2015年12月10日星期四

Louis Vuitton’s cultural baggage

An ongoing exhibition in Paris reveals the dialogue between a luxury luggage brand and the changing technologies of travel
A display at the exhibition. Photo: Stephane Muratet
A display at the exhibition. Photo: Stephane Muratet
A few days before the Louis Vuitton (LV) exhibition Volez, Voguez, Voyagez was to open at Grand Palais in Paris on 4 December, I received an email from the brand’s public relations team. It said that in light of the recent terror attacks in Paris, the luxury house had scaled down the events planned to mark its opening. If I wished to cancel my place at the press preview because of any safety concerns, it continued, the brand would be happy to make alternative arrangements.
In a city that is still healing from terror-inflicted wounds, several narratives seemed to be running through and around Volez, Voguez, Voyagez, or “Fly, Sail, Travel”, even before it opened. The show is a panoramic telling of LV’s 160-year-old story, from 1854, its year of inception, to now. It familiarizes viewers with its founders as well as artists, designers and strategists who are creating the Louis Vuitton of the future. Curated by Olivier Saillard of the Musée Galliera in Paris and designed by Canadian opera director Robert Carsen, the exhibition presents objects and documents from Louis Vuitton’s as well as other archives, both public and private. It is artistically narrated around nine chapters.
Cities never really heal from the kind of affliction that Paris was struck with. But eventually they learn to live through it, then with it and then, hopefully, beyond it. More than one member of the LV team involved with the exhibition said that going ahead with the event—instead of cancelling it—had been the brand’s own little display of Parisian defiance. “We want to show that life will go on in Paris,” a manager in the press department said with a tone of considerable and genuine resolve.
Volez, Voguez, Voyagez is an uncommon and thoroughly enjoyable example of a brand-led exhibition that does not succumb to the pitfalls common to this genre. First of all, such shows can exhibit a lack of thematic generosity in which all stories are told purely from the perspective of a brand which can be quite off-putting. Second, brand-led shows can get stuck up in the brand’s own mythology and taxonomy. Products are often displayed in set categories and sections—menswear, women’s wear, travel, sports, business, yachting, skiing, diving—that are not intuitive to anybody who does not work in marketing or sales.
The LV exhibition however ducks these problems through a combination of curatorial sensibility, space design, and measured story-telling.
An expert curator of fashion exhibitions, Saillard has a reputation for subverting curatorial conventions in his shows. His sleight of hand here, so to speak, is to make the LV trunks and bags play the same role throughout the show that they play in real life—as accessories and enablers of eventful luxurious lives. Thus even as the show is ostensibly about LV’s history as one of the world’s great luggage brands, all objects tell stories instead of just starring in them.
The 1906 monogrammed canvas trunk. Photo: Tous Droits
The 1906 monogrammed canvas trunk. Photo: Tous DroitsThe exhibition opens with a 1906 vintage trunk in monogram canvas from the family archives as representative of the house’s historical and artisanal background. “The 1906 trunk prefigures the Voguez, Volez, Voyagez...because it brings together all the fields covered, from the perfect gesture to savoir-faire, travel, beauty, creation and avant-garde vision,” says the exhibition note. It is an unambiguous nod to what is still the spiritual, if not financial, soul-object of the company. Also this is a subtle reminder that while the brand is most famous for its monogrammed handbags and tony luggage, its roots lie in workshops and wood and craftsmen. An entire chapter is devoted to the fabric, locks and shapes of the LV trunks.
A Louis Vuitton catalogue photograph from 1927. Photo: Droits Restreints
A Louis Vuitton catalogue photograph from 1927. Photo: Droits RestreintsThese objects, photographs and other memorabilia from the LV archives are placed in a series of rooms. Two stand out. One, early on, is a room dedicated to the founding history of the brand. Much of this wood-panelled antechamber is lined with photos and documents telling the founding stories of the brand from 1854. A display case in the centre of the room holds a selection of wood-working tools. The entire room smells of wood and there is a faint whiff of sawdust in the air. It is a subtle nod to the humble origins of the brand and to the craftsmanship involved and invested in making LV trunks to this day.
The other room of note is a mock, oversized train carriage, with scenery flashing by in flat-screen windows. Louis Vuitton cases and bags sit on baggage racks and along the floor. On the other side of the carriage are replica hotel stickers and baggage tags from the LV family collection. It is an excellent bit of set-design deceit that propels the exhibition’s narrative forward without becoming overbearing.
This narrative structure is the real spine around which the exhibition is built. Volez, Voguez, Voyagez is really all about the ongoing dialogue between the brand and the changing cultures and technologies of human travel. For the first three decades of its life LV made nothing but trunks. Until steamship travel took off, at which point the luggage atelier made its first non-trunk: a steamer bag. These first bags were durable and well- made. But not much to look at. This is because, Cecil the guide told us, steamer bags were never meant to be used outdoors. They were meant to hold laundry and be secreted away inside a trunk.
How ironic then that the successors of that original “private” bag are LV’s most famous “public” products today. The brand’s iconic Speedy and Keepall model bags can be spotted all over the display rooms, including lined up on the wings of a biplane. The displays deftly combine old products from the archives as well as more recent products. Thus a Noé bag from the decades past sits next to a brand new piece from the 2015 collection. The finest of the new products, undoubtedly, is one displayed right at the start, the Petite Malle, a wonderful little clutch inspired by the trunk.
Long before the arrival of Marc Jacobs as the brand’s creative director in 1997 marked the official entry of LV into the fashion world, it was among the most revered brands in the mid-century. The curator’s note mentions the presence of LV in the customer records of French designers Paul Poiret and Christian Dior. To reference that LV was fashionable before it started making clothes, the show includes contemporary silhouettes from Nicolas Ghesquière, artistic director of Women’s Collections.
The most crowd-pleasing of the displays, perhaps, will be one towards the end that showcases Louis Vuitton’s work for Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn and other celebrities. Both the luggage and the stars shine through, but the real pleasure is in the little details. The handles on a set of white combs from a Valise Necessaire instantly invoke American skyscrapers. This is a blizzard of interactions: genre, travel, art, culture, technology and craft.
Like any good museum exhibit, Volez, Voguez, Voyagez is rewarding at different levels of engagement. Glance at the objects and it is a rewarding look back at the story of one of the great luxury brands. Read all the signs and the brochure and the historical details and you get a fine sense of LV’s origins, inspirations and legacy. But linger even longer and the exhibition can become a meditation on travel and culture.
Volez, Voguez, Voyagez is a complex, layered exhibition that will say different things to different people. It should be a part of every Paris itinerary.

Louis Vuitton’s Nicholas Knightly Launches Own Label


malletandco-scoop-091215-021
NEW BEGINNINGS: Drawing on his extensive experience designing leather goods for heritage brands, Nicholas Knightly has launched his own handbag label, Mallet & Co., exclusively on Net-a-porter.com.

Knightly, the creative force behind Mulberry’s popular Bayswater bag, is now in his 12th year as Louis Vuitton’s design director of leather goods. He will continue to work for the French fashion house on a freelance basis.

“Thanks to Louis Vuitton’s generosity and understanding I am able to continue to contribute to the legendary brand on a freelance basis in order to spend more time at home in the U.K. and nurture this exciting new venture,” Knightly said.

Three styles are carried on the online retailer’s site; the Archie, the Hanbury and the Zeus, priced between 795 pounds, or $1,194, and 995 pounds, or $1,494.

Knightly noted that the Net-a-porter exposure would “give us the chance to establish a dialogue directly with the customer, which is important to me.”

Made of slouchy calf leather and festooned with a padlock charm, the handbags aim to capture the quiet elegance of the “English sensibility” and for everyday use.

“I have been a long-standing fan of Nicholas; his résumé and the bags that he has created under his own label speak for themselves. We felt that to work exclusively with one another would make for a really exciting collaboration on a truly global level,” said Sarah Rutson, vice president of global buying at Net-a-porter.com.

Nick Jonas Covers L'Uomo Vogue in Full Louis Vuitton

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There's nary a bomber jacket in sight on Nick Jonas' new L'Uomo Vogue cover, only a bold Louis Vuitton menswear look from the maison's Fall 2015 collection. Considering there are not many places a printed Canadian jumpsuit and matching rope motif peacoat would fly, we're glad he's making the most of the opportunity to embrace a luxury look, especially since a) if he's not wearing a bomber jacket he's probably shirtless and b) his brother has already taken the title of The Cool One. However inside the issue, it's Nick's newfound status as a gay icon (the youngest Jonas plays a ridiculously buff gay character on the show Kingdom) that gets discussed.
"It’s an honor, but I don’t think of myself as an icon," the frequently shirtless star tells the magazine. "There should be a lot more straight artists who don’t have a problem with having gay fans. I’m really proud to play gay characters and I’ll continue to do so. I think it’s among the challenges of maturing as an actor."
Nick also discusses his potential next act as a playwright, saying he'd like to head back to Broadway with something he'd written himself. But more importantly, he wears this fantastic white shirt, which, surprise, is also by Louis Vuitton, and a black coat by Tom Ford, which is also not a bomber jacket. Read the budding writer's full interview here, and remember the days when his most statement piece was a purity ring.
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Dress du Jour: Daisy Ridley Is a Star in Chanel

The Dress: A two-piece Chanel ensemble featuring a woven white halter top and a tiered, multicolor skirt.
The Wearer: Breakout Star Wars lead Daisy Ridley.
Read more Michelle Obama Raps in a Wrap Dress
The Event: A Tokyo fan event for Star Wars: The Force Awakens on Thursday afternoon.
Why We Dig: Like any good American, we love a good mullet metaphor — and Ridley's "business on the top, party on the bottom" Chanel number is the perfect occasion to whip one out. Paired with a perfectly swooped updo and soft, natural makeup, the crisp white halter — complete with a sparkly brooch embellishment — is perfect for a sophisticated, meet-the-parents-type situation. But what really ties the youthful look together is the 23-year-old's slashed skirt, which features an array of gauzy, multicolored tiers. All in all, the best of both worlds.
TOKYO, JAPAN - DECEMBER 10:  Daisy Ridley attends the 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' fan event at the Roppongi Hills on December 10, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.  (Photo by Christopher Jue/Getty Images for Walt Disney Studios)
TOKYO, JAPAN - DECEMBER 10: Daisy Ridley attends the 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' fan event at the Roppongi Hills on December 10, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan. (Photo by Christopher Jue/Getty Images for Walt Disney Studios)
Cast member Daisy Ridley speaks to media during a red carpet fan event for her upcoming movie "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" in Tokyo, Japan, December 10, 2015. REUTERS/Yuya Shino
Cast member Daisy Ridley speaks to media during a red carpet fan event for her upcoming movie "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" in Tokyo, Japan, December 10, 2015. REUTERS/Yuya Shino

2015年11月26日星期四

Meet Harry Styles' new muse, Gucci's Alessandro Michele

Harry Styles at the AMAs, and Alessandro Michele at the British Fashion Awards
HARRY STYLES AT THE AMAS, AND ALESSANDRO MICHELE AT THE BRITISH FASHION AWARDSCREDIT: REX
lessandro Michele’s rise to fashion superstardom has been swift and meteoric. This time last year he was the unknown right-hand-man to Gucci’s former creative director Frida Giannini, working away without so much as a hint of public praise.

But that all changed in January when Giannini made an unexpectedly swift exit from the fashion house and he was asked to step up to the plate and bring the then-failing Gucci back to its best, beating off stiff competition from numerous big-name designers who had been slated to take the post. In a matter of months he had transformed Gucci from a so-so luxury house into the hottest brand of the moment, creating cult-status products (those fur-lined mules) and winning legions of new fans with his strong Seventies lilted sense of fun, from Alexa Chung to Dakota Johnson and Gwyneth Paltrow. Last night he won the International Designer of the Year Award at the British Fashion Awards.
Harry with his more discreetly dressed One Direction band mates
Harry with his more discreetly dressed One Direction band mates CREDIT: REX
But it seems it’s not just the world’s most-photographed female fashion plates that have been lured by his designs – there’s one particular man who seems to have taken not just to Michele’s designs but also his personal style; Harry Styles.
Styles swapped his Gucci suit for a floral Gucci neck garland later on at the AMAs
Styles swapped his black Gucci floral garden for a yellow one later on at the AMAs CREDIT: REX
The One Direction heartthrob, 21, turned up at Sunday night’s American Music Awards in an eye-catching custom-made floral Gucci suit, complete with flared trousers and a natty floral garland in place of a tie. His individuality was highlighted by the fact that his three bandmates had plumped for rather run-of-the-mill grey, navy and black suits, leaving Styles looking a little like he’d been duped into believing the dress code was fancy dress - a bit like when Bridget Jones turns up at a Tarts and Vicars party in a Playboy bunny outfit. We feel your pain, Harry.
Nevertheless, Styles stood tall - not that it stopped the internet from mercilessly comparing him to an Ikea bed sheet…
The suit was compared to an Ikea bedding set
The suit was compared to this Ikea bedding set CREDIT: REX
His new look – he normally opts for super-skinny trousers and a Saint Laurent-style undone, rock star vibe – may have seemed a little out of character, until you consider this: he’s totally stealing Alessandro’s style…
Gucci's Alessandro Michele at last night's British Fashion Awards
Gucci's Alessandro Michele at last night's British Fashion AwardsCREDIT: REX
A bold move but if anyone can pull it off, it's Styles. You wear that floral suit with pride, Harry. We can smell a campaign coming.
In June Styles wore a Gucci floral-print shirt
In June Styles wore a Gucci floral-print shirt CREDIT: REX
He wore a patterned gucci suit in September
He wore a patterned gucci suit in September CREDIT: REX

2015年11月5日星期四

U.K. Says Islamic State Likely Brought Down Russian Plane


Major European nations ban flights to and from Sharm el-Sheikh.

Britain said on Thursday there was a significant possibility that Islamic State’s Egyptian affiliate was behind a suspected bomb attack on a Russian airliner that killed 224 people in the Sinai Peninsula.
Russia dismissed the claim as speculation and Egypt said there was no indication so far that a bomb was to blame.
The topic is sensitive for Russia, whose warplanes have launched raids against Islamic State in Syria, and for Egypt, which depends heavily on revenues from tourism.
Asked if he thought Islamic State was responsible, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said: “ISIL-Sinai have claimed responsibility for bringing down the Russian aircraft, they did that straight away after the crash.
“We’ve looked at the whole information picture, including that claim, but of course lots of other bits of information as well, and concluded that there is a significant possibility,” he said on Sky television.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said it was more likely than not that a bomb was to blame.
“We cannot be certain that the Russian airliner was brought down by a terrorist bomb, but it looks increasingly likely that that was the case,” Cameron said.
U.S. and European security sources say evidence now suggests that a bomb planted by Islamic State’s Egypt affiliate—Sinai Province—was the likely cause of the crash. The sources stressed they had reached no final conclusions about the crash.
Britain, Ireland and the Netherlands banned flights to and from Sharm el-Sheikh, where the doomed flight originated, while Germany urged travelers to avoid the Sinai Peninsula.
Caution among Egyptian officials in assessing the cause of the crash has not eased anxiety among tourism companies that handle visitors to Egypt’s ancient sites and Red Sea resorts.
Shares in Thomas Cook opened down 2.1 percent after Britain cancelled flights to Sharm el-Sheikh, dealing a blow to the tourism industry on which Egypt relies to earn hard currency.
Britain said it was working with airlines and Egyptian authorities to put in place additional security and screening measures to allow Britons in Sharm to get home. It hoped flights bound for Britain could leave on Friday.
Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for President Vladimir Putin, said Russian planes were still flying to and from Sharm.
“Theories about what happened and the causes of the incident can only be pronounced by the investigation,” Peskov said.

Major European nations ban flights to and from Sharm el-Sheikh.

Britain said on Thursday there was a significant possibility that Islamic State’s Egyptian affiliate was behind a suspected bomb attack on a Russian airliner that killed 224 people in the Sinai Peninsula.
Russia dismissed the claim as speculation and Egypt said there was no indication so far that a bomb was to blame.
The topic is sensitive for Russia, whose warplanes have launched raids against Islamic State in Syria, and for Egypt, which depends heavily on revenues from tourism.
Asked if he thought Islamic State was responsible, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said: “ISIL-Sinai have claimed responsibility for bringing down the Russian aircraft, they did that straight away after the crash.
“We’ve looked at the whole information picture, including that claim, but of course lots of other bits of information as well, and concluded that there is a significant possibility,” he said on Sky television.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said it was more likely than not that a bomb was to blame.
“We cannot be certain that the Russian airliner was brought down by a terrorist bomb, but it looks increasingly likely that that was the case,” Cameron said.
U.S. and European security sources say evidence now suggests that a bomb planted by Islamic State’s Egypt affiliate—Sinai Province—was the likely cause of the crash. The sources stressed they had reached no final conclusions about the crash.
Britain, Ireland and the Netherlands banned flights to and from Sharm el-Sheikh, where the doomed flight originated, while Germany urged travelers to avoid the Sinai Peninsula.
Caution among Egyptian officials in assessing the cause of the crash has not eased anxiety among tourism companies that handle visitors to Egypt’s ancient sites and Red Sea resorts.
Shares in Thomas Cook opened down 2.1 percent after Britain cancelled flights to Sharm el-Sheikh, dealing a blow to the tourism industry on which Egypt relies to earn hard currency.
Britain said it was working with airlines and Egyptian authorities to put in place additional security and screening measures to allow Britons in Sharm to get home. It hoped flights bound for Britain could leave on Friday.
Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for President Vladimir Putin, said Russian planes were still flying to and from Sharm.
“Theories about what happened and the causes of the incident can only be pronounced by the investigation,” Peskov said.
“So far, we have heard nothing (like this) from the investigation. Any kind of similar assumptions like this are based on information that has not been checked or are speculation.”
Egypt’s civil aviation minister, Hossam Kamal, said of the explosion theory: “The investigation team does not have yet any evidence or data confirming this hypothesis.”
However, the head of Russian aviation agency Rosaviatsia said investigators would examine whether there was any explosive material on the plane. Alexander Neradko said the investigation would reach initial conclusions in a few months.
Russia’s Kogalymavia airline, which operated the crashed plane, said three of its four remaining A321 jets had passed safety checks by Russia’s state transport agency, while the fourth would be checked shortly.
Russia, an ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, launched air raids against opposition groups in Syria including Islamic State on Sept. 30.
Islamic State has called for war against both Russia and the United States in response to their air strikes in Syria.
The hardline group, which also has a presence in Egypt’s neighbor Libya, is waging a campaign of suicide bombings and shootings in Egypt designed to topple the government of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
The Egyptian leader is currently on a state visit to Britain, which like other Western powers sees Cairo as critical to efforts to counter militancy.
A senior Russian lawmaker said Britain’s decision to stop flights from Sharm was motivated by London’s opposition to Russia’s actions in Syria, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.
“There is geopolitical opposition to the actions of Russia in Syria,” said Konstantin Kosachev, a senior member of Russia’s upper house of parliament, when asked about Britain’s decision.
If a bomb killed the 224 passengers and crew aboard the Airbus A321, that would almost certainly undermine Egypt’s tourism industry, which is still recovering from years of political turmoil.
At Sharm airport, security appeared to have been tightened on Thursday with security forces patrolling the terminals and not allowing drivers, tour agents or others to loiter while awaiting tourist arrivals, a witness said.
Islamic State, which controls swathes of Iraq and Syria and is battling the Egyptian army in the Sinai Peninsula, said again on Wednesday that it brought down the airplane, adding it would eventually tell the world how it carried out the attack.
Egypt dismissed a similar claim of responsibility for the crash by Islamic State on Saturday.
Security experts and investigators have said the plane is unlikely to have been struck from the outside and Sinai-based militants are not believed to possess the technology to shoot down a jet cruising above 30,000 feet.
Sinai Province has killed hundreds of Egyptian soldiers and police since Sisi, as army chief, toppled Islamist President Mohamed Mursi in 2013 after mass protests against his rule.
Sisi was elected president last year on promises he would stabilize Egypt and rebuild its shattered economy. Critics say his tough crackdown on Islamists will only create more radicals in Egypt, which has fought militants for decades.

Michael Kors Blames Small Handbags for Its Big Problems


The once hot fashion brand has hit a rough patch.

Michael Kors  KORS 8.27% , a once-hot fashion brand, apparently did not see the small handbag trend coming.
The company, which was a Wall Street favorite during its meteoric expansion, reported that comparable sales at its North American stores fell 8.5% last quarter, a slightly less awful drop than in the previous quarter but nonetheless the third straight decrease. This is unimpressive for a company that not long ago was stealing market share from Coach  COH -0.83% .
One of the big culprits: smaller handbags and greater demand for cross-bodied bags. Such bags fetch a lot less money in stores and caught fire as a trend earlier this year, catching Kors and others unawares.
Kors’ shares, which had fallen by half this year, rose 10% on Wednesday after its earnings proved to be less of a bloodbath than expected. Still, Kors expects similar North American sales declines in the current quarter, which includes the key holiday season.
Michael Kors CEO John Idol told analysts that he sees a silver lining. “The idea that people are not buying handbags, I do not believe is a correct concept.” He continued: “We were selling less of those [pricier bags] because we are selling a lot more in particular of cross bodies and large wallets,”
Though Idol claims Kors is selling a lot more handbags, the fact remains the handbag craze is waning: Barclays has estimated that sales of premium handbags and accessories in North America will rise 3% to $11.7 billion this year. But growth had been 8%, 11%, and 16% in each of the three preceding years.
Inventory buildup was 13% higher at the end of the quarter compared to a year earlier, far outpacing total sales growth. So it is likely Kors will have to continue the kind of heavy discounting it blamed for its decrease in gross profit margin.

WATCH: The Burberry Christmas Campaign Is All Kinds Of Wonderful

Burberry Christmas Campaign
The Burberry Christmas campaign has landed, and it's quite a sight to behold. With the biggest British names in the world taking part, from Sir Elton John to Romeo Beckham, it's an all-star spectacle which has the added effect of making us want to buy everything in the Burberry store (if only).

The A-list cast of actors, musicians and models includes James Corden, Julie Walters, Naomi Campbell, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Michelle Dockery, James Bay, George Ezra and Toby Huntington-Whiteley. Phew!

Separate photographs were shot by Mario Testino as part of a campaign which will run over the festive period.

The festive film pays tribute to Billy Elliot, which is 15 this year (WHAT!?); it's based on the opening sequence of the film and also features original footage and even the original soundtrack from the film, Cosmic Dancer by T Rex.

The video is uplifting and heartwarming to watch - and who knew some of our favourite celebrities were capable of these moves?

Watch it for yourself below, and click through the gallery above to see some of the best images of the campaign...

Elizabeth Hurley, 50, stuns as she showcases her enviably toned legs in a black minidress and royal blue coat for Burberry bash

Elizabeth Hurley certainly seemed to be getting into the festive spirit on Tuesday night as she beamed on arrival at Burberry's Christmas film premiere.
Sticking to the traditions of the party season as she arrived in a suitably glamorous little black dress, showing off her youthful looks with her legs on show.
The 50-year-old actress set off the ensemble with a royal blue patterned coat that elongated her frame at a sophisticated upper-calf length cut.
Scroll down for video 
Glowing: Elizabeth Hurley looked positively radiant as she stepped out for the Burberry Christmas party to launch their festive campaign on Tuesday night

2015年11月3日星期二

Alber Elbaz Was Pushed Out at Lanvin—Vogue’s Sarah Mower Reflects on His Legacy

lanvin spring 2016
It is very difficult to keep a calm voice in the midst of a drama, but how is it that Alber Elbaz—one of the most loved, most prolifically creative, most hardworking and loyally long-serving designers—has actually been dismissed?
This scarcely believable bombshell came in a letter to the press sent directly from Elbaz this afternoon. “At this time of my departure from Lanvin on the decision of the company’s majority shareholder,” he writes, “I wish to express my gratitude and warm thoughts to all those who have worked with me passionately on the revival of Lanvin over the last 14 years . . . together, we have met the creative challenge presented by Lanvin and have restored its radiance and have returned it to its rightful position among France’s absolute luxury houses.”
lanvin fall 2014
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Looks from Fall 2014, Fall 2013, and Fall 2012
Photo: Yannis Vlamos / Indigitalimages.com; Marcus Tondo / InDigital | GoRunway; Yannis Vlamos / GoRunway.com
Again, we are pitched back into the unavoidable question that has been roiling in the atmosphere since Raf Simons quit Dior only last week: Exactly what place of strife has today’s fashion industry become? What illness has taken hold at the very top of fashion that is pitting the best and most visionary talents of our times against the management of the companies who hired them? And how do we, the audience of women who buy clothes, reconcile that with what we know of the leaders we look up to, whose shows we enthusiastically attend and whose narratives we carefully analyze and appreciate every season? And who are, in one way or another, dropping like flies?
I can’t answer that. As of this time, I can only speak as someone who has known Alber Elbaz since he stepped into this house. Witnessing over many years how he respected and cared for everyone who worked for him—the infinitely skilled seamstresses, whom he was well aware were supporting their families daily; the young team of designers he nurtured; the friendly press people who were integral to his world—I find it painful to imagine the scene at Lanvin headquarters on the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Alber, clearing his desk. Fired.
lanvin spring 2011
I last saw Alber in his studio days before his immensely powerful and well-received Spring 2016 show. I sat across the desk from him as he calmly explained how he was processing the multiple realities of addressing women—and the processes of commerce today. He was asking rhetorical questions, not complaining, not judging, but trying to come up with creative answers to the challenges thrown up by the Internet-accelerated speed of fashion, the shift in expectations on a designer not to be a developer and “maker” but a “creative director,” and the need to make dresses that look great on a red carpet.
Alber was also concerned—and show me the designer who is, these days—about how real women might be able to translate skimpy, semi-naked “event” dresses for themselves. “Come in, Olga,” he said, beckoning to a model who was standing in his doorway. Olga was wearing a nude corseted bodysuit over which was draped an emerald green satin “event” gown. Olga looked me in the eye. She knew how good it was. As a genius construct. As a witty comment. As something considerately meant.
lanvin spring 2008
The Lanvin Spring show—Alber’s unexpected last—covered this entire waterfront (or is it a cliff’s edge?) with a vast lineup of proposals from severe black and white tailoring, to faux-sexy eveningwear, to brilliantly louche glittery sequins and sarcastically funny Lanvin-logo prints of shoes and bags. Drawing back a bit, I think it was his attempt to square all the circles of the commercial needs of a globally selling company while still being himself, a man who, above all, tries to empathize with what women want. Though, apparently, even that wasn’t enough to keep his bosses happy.
lanvin spring 2003
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Spring 2003, Elbaz’s first runway show for Lanvin
Photo: Shoot Digital for Style.com
Skimming back through Alber’s Lanvin collections, I am struck by how much he has innovated, how much he owned, and how relevant his clothes still are through time. If you were lucky enough to have bought something from one of his early collections, you were the first to have gotten your hands on dresses with tulle jewels suspended in the neckline, the first to have invested in his fluid one-shouldered goddess dresses, the first to appreciate the pretty-fierce eroticism he invented with his ribbon-implanted zippers. And through practice—if you are like me—you’ll now realize that you’ll probably be wearing them, on and off, for the rest of your life.
When all’s said and done, that timeless hot-yet-elegant relevance is Alber Elbaz’s permanent calling card. Should anyone be approaching him with a job proposal right now, they’d be lucky to get him. And for all of us who have Lanvin in our wardrobes, let it be known: We want more. But only if whoever snaps up Alber next takes care to make him happy.

Watch: Chanel Announces Its Next Far-Flung Show Destination

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Photo: Alessandro Garofalo / Indigitalimages.com
From Salzburg to Seoul and Dallas to Dubai, Chanel has spanned the globe with shows for its twice-yearly pre-collections. The next city to play host to Karl Lagerfeld and co. (after December 1’s Métiers d’Art show in Rome, that is) will be Havana, Cuba, where the house’s Resort 2017 collection will be shown on May 3, 2016.
Since relations were restored between Cuba and the United States earlier this year, the country has provided inspiration for a host of designers, though Lagerfeld will be the first to actually take a show on the road to the island nation. The event will also be the first time Chanel has staged a show in Latin America.
At Chanel’s Spring 2016 show earlier this month, Lagerfeld was already talking about the destination, telling Vogue.com in an exclusive video, “I would love to do a show in Cuba.” While more details of the event have yet to be released, one thing we know for sure is that Chanel’s guests will be well equipped for the journey to Havana—the house’s Spring 2016 suitcases and airplane knits will have recently hit stores.

Chanel Has a New Lipstick for Your Dark, Tortured Soul

Chanel Vamp Attitude. Photo: Courtesy of Chanel
Where were you when you first saw Vamp, the Chanel nail-polish color so legendary it even has its own Wikipedia page? Rumor has it that the day after the color was shown at Chanel's 1995 spring/summer runway show, Madonna herself called Karl Lagerfeld's office to request samples. The famous almost-black red was then seen in her "Take a Bow" video and became the nail color of choice for Uma Thurman in Pulp Fiction. It was at one time the rumored fifth best-selling nail-polish shade in the world. And this holiday season, Chanel is creating an entire collection based around the shade.
Called Vamp Attitude, the collection features several vamp-inspired nail shades, including a glittery gold-flake top coat called Le Top Coat Lamé and a more silvery version of Vamp called Rose Fusion. There's also a silky textured eye shadow (the Illusion D'Ombre in Rouge Noir), in a black-burgundy that will make you look like Eva Green in Penny Dreadful, and a limited-edition eye-shadow quad, which includes a gold highlighter (because you need some shine and texture to lighten up the vampiness).
How to get Vampy eyes. Photo: Courtesy of Chanel
If you are a Chanel Beauty purist or someone who has trolled eBay for $150 bottles of Trés Noir Very Vamp nail polish, you'll know that Rouge Noir is the name of Vamp outside the United States (and some say, a truer match to the original creme Vamp before it was discontinued and then re-released). For those of you who have been begging for a Vamp lipstick, there is shade 109 Rouge Noir. Now go forth and pair your makeup to your dark soul. You can see the entire collection here.  
Because the Chanel Twilight collection just wouldn't have the same ring to it. Photo: Courtesy of Chanel