Gucci Release Their Cruise 2017 Campaign
Lounging around a mansion. Riding a white horse. Chasing geese. Swinging off trees. Playing with cows. Oh, the life. This behaviour, captured here by Glen Luchford, is lavish enough, but doing it all in Gucci is next level bougie. Dan
MM6 Maison Margiela: Ready-to-wear SS17
The theme of MM6 Maison Margiela's London presentation was "hugs and kisses," apparently. Unfortunately, however (though not actually demonstrated in this particular set of images), the collection was displayed upon mannequins. So no hugging and kissing. Getting intimate with inanimate objects, as
Burberry Present Their First See-Now-Buy-Now Collection
The seats at Burberry's show this evening, held in Soho's Maker's House, had a copy of Virginia Woolf's Orlando on them. Orlando, for the literary philistines amongst us, is a novel about an Elizabethan nobleman who traverses time, changing between man
Christopher Kane: Ready-to-wear SS17
Christopher Kane's models marched left, left right left at the Tate Britain. Inspired by the make-do-and mend movement, the displaced generation of the Second World War, Kane decided to prepare a resourceful army of his own. They began in fur,
Pringle of Scotland: Ready-to-wear SS17
The Pringle girl knows how to dress for British summer time. Well, Scottish. She knows never leave the house without layers. And today, there were layers a-plenty, as the brand’s Womenswear Design Director, Fran Stringer took us on a bracing hike through
Erdem: Ready-to-wear SS17
Do you think that Erdem's been rewatching Titanic lately? Stand on the helm of a ship singing My Heart Will Go On? Longing to be painted like one of Jack’s French girls? I think it’s safe to assume, probably not. But
Roksanda: Ready-to-wear SS17
There’s something quite comforting about turning on the TV on a Sunday afternoon - does anyone actually watch TV anymore? - to totally by chance find a Poirot drama playing. So there's murder involved, but it's twee English murder, committed
Antonio Berardi: Ready-to-wear SS17
The starting point for any Antonio Berardi collection, and the first line of the press release is always a quote. This time it came from Leonardo da Vinci, "art is never finished, only abandoned". Think of this collection as a kind
Peter Pilotto: Ready-to-wear SS17
Remember Baby's sister in Dirty Dancing, when she sang the Hula Hana song for that end of summer pageant? Well this had a hint of that about Peter Pilotto. It felt Hawaiian. Hawaiian crossed with Princess Leia, in that gold
David Koma: Ready-to-wear SS17
David Koma's SS17 show was about eggs. Russian eggs. As in, Faberge eggs, rather than the food stuff. It was actually about Russia in general, Russia at the beginning of the 20th century. Think: Anastacia, he Imperial family, Tsarinas frolicking
Manuel Facchini: Ready-to-wear SS17
There was a screen at the Manuel Facchini presentation. Revolutionary, I know, but bare with me. On one side of the room stood models, in the new SS17 collection, a rotating mirrored platform among them, on the other side of
Phoebe English: Ready-to-wear SS17
Things have, politically speaking anyway, been a bit shit recently. So that's what Phoebe English's focussed on for her SS17 presentation. But this wasn't about wallowing - nope, the collection - a tight seven looks - was instead a way to
Preen by Thornton Bregazzi: Ready-to-wear SS17
There was a photo of a pile of books on the back of the Preen press release, Potions & Spells, The Incidental Tarot, Skinhead, Creep Girls are the Cutest, which should give you a pretty good indication of what this
J JS Lee: Ready-to-wear SS17
Remember sugar paper? As in, not something you can eat, but those big rolls of coloured paper that you used to make displays at school? Well, anyway, the walls of Korean-born J JS Lee's presentation yesterday were lined with the stuff. And
Paul Smith: Ready-to-wear SS17
Paul Smith SS17 was a floral cornucopia. Literally. There were flowers sprouting from the floor, over dresses, liberally sprinkled over suiting. In every form imaginable. Woven into wide stripes on tailored jackets, painted over louche suiting, embroidered across feminine tea dresses,