WELLA FASHION WEEK
MAY 5 2007 11:16h
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On the third day of the Wella Fashion Week we could relax from the previous days and stay awake with interesting creations.
Last night’s fashion was opened by Wella with its knitted dress made from 25 kilometres of hair. More than impressive.
The young trio Artidjana delighted us with their creations. The girls combined simplicity into an
explosive package of perfect design. Each item of clothing was notable because we could see ourselves in them in everyday situations. The elegance with which these girls approached clothing items can turn it into an evening dress solution. Low-cut trousers are enriched by practical pockets and gradually widen in the form of a trapeze, which beautifully lengthens the form of the body in a completely natural way. Dresses are made in combination with several types of fabric with a calico collage and a condiment of metal elements. The girls chose earthy colours and play with the form itself.
With it new collection, Labud offers nothing new apart from its typical approach to clothing design. The creations are dull, monotonous and, what they rely on: classical.
Iggy was inspired by Russian ethno and military rigidity. He seemed to scream: Long live the Babushka! The designed used strict, clean cuts, concentrated on the effect of the fabric itself. His velvet coats are brilliant with their line ornaments. But, in this case, we cannot speak so much of an innovative creation as much as the ingenuity of reconstruction of the Russian ethno. Now, this is true communism nostalgia!
Also, Montenegrin designer Marina Nikolic turned the traditional national costume of her country into a modern item of clothing. She attired her creations with details of the traditional golden embroidery. She impregnated lace onto her creations and fixed it firmly to the body. She arose controversial reactions from the audience with a white wedding gown to which she added a black scarf as a symbol of sorrow.
Aleksandra Djocinovic celebrates the short dress. She fixed the excess material to the body with a belt high up the waist line or a rope that she tied around the waist, and allows the excess material to fall as drapery.
Canadian Andrew Matenyi presented his clothing in a vamp-style package. His models seem as the products of some dark Klimt works. He celebrates lace harmonised with a minimalist piece of clothing. His dresses are only a poor construction with an association with the current collection of Croatia’s Boudoir.
Italian designer Renato Balestro will be remembered for his elegance and sense for detail. As much as designers celebrate the active Parisian woman, so he put efforts into the celebration of the elegant Roman woman. His cocktail dresses literally glowed with a string of pearls that he made into a fabric. His glittering colourful suspenders draw attention, that he adds to classical black and white clothing items. His dresses are a wide retrospective with a view of film classics.
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