วันพุธที่ 18 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2564

Nike x Sacai LD Waffle and Fragment (2021)

Nike LD Waffles Collaboration

โครงการการทำงานร่วมกันเป็นคู่กับ"Nike"ในรุ่น"LD Waffle"มีทั้งหมด 4 แบรนด์ได้แก่"Sacai"ที่เป็นแบรนด์หลักในการทำงานร่วมกันครั้งนี้และมีแบรนด์ที่เข้าร่วมด้วยอีก 3 แบรนด์คือ"Fragment","Clot"และ"Undercover" โดยที่รุ่นของ"Sacai"ที่ทำร่วมกับ"Fragment"นั้นจะออกวางจำหน่ายก่อน มีทั้งหมด 2 สีคือ"เทาอ่อน"(Flooded Grey)และ"น้ำเงินเข้ม"(Flooded Blue)ในราคาคู่ละประมาณ 6,323 บาท ในวันที่ 24 สิงหาคม 2021 นี้ ส่วนรุ่นที่ทำร่วมกับ"Clot"และ"Undercover"นั้นยังไม่มีกำหนดวางจำหน่ายและราคาที่เป็นทางการ

Nike x Sacai LD Waffle and Fragment

Nike x Sacai LD Waffle and Clot

Nike x Sacai LD Waffle and Undercover
Image & Details Fashionsnap

Brooks Brothers x eYe Comme des Garçons Junya Watanabe MAN


การร่วมมือกันระหว่าง"Brooks Brothers"และ"eYe Comme des Garçons Junya Watanabe MAN" โดยการนำเอา"Blazers"รุ่น"Madison Fit 3 Button Sack Mode l"สีกรมท่าที่เป็นเอกลักษณ์ชิ้นสำคัญของ"Brooks Brothers"มารื้อออกแล้วประกอบใหม่เข้ากับ"U.S. Military Trench Coat"ในยุค 50 (สีกากี)และ"Bomber Jacket"(สีขี้ม้า)ตามแนวทางของ"Junya Watanabe"ที่ทำอยู่เป็นประจำ เสื้อทั้ง 2 รุ่นนี้จะวางจำหน่ายในวันที่ 18 สิงหาคม 2021 เป็นวันแรก โดยจะวางจำหน่ายที่ตัวแทนจำหน่ายของ"Comme des Garçons Junya Watanabe MAN"และ""Brooks Brothers"สาขา"Omotesando"ในราคาประมาณ 61,850 บาทเท่ากันทั้ง 2 แบบ

หมายเหตุ: บางความเห็นใน"Instagram"เขียนไว้ว่าเสื้อตัวนี้ทำให้นึกถึง"Sacai"(คงหมายถึงรุ่น"L-2B Bomber Jacket") นี่ก็เห็นด้วยนะ ถึงแม้ด้วยอายุงานของแบรนด์และแนวคิดในการทำ"Deconstruction"หรือ "Reconstruction"นั้น"Junya Watanabe"จะทำมาก่อนเป็นเวลานานมากก็ตาม แต่ภาพงานในลักษณะนี้ ลักษณะนี้หมายถึงการรวมชิ้นส่วนต่างของเสื้อผ้าแบบทางการเข้ากับเสื้อผ้าแบบไม่เป็นทางการโดยเฉพาะการใช้วัสดุจำพวกไนล่อนสีขี้ม้ารวมกับวัสดุที่ทำจากขนสัตว์(หรืออื่นๆ)ที่เป็นสีกรมท่าเป็นภาพจำที่เห็นจนชินตาในงานของ"Sacai"ยุคปัจจุบัน

Madison Fit 3 Button Sack Mode l x L-2B Bomber Jacket

Madison Fit 3 Button Sack Mode l x U.S. Military Trench Coat
Image & Details Fashionsnap

วันศุกร์ที่ 30 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2564

Spring/Summer 2022: Sacai


Chitose Abe is back home in Tokyo after her Paris haute couture debut. The prolific designer presented a one-off Jean Paul Gaultier collection, the first of that brand’s new partnership projects. She called it an “intimate, more friendly proposal” than the long-running collaboration she has with Nike or her recently announced hookup with Dior Men’s Kim Jones.

Her latest Sacai collections for men and women feature yet another collab, this one with the cult German streetwear label ACRONYM, whose designer Errolson Hugh has been likened by my colleagues at GQ to “some sort of ninja-god-slash astronaut.” ACRONYM specializes in technical outerwear, often in monochrome. Errolson brought the waterproof nylon, Abe brought the bandana prints, buffalo plaids, and rug jacquards.

One throughline of the recent collections has been a sort of elegant functionality; it’s a reaction, no doubt, to the pandemic-time ease—and exercising—we all got used to, and the collective desire to return to a more glamorous way of life. For Abe, the dueling urges yielded a series of camel separates made with an unlikely combination of satin and raincoat fabric. Elsewhere, she paired a cozy buffalo plaid sweater with a buffalo plaid chiffon maxi skirt, and cut a chesterfield coat in white chiffon appliqued in a bandana pattern.

The men’s collection had a more expeditionary spirit, with an emphasis on jackets and vests that could do double duty on the street or at the campsite—an active lifestyle means different things to different people. Abe had the collections shot on the streets of Paris when she was in town for couture, where a well-timed rain shower helped her make her point about utility. Next up: a collab with the weather gods?

Vogue

Image Vogue

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 29 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2564

Spring/Summer 2022: VTMNTS


Let’s get the name VTMNTS out of the way first, because I know I stumbled over it like crazy when speaking with Guram Gvasalia, the founder and creative director of VTMNTS, the first label to appear as part of the Vetements umbrella. You spell it out: V-T-M-N-T-S. That’s hardly surprising. Gvasalia has been spelling things out about the fashion system ever since he launched Vetements with his brother Demna in 2014, upending the industry and reminding us that real clothes are great clothes—and vice versa. To be clear, though: VTMNTS (practice it a few times and it starts to roll off the tongue) is a separate entity from Vetements, despite the wink-wink play on the name of the mothership, with the brands only linked by Gvaslia’s presence and their shared organizational resources. “How did Shakespeare put it?” mused Gvasalia on our call. “‘That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet’. We chose VTMNTS to show the roots of the label,” he went on to say. “To be proud of who you are, and where you come from.”

Inevitably, it’s tempting to play the game of spotting the differences between the two labels, of which there are several. Firstly: Scrolling through VTMNTS’s 100 looks reveals that there are very few jeans, only one hoodie, and certainly no sneakers. With the latter there are instead sturdy, relatively classic shoes pithily emblazoned with the legends Hard Core, Let Go, and Fuck Off; not so much “wear your heart on your sleeve” as your toe caps. (Incidentally, further VTMNTS adornments come in the form of strands of pearls, hefty chain necklaces in precious gold, and yet more gold—and sometimes platinum—on sunglasses, which will retail at an even heftier $20,000 and upwards. Given that billionaires were breezily going into the stratosphere of space these past few weeks, those shades and their price tag somehow seem to meet the cultural moment we’re in; I mean like, sure, why not?)

Secondly: There’s a virtual absolute absence of logo-ing, despite the name VTMNTS looking like a prime contender for the big bold branding treatment. Instead, in that clever and shrewd counterintuitive way of Gvasalia’s, he has opted instead to play with the humdrum reality of the universally recognized barcode as a way to graphically represent the label, a nifty, witty joke on identity and consumerism. It could turn up on the chest of an impeccable camel or loden balmacaan—the tailoring is pretty impressive here, more of which later—or one of the many terrific jacquard knits, the barcode traced onto the necklines of the sweater. “Personally, I don’t wear logos,” said Gvasalia, “and those like me who don’t might say, ‘Well, maybe I could wear a little barcode.’”

Of course, that leads to the question: What do you want your clothes to say about you? And more pertinently: What does Gvasalia want to say about the clothes of his new VTMNTS label? One clue is that despite the collection primarily being menswear-focused, it's really envisaged as being for all genders, something alluded to by the tees stamped with pronoun choices—and intended to signal that the freedom to be who you are sadly isn’t freely enjoyed everywhere. Another clue lies in the tally of what’s being shown. “We are starting VTMNTS with 100 looks in our first season,” he said. “The number of looks is symbolically chosen to show our 100% commitment to the fashion industry.”

What we have here, for all the playful allusions to pop and political cultures (that hoodie emblazoned with the movie poster for Back to the Future; the brown pants which echo communist era Eastern European school uniforms) is a label which out of the gate takes a sincere and earnest appreciation for the art of making clothes; to evoke luxury without having to crassly spell it out. (Even if any of us were ever in the market to shell out that kind of money for those shades, who’d ever really know they were approximately the price of a modest car?)

So that tailoring, for instance: the jackets, which button high on the chest, and whose seams have piping built into them, done not only for how it looks, but because the skill involved in that seaming technique is all but impossible to imitate (Okay: knock off). Or the pants, whose cut was perfected after every single person on the team tried them on and weighed in on what worked and what didn’t. Ultimately, the measure of success of VTMNTS has to be judged not by what it isn’t but by what it is: A new label which conspires to offer clothes which possess both the shivery frisson of fashion and which transcend that immediate thrill to stick around and last. In the (still) difficult time we’re living in, there’s a real joy and optimism about that, not to mention just a bit of bravery, to be venturing into the territory of launching a new label when you still have the day job. Maybe that’s why Gvasalia chose a silver lining for some of those jackets.

Vogue

วันอังคารที่ 20 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2564

Collaboration: Toga Archives X H&M


ในปี 2021 นี้ทาง"H&M"มีนักออกแบบรับเชิญถึง 2 แบรนด์ แบรนด์คือ"Simone Rocha"ที่ออกวางจำหน่ายไปในเดือนมีนาคม 2021 และ"Toga Archives"ที่จะออกวางจำหน่ายในวันพฤหัสบดีที่ 2 กันยายน 2021 นี่เป็นเพียงเสื้อผ้าบางส่วนและราคาโดยประมาณเป็นเงินบาท เนื่องจากราคาเป็นเงินบาทอย่างเป็นทางการยังไม่มีออกมา

H&M is delighted to unveil the TOGA ARCHIVES x H&M collaboration in its entirety. The forthcoming capsule with the Tokyo-based independent label, founded in 1997 by Yasuko Furuta, loved for its curious sensuality and experimental takes on wardrobe classics, draws on its avant-garde-yet-accessible archive with reimaginings of TOGA signatures. The TOGA ARCHIVES x H&M collection will be available worldwide in selected stores and at hm.com from September 2.

Image H&M

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 18 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2564

วันศุกร์ที่ 16 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2564

GQ Korea: August 2021

Image GQ Korea

Clothing: Louis Vuitton Fall/Winter 2021-2022

Fashion Editor: 박나나, 이연주, 김유진, 신혜지

Photographer: 강혜원

Hair: 이소연, 이은혜, 이혜진, 조미연

Make-Up: 서아름, 황희정

Model: 박경진, 이승찬, 안재형, 이민석, 이봄찬, 나재영, 우석, 이주한, 이상건, 노신신, 한진희, 김정우, 벤자민, 임지섭, 송현근, 이지한, 주노, 박준성, 송호준, 토비, 타카노 유고, 병만

Set Design 노매스

Lighting 김광민

Assistant 허지은, 박지윤, 박찬경

Image GQ Korea

วันพุธที่ 21 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2564

Kris Van Assche for Berluti (2019-2021)

First Collection: Spring/Summer 2019

AFTER 3 YEARS AT @berluti , I AM ANNOUNCING MY DEPARTURE FROM THE BRAND AS ITS ARTISTIC DIRECTOR.

THESE 3 YEARS AT BERLUTI HAVE BEEN EXTREMELY INTENSE.
REINVENTING AND RESHAPING THE BRAND’S DNA, ITS HISTORY AND TRADITION, CRAFT AND LUXURY IN A CONTEMPORARY AND CREATIVE MANNER WAS DEFINITELY A CHALLENGE, AND ALL LIMITATIONS AND RESTRICTIONS AROUND COVID DIDN’T HELP.

SO I WANT TO EXPRESS ENDLESS GRATITUDE TO MY CREATIVE TEAM FOR ALWAYS DELIVERING MIRACLES, NO MATTER WHAT. YOU KNOW WHAT YOU DID, HOW YOU HAD TO DO IT, AND YOU CAN BE PROUD.

I SURE AM PROUD OF YOU, OF US.

WHILE @berluti WILL BE TAKING A NEW APPROACH TO ITS COLLECTIONS AND CALENDAR, I FEEL GRATEFUL FOR ALL I HAVE LEARNED AND LOOK FORWARD TO WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS FOR ME.

THOUGH I WILL BE FINISHING SOME PROJECTS IN COMING WEEKS, I WILL NOT BE PRESENTING A NEW COLLECTION FOR THE BRAND.
LAST WEEK’S REVEAL OF THE “LIVING APART TOGETHER “ COLLECTION WILL BE MY LAST.

LOVE,


Last Collection: Fall/Winter 2021-2022

Image Vogue

วันพุธที่ 17 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2564

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