Happiness is to be found when in pursuit of it, in the soothed expectation, on the way, not only upon the arrival. Accepting detours, just going the way, which is anyhow not this obvious to anyone.
Thomas Bettinelli



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Chris Crocker

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"The way the system works now, you see the clothes, within an hour or so they're online, the world sees them. They don't get to a store for six months. The next week, young celebrity girls are wearing them on red carpets. They're in every magazine. The customer is bored with those clothes by the time they get to the store. They're overexposed, you're tired of them, they've lost their freshness".
Tom Ford, September 14, 2010








1.12.2012

Dolce & Gabbana

There was a brilliant Dries van Noten show some years back that celebrated Bryan Ferry's early-seventies leopard-clad glamness, but his subsequent career as rock's most elegant man has been a significantly under-exploited inspiration in contemporary menswear. Until today, that is, when Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana made him the launchpad for their collection. Bryan Ferry's record covers were all over the mood-board, his music was all over the show, and there he was on the seasonal icon tee-shirt donned by Sean O'Pry and Nicolas Ripoll. It seemed entirely appropriate, then, that the man himself was front-row center. But the show's theme, 'Sartoria Eccentrica ', actually had much less to do with the singer's own classic style than the designers' retailoring of anything classic, starting at Savile Row, for a much younger audience. The singer's taste for West End girls is well documented -the beauteous Amanda Sheppard was at his side today. The clothes on the runway, though, were better suited to East End boys. Low-rise, multi-pocketed pants were slung off skinny suspenders. One model sported Freddy Krueger stripes and a trilby casually tossed back on his head. There was a spiffy edge to a checked, fitted, double-breasted jacket, while cropped, double-vented jackets and those pegged, low-slung pants created a boxy, bubble-butted silhouette that added beef to the already buff models. Add that to the chunky, bovver-ready footwear and these boys were a bit of rough fighters, not lovers. But wasn't Bryan Ferry famously a slave to love ? Dolce and Gabbana threw the lovers a bone with a couple of pavé-sequined jackets in pink and black, then they closed the show with their own quintessential march past of black velvet jackets and distressed denims. Call it glam for a brash, butch new age. As for Bryan Ferry's more rarified brand of contemporary glamour ? That remains to be explored another day.

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