

There is always one thing I love about Marc Jacobs' collections: expect the unexpected. Whether it is on the fetish policewomen for Louis Vuitton or the infamous Perry Ellis grunge collection, the guy takes inspiration and take a new spin on things. Even though the fashion world wasn't as keen with Marc Jacobs and his designs, as they had been years ago, I still find his designs innovative and meticulous. Shorts, skirts and skin-revealing is something expected for spring, but this collection take notes from the masterpiece of book The Great Gatsby(it's set in the 20's during the Prohibition with a lot of flappers)
You're probably think "How exactly is that related to fashion, Marcia? Just get to the point and talk about the fashion!" I'm not, so you might just click over to one of your other blogs and look the the pictures. The runway was set in a dance hall decorated with retro lightbulbs, where the models were waiting behind a heavy velvet curtain. When the spotlight came on and roll onto the first model, I'm just full of shock(well, in a good way, a good surprise? Nevermind.) Everything is so romantic and fantasy-like, it didn't feel real at all. But that was the purpose, according to Marc Jacobs himself: "I didn't want it to feel real." It didn't feel real at all.
The Roaring Twenties were an amazing time, not only for fashion but also feminists. We stopped wearing those tiny corsets and wore clothes that you can actually walk in(can you believe that people used to have 16 inches waist? It sounds horrible, can you actually eat in it?) When you mixed history and The Great Gatsby together, you get romantic-themed fashion. There are a series of boxy, cropped jackets, dropped-waist flapper dresses with socks and plastic cowboy-boots and sequined-checked turbans. Mixed in with denim suits, sporty sweatshirts and techno-gingham prints(on coats and skirts)
Romantic, yet a bit of nostalgic and unexpected. Exactly what a fashion collection should be, evoking different thoughts and emotions. Quick question: would it be far-fetched to wear techno-gingham with Surface to Air boots?
photos: vogue collections
The Roaring Twenties were an amazing time, not only for fashion but also feminists. We stopped wearing those tiny corsets and wore clothes that you can actually walk in(can you believe that people used to have 16 inches waist? It sounds horrible, can you actually eat in it?) When you mixed history and The Great Gatsby together, you get romantic-themed fashion. There are a series of boxy, cropped jackets, dropped-waist flapper dresses with socks and plastic cowboy-boots and sequined-checked turbans. Mixed in with denim suits, sporty sweatshirts and techno-gingham prints(on coats and skirts)
Romantic, yet a bit of nostalgic and unexpected. Exactly what a fashion collection should be, evoking different thoughts and emotions. Quick question: would it be far-fetched to wear techno-gingham with Surface to Air boots?
photos: vogue collections










