conceals the hands with its lengthy sleeves. On the bottom half were low-waisted, flowing dropcrotch pants above a pair of slick black combat boots. This carelessly flashy attire would set the mood for the rest of the show. Following him were more extended sleeves on coats, shirts, blazers, and sweaters, more buffed combat boots, more printed blazers, more dropcrotch pants, and a noticeable lack of biker jackets someone familiar with Slimane’s Saint Laurent work would be surprised by. There was a single leather jacket throughout the entire show, but it was not in the double rider style Saint Laurent fans will recognize. The traditionally feminine appearance of hand covering sleeves had been a constant sight throughout Slimane’s seven years at Dior Homme, but have yet to appear once in Saint Laurent’s shows. Furthermore, nothing even close to dropcrotch pants has ever been displayed during a Saint Laurent showing under Slimane. The styling of the show was almost intentionally careless. Belts and straps hung off and flapped with movement, pants slouched to one side, hair fell casually in models’ eyes. This is wildly different from the rigid tightness of Saint Laurent’s collections. A traditional Dior grey trenchcoat did appear, but in a slim form that fit comfortably in with the rest of the looks. The standout pieces of the show were a leather down-filled jacket and a glittering gold blazer modeled so casually it was a wonder whether the model was actually a rockstar who had decided to crash the runway. The show was silky, glittering, flashy, all while giving the vibe of not caring; the perfect embodiment of the word “cool”. This show and all of Hedi’s time at Dior Homme was a drastic, but much needed deviation from the more traditional menswear of Dior Homme’s past.

Now looking at Saint Laurent AW15, we get quite a different view. After a minute and a half of suspenseful droning instrumental, the show started with the ominous and minimalistic psych-rock song, “Me Suive” by French band La Femme. As mentioned before, the show was unlike the Dior Homme as it was rigid, tight, and more traditional in the style of most SLP shows. However, the collection still carried the rockstar attitude, just in a different way. Where “Navigate” said “I don’t care, I’m cool and I know it”, the Saint Laurent display cared in the way that says “I know I’m cool and you know I know you know it”. Tight, high-waisted black denim, a staple of the Hedi SLP brand, was the choice for pants on many of the models. Where they did not wear denim, they had equally tight leather pants. Cropped jackets and blazers with pristine, sharp folds seemed to stretch the legs and gave the signature Hedi Slimane proportions. Elegant coats, many adorned with animal patterns were left open and billowing to contrast with the heroin-chic skinniness on the rest of the silhouette. The trademark double rider biker jacket made several appearances as expected. There were none of the casually flung collars and flaps that appeared in “Navigate”; everything was precisely where it needed to be. On the foot of the models were high-heeled french boots in gleaming black leather, which stayed true to Slimane’s vision for redefining and challenging traditional masculinity, and when paired with Slimane’s very skinny jeans and cropped jackets gave a sense of androgyny to many of the silhouettes. It served as a reverse of Yves Saint Laurent’s famous “Le Smoking” pantsuit for women, giving the traits of femininity to men instead of the other way around. The confidence with which these challenging and forward-thinking looks were delivered made these clothes look at the very least cool, I imagine, to even the most disgruntled Slimane critic. The models moved with purpose, giving the cameras a disdainful half-second look, before turning and leaving the audience wanting more. The show was dark, confident, and sneering; a different kind of rockstar.

While similarities existed in the use of androgynous clothing and dark clothing contrasted with patterns, the tailoring, fit, style, and overall theme of the collections were unique. Though they were both cool and confident, this was presented in entirely different ways for each brand. Hedi Slimane undoubtedly has a unique style that he is able to express effectively and consistently, but he did not simply make the same clothes under a different name when going from Dior Homme to Saint Laurent Paris. Slimane implemented his own ideas and style in seperate ways that he felt were fitting for each brand considering their past.

 

Posted in menswear | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on The Rockstars of the Hedi Slimane Band

Thoughts on the Yeezy Season 1 Collection

For menswear.

Kanye West displayed his first ever collection for his upcoming clothing line with Adidas this past winter. Fittingly named “Yeezy Season 1”, it will be Kanye’s first true venture into fashion, since formerly only collaborating on athletic sneakers with both Nike and Adidas. Many are also aware of Ye’s heavy interest in high end fashion, as he is often seen wearing niche designers such as Haider Ackermann, Saint Laurent Paris, Vetements, and many others. In fact, it flew under the radar with most of his fans that in 2012 he put out two runway shows during Paris Fashion Week.

His first Spring/Summer 2012 collection was seen as uncoordinated and heavy-handed, and his second, Autumn/Winter 2012, although it was more cohesive and showed progress, still failed to impress. In nearly every interview within the last two years, Kanye has heavily emphasized that fashion would be the next area he would break down the walls to, intending to fully enter the industry and to leave his mark. Naturally, fans were excited to see what would finally receiving from the Lord Yeezus after his first two blunders. What was shown was a reflection of Kanye’s own style; distressed oversize sweaters, fur-lined parkas, baggy sweatpants, and lots of camo of course paired with plenty of Yeezy’s signature boost footwear. Everyone agreed that it was about what was expected, it wasn’t revolutionary or incredibly unique, but it was things that Kanye West himself would wear.

As the release of the collection draws nearer, people have been becoming interested in prices and what they could realistically buy from the collection. Just a few days ago, prices were published in a Japanese magazine and converted to USD. They were much higher than most people expected. Destroyed sweater: $2,200, shearling coat: $4,000, quilted camo jacket: $1,900, camo t-shirt: $210, just to name a few examples. The prices weren’t unprecedented when compared to houses such as Dior Homme or Saint Laurent, but that was just the issue to many; Kanye West is no Christian Dior, no Yves Saint Laurent. He is no Kriss Van Asche, no Hedi Slimane. He does not have a legacy and history the same way these houses and their creative directors do. He has not proven himself yet in the world of fashion and this collection was not anything that had not been done before. It seems almost like an insult to those who have worked hard to establish themselves in the industry, saying “It doesn’t matter that I’ve never been considered a successful designer, it doesn’t matter that I’ve only sold sneaker collaborations before, I can charge prices that pretend that I am an established name in fashion and because everyone knows I’m Kanye West, they’ll buy it anyways”. I found myself, a huge Kanye West fan, asking; what can I get from this that I can’t get anywhere else for much cheaper? I do not doubt that other people will be asking the same, especially Kanye’s main audience of younger people with limited income, many of which having no interest in high end fashion. It feels like Kanye’s goal was to appeal to an entirely different demographic, similar to Virgil Abloh and his price jumps from Pyrex to Off-White. Though Kanye’s name does hold a lot more weight than Virgil’s, it is hard to imagine that those with the income to spend thousands on an untested and seen-by-many-as-novelty brand will be interested in clothes by a rapper with very limited experience as a designer.

Of course, he does have his reasons for setting prices the way he did. Since Kanye wants to be taken seriously as a high end fashion designer, he needed high end prices to create the exclusivity associated with high end fashion. Additionally, he wished to use high quality materials and to cover the costs of these he did need higher prices. Despite these reasons, he could have maintained relatively high end prices while still staying within a realistic range of most working class people’s budgets, similar to the brand Acne Studios. Acne Studios puts out runway shows, is recognized for its creativity, and is accepted as part of high fashion, yet the label’s outerwear retails for as little as $600, its sweaters as low as $200, and t-shirts around $100. Not only were these the prices when the brand started, they remain this way after Acne Studios has proved themselves season after season. If Kanye had priced similarly, few would be able to complain about prices, while the collection still maintained a higher end image.

In the end, it is understandable, knowing Kanye’s personality, why he set prices in way that seems so unreasonable to us, though to say it is ambitious would be an understatement, but no one will be 100% sure of how fair or unfair the prices are until the collection releases this fall.

Posted in menswear | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Thoughts on the Yeezy Season 1 Collection