Berluti shoe leathers turned into tailoring for Spring/ Summer 2020. The famous patina is everywhere

 

 

Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 expands on the adventurous wardrobe.

Presented in front of the Orangerie of the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris, the Berluti Men’s Spring-Summer 2020 collection expanded on the adventurous wardrobe proposed for the previous season, amplifying its details.

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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Runaway; @berluti.com

Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 collection underscores the continuity between Kris Van Assche’s contemporary spirit and Berluti’s heritage.

Berluti is a curious brand because, in terms of clothing, it has almost no heritage: its story is found in shoes rather than ready-to-wear. That blank canvas appears to fascinate Van Assche who, alongside presenting the “fashion forward” and womenswear looks, is also reimagining its past,” commented Vogue UK’ Olivia Singer.

Informed by the stained surfaces of the marble tables on which Berluti artisans in the Manufacture de Ferrare hand-dyed patina shoes, Artistic Director Kris Van Assche added bright neon and fluorescent hues to his palette.

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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Runaway; @berluti.com
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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com

The patina suit, transmuted from the classic Alessandro shoe, is embossed with the Maison’s heritage scritto motif, which reappears on jacquard shirts and suits, printed on sportswear, as well as on bags and in the details of linings and zips. With an unrestrained attitude towards dress codes, silhouettes expand in pants, Bermuda shorts and sleeveless jackets with epaulettes.

Kris Van Assche also explores new iterations of sportswear with takes on perforation in woven leather tops.

“Berluti is supposed to be LVMH’s solely all-menswear marque, but Kris Van Assche is not down with the same-sex, boarding school vibe,” commented vogue.com

“Van Assche again mixed tailoring with moto-inspired pieces to evoke the complementary interplay of heritage values and fashion-forwardness he is working to achieve. This was also exemplified in the orange-accent-soled Alessandro shoes and the orange piping on this season’s bag offer.”

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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
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Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com

Dior artistic director Kim Jones uses past to fuel future

 

 

 

Dior Summer 2020 men’s show
Dior Summer 2020 men’s show; @DIOR

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Dior artistic director Kim Jones uses past to fuel future” was written by Scarlett Conlon, for theguardian.com on Friday 21st June 2019 22.56 UTC

When a fashion designer’s last catwalk show was – by their own admission – their favourite thing they’ve ever done, what do they do six months later when showtime comes around again? If you’re Dior Men’s artistic director Kim Jones, you use the past to fuel the future.

Collaborating with the American contemporary artist Daniel Arsham, Jones took classic Christian Dior items from the archive and projected them into the mid-21st century. He said backstage before the show that it stemmed from him “thinking about the future and imagining a Dior exhibition 50 years from now – it made me think, what have I done that would be in there?”

Arsham – an artist known for depicting the relationship between antiquity and futurism – was chosen by Jones, famed for taking Dior back into a couture direction since his appointment last year, because “he looks at the present and the future”.

A creation presented at the show
A creation presented at the show. Photograph: Charles Platiau/Reuters

Their codes combined made for a couture-focused collection with its roots in architecture. Toile de Jouy shirts were hand-painted by kimono craftsmen in Japan (where Jones held his second show for the house). Embellishment was finely pleated silk-chiffon, worked to appear like a coral and appliquéd on to shirts. Longline leather coats were sculptural and bonded. Transparent outerwear was mirrored in see-through footwear so to see the Dior-motifed socks underneath, evoking the hallmark of couture where what lies beneath is as important as what the eye can see.

Familiar motifs returned in the newspaper print made famous by John Galliano for the 2000 womenswear couture show which was reworded by Arsham for a new audience.

Kim Jones showed his style
Kim Jones showed his style. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images

Jones is widely known for his collaborative nature, and for this he once again assembled his merry band. In addition to Arsham, Yoon Ambush designed the jewellery, which featured floral brooches, long pendants featuring clocks and telephones (pieces from Dior’s personal collection) and a keyring of Jones’ Insta-famous dog Cookie. “Christian Dior had a history with his dog Bobby so I thought it would be nice.”

Bags were a collaboration with fellow LVMH-owned luggage brand Rimowa and comprised baby cases, for credit cards and keys, as well as large picnic vessels. Also in the bag department came more best-selling Saddle bag shapes. Jones incorporated the former womenswear piece into his first collection and they’ve had waiting lists around the world ever since.

The show marked the first anniversary of Jones’ tenure at the house and this is the fourth collection he has delivered in 12 months.

LVMH has made a heavy play for a dominant share of the luxury menswear market in the last year and a half. Along with Jones at Dior, it has appointed some of the most influential designers focusing on menswear – including Virgil Abloh at Louis Vuitton and Clare Waight Keller at Givenchy.

For 2018, it recorded revenue of €46.8 billion, an increase of 10% over the previous year, which it in part attributed to the impact of Jones’ arrival.

Today, Dior CEO, Pietro Beccari – who worked with Jones in his last job at Louis Vuitton and hired him for this one – said backstage that he was “glad [Jones] was a part of my squad”.

“He’s a cultural DJ – he’s mixing all his experiences he has done in his life and travels and gives back something which is very now,” he said.

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