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Spring fashions blossom on Paris runways
Joelle Diderich
PARIS—In the new world of fashion marketing, it’s all about flooding the
zone. Brands like Stella McCartney and Yves Saint Laurent, which showed
their latest ready-to-wear collections in Paris on Thursday, have
understood that glossy magazine advertisements are no longer the most
effective way of reaching their audience.
They are using methods like street pamphleteering, Web sites and linkups
with other firms to trumpet their presence.
McCartney has inked deals with Adidas for sportswear, LeSportsac for
bags and Bendon for lingerie, as well as creating limited editions for
high street retailers H&M and Target in Australia. “Without visibility
today, a luxury brand is not a luxury brand,” said Cedric Charbit,
general merchandise manager of women’s fashion at the French department
store chain Printemps. “So I think it’s pretty smart, and it speaks to
Stella McCartney’s audience, which rejects the current codes of the
luxury sector because they are too ostentatious and too obvious,” he
added.
The British designer’s spring-summer collection featured floaty floral
dresses and paisley-patterned all-in-ones with a ‘70s feel. Models
emerged in front of a wall of green plants wearing billowing silk
separates in gentle tones of sky blue and dusty beige.
McCartney used techniques like block-printing and quilting to give her
outfits a hippie-luxe feel. But her training on Savile Row, the London
hub of made-to-measure men’s suits, was also evident in a cream
single-breasted tuxedo suit. Her pragmatic approach to dressing is
beginning to pay off. Figures released this week showed her label posted
its first profit in 2006, a year before the deadline imposed by its
parent, Gucci Group. The results show it is possible to succeed at the
top-tier luxury level without using leather or fur, providing you are a
little creative. McCartney is a vegetarian and recently staged an online
animal rights protest in the Internet-based virtual world Second Life.
Yves Saint Laurent is also busy online. The company this week unveiled a
revamped Web site — http://www.ysl.com — with an online store for U.S.
shoppers and special features like short films. Meanwhile, its creative
director Stefano Pilati has launched Manifesto, a pamphlet-style
advertising supplement handed out on the streets of New York, Paris,
London and Milan last month. “I initiated the Manifesto campaign because
I wanted to speak more directly to people. The advertising campaign is
not enough,” Pilati told British daily The Times in a recent interview.
“Magazines publish only the handbag adverts, because that is where the
money is, but what about my designs?” Though the brand derives much of
its income from “It” bags like the Muse and Downtown, they were
conspicuously absent from the catwalk on Thursday, putting the focus on
the impeccable lines of masculine tailored jackets.
These came with or without sleeves in traditional English wool and were
paired with boxy trousers cuffed just above the ankle. With its sober
palette of navy, white, grey and beige, it was hard to picture this as a
summer collection. A stunning one-shouldered evening gown in rippling
jewel pink silk made for a welcome splash of colour. By contrast,
Italian designer Giambattista Valli sent out dresses so bright, you had
to wear shades. Models swept past in neon pink swimsuits and fluorescent
yellow gowns that included a sleeveless number covered in tiny ostrich
feathers. Though Valli launched his line only two years ago, he has made
his mark by dressing starlets like Mischa Barton and Victoria Beckham
for the red carpet. Sales in North America are growing by some 90
percent each season, according to industry paper Women’s Wear Daily.
“You feel like a princess in his stuff, it’s unbelievable,” said actress
Jennifer Morrison, of the hit U.S. TV show ‘House.’ “And it’s incredibly
comfortable, which is kind of an added bonus because that’s not always
the case.” Pink is fast shaping up as the key colour for next spring.
Croatian designer Ivana Omazic sent out a fuchsia satin dress with a
matching oversized clutch and strappy sandals in her collection for
French label Celine. Soft white jackets featured corset boning to add
shape to the waist, while a twisted silver choker gave a wispy scarlet
silk dress an unexpected edge. |