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Tag: Fall 2023

  • Standing Ground Is the Emerging Label Cutting Through the Noise

    Standing Ground Is the Emerging Label Cutting Through the Noise

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    Style Points is a weekly column about how fashion intersects with the wider world.

    It was a comet that first fired Michael Stewart’s imagination. He grew up in Ireland, in a house tucked into a hill. Above it loomed an ancient ringfort, or fortified settlement built into the earth. (He calls them “timestamps in the land.”)

    “I used to stargaze a lot,” Stewart remembers. When the Hale-Bopp comet shot across the sky in 1997, “I have distinct memories of [seeing it] and my mom telling me the last time it was here, or visible, was about four and a half thousand years ago.” The idea of coming into contact with something only the ancients had seen fascinated the young Stewart. “If you strip it away and you just look up at the stars, you think, ‘Okay, I can almost imagine what this land was back then if I squint right,’” he says. “I love that idea of mentally transporting yourself to a different time.”

    standing ground fall 2023

    Standing Ground fall 2023.

    Noah Reicansky

    When Stewart became a design student, enrolling at London’s Royal College of Art, he drew on that fascination with the timelessness of his childhood landscape. Unlike his Irish cohorts Simone Rocha or Roísin Pierce, his work doesn’t touch on traditional craft motifs from the Emerald Isle. “I don’t engage with modern Ireland, or even relatively modern Ireland,” he says. “My interest is the land, the first people who came to Ireland, and the traces that they left behind.” He likes imagining the ancients through “a science fiction lens,” collapsing time frames so that the futuristic and primordial converge. “I wouldn’t say my work is super futuristic, and I wouldn’t say it’s super ancient,” he says, but you can almost imagine it in either space.”

    standing ground fall 2023

    Standing Ground fall 2023.

    Noah Reicansky

    Stewart has shown collections for his brand, Standing Ground, for the past two seasons as part of Fashion East—the London Fashion Week group show that counts Grace Wales Bonner, Craig Green, and Jonathan Anderson as alums.It’s a real stamp of approval on people’s work,” he says. But despite showing in the capital, Stewart doesn’t really identify with the punk-New Romantic-maximalist aesthetic salad that has come to define London style. He’s more apt to make references to the classic silhouettes of Geoffrey Beene and Charles James than to more recent fare. It’s most important to him to have a purity in the work and to focus on fit and cut. There’s a reality to my work, because I drape on the stand and fit on the body.”

    imaan hammam standing ground met gala

    Imaan Hammam wears Standing Ground at this year’s Met Gala.

    Dimitrios Kambouris//Getty Images

    Stewart goes against the grain in another way: he doesn’t use mood boards or sketch. He sees his process as more akin to sculpting with fabric. It might also be compared to improvisation. I have a vision in mind,” he explains, but I allow the fabric to tell me what it wants to do, and I’m playful with it.”

    For spring 2023, he showed brightly-colored column gowns that dripped with ease and featured tube-shaped structures snaking over the body-like vines. Fall brought gently molded hips and a stripped-down take on midcentury silhouettes. Some dresses were corseted, but not in an obvious, costumey way. Stewart was aiming for this soft, marshmallowy, modern take on a bustier dress…I don’t want to see the boning of the corset poking through or leaving an impression on the fabric.”

    A lot of people don’t even know that they’re corsets underneath,” he adds. They think they’re much simpler than they are. I quite like that. It’s nice to be able to achieve a really pure look, but with all of those intricate workings internally.”

    karol g elle standing ground

    Karol G wears Standing Ground in the June/July 2023 issue of ELLE.

    ZOEY GROSSMAN

    Stewart’s unfussy approach to eveningwear has been a hit with celebrities: Naomie Harris, Imaan Hammam, and Jourdan Dunn have all worn his designs on the red carpet, and our June/July cover star Karol G sports his bodysuit and sweeping hot-pink skirt in her shoot.

    Fashion has found a minimalist equilibrium lately. And while Stewart is averse to trends, there’s no denying that his work falls within that rubric. Personally, Stewart believes the return of spare silhouettes came about because people are jaded from looking at noise. I know I certainly am. I find the social media thing quite difficult, to be constantly bombarded with so much information. People do crave purity; it’s almost like a stillness, a break for your eyes.” But getting a pared-back design right can be more challenging, he thinks. It can be less impressive, if not done correctly.” And its appeal is quieter: If you look at a jersey dress on a hanger, it doesn’t have much presence, but when you put it on a body, it’s a really different story.”

    jourdan dunn standing ground

    Jourdan Dunn wears a look from Standing Ground.

    Gareth Cattermole//Getty Images

    Stewart isn’t just taking the road less traveled when it comes to design, but with his business as well. Thus far, he’s eschewed selling to wholesale accounts in favor of a small, almost Luddite made-to-measure operation where he works directly with private clients. For him, it’s a way of slowing down a system that can feel like it’s careening out of control. So many young designers, he says, get chewed up and spat out, and six seasons later they’re never to be seen again…I just want to take a bit of power from that a little bit.”

    Headshot of Véronique Hyland

    ELLE Fashion Features Director

    Véronique Hyland is ELLE’s Fashion Features Director and the author of the book Dress Code, which was selected as one of The New Yorker’s Best Books of the Year. Her writing has previously appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, W, New York magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, and Condé Nast Traveler. 

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  • Gwyneth Paltrow’s Ski Trial Style and the Cult of Stealth Luxury

    Gwyneth Paltrow’s Ski Trial Style and the Cult of Stealth Luxury

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    Style Points is a weekly column about how fashion intersects with the wider world.

    This season, fashion pulled a fast one. Dopamine dressing? Serotonin-seeking maximalism? Aughts bodycon? We don’t know her. Instead, trends were out and wardrobe-building was in; on the runways, stealth wealth reigned in a way it hasn’t since the glory days of Phoebe Philo (who, appropriately enough, will be making her return to fashion this fall).

    gwyneth paltrow court looks

    Rick Bowmer//Getty Images

    While the covetable fall 2023 clothes we saw won’t hit stores anytime soon, we can already see the aesthetic in action on a longtime practitioner of minimalism, Gwyneth Paltrow, as she navigates the most stealth-wealth court case possible (namely, one that’s ski collision-related). The back-and-forth on the stand has a riveting banality—with bombshells including the fact that Paltrow is just under 5’10” and that she doesn’t consider Taylor Swift to be a close friend—but the style has without a doubt been the biggest takeaway.

    gwyneth paltrow court looks

    Paltrow in gray suiting, another fall 2023 trend.

    Jeff Swinger//Getty Images

    Meme-makers and fashion mood boarders everywhere must be thanking their lucky stars that the courtroom goings-on are televised, because Paltrow is giving a master class in the style Max Berlinger has dubbed “low-key rich bitch.” A perfectly rolled-up white turtleneck sweater and Smythson notebook? Immaculate blond waves that are more like ripples? Gold statement jewelry, a bone broth-hued tote, and a slim-cut gray blazer accessorized with the requisite green juice? It doesn’t get more LKRB. Paltrow even nodded to her power color, green, with an olive coat, evoking immediate associations to Great Expectations in anyone who follows ’90s fashion Instagram.

    gwyneth paltrow court looks

    Paltrow in an olive green coat.

    MEGA

    The Row Jaka Oversized Wool-Blend Felt Coat

    Jaka Oversized Wool-Blend Felt Coat

    The Row Jaka Oversized Wool-Blend Felt Coat

    Fashionista has tabulated her fashion credits, which include quiet-luxury brands like Celine, The Row, and, of course, her own G. Label. But the look is less about branding than WASPy restraint, a territory Paltrow has been tilling for decades now. She comes by it honestly—it’s in her bones. (Even her ski outfit, she claimed on the stand, is one she’s owned for years; she said she dresses to blend in on the slopes.) Chic ski gear and tennis whites have proliferated since the pandemic, and old-money aesthetic feels like the antidote to the look-at-me, trend-enthralled world of TikTok. Fashion’s ongoing fascination with women like Carolyn Bessette Kennedy and Princess Diana and the stealth-wealth looks on Succession has only begun to burn. In an era of watered-down luxury, there’s a fascination with the idea of an innate style that you can’t buy. And Paltrow is its embodiment.

    gwyneth paltrow court looks

    A subdued look from The Row.

    Courtesy of the designer.

    The courtroom can be almost as heightened a fashion hothouse as the runway or red carpet, as plaintiffs, defendants, and witnesses try to walk the uneasy tightrope of looking stylish but not superficial, trustworthy but not dowdy, tasteful but not ostentatious. No wonder Anna Delvey’s courtroom looks got their own Instagram account, Winona Ryder’s Marc Jacobs wardrobe is still a touchstone, and Cardi B followed up her many designer moments in court with a panoply of community service fashions. If designers are, like the rest of us, tuning in to Court TV, we might well see a new muse for spring 2024.

    Headshot of Véronique Hyland

    ELLE Fashion Features Director

    Véronique Hyland is ELLE’s Fashion Features Director and the author of the book Dress Code, which was selected as one of The New Yorker’s Best Books of the Year. Her writing has previously appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, W, New York magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, and Condé Nast Traveler. 

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  • Ding-Dong, the -Cores Are Dead

    Ding-Dong, the -Cores Are Dead

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    Style Points is a weekly column about how fashion intersects with the wider world.

    “The primacy of clothes.” That was Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons’ stated starting point for their fall 2023 menswear collection back in January. And it’s a sentiment that designers have been going back to recently, tired of chasing the concentric trend cycles of TikTok trend forecasters, the tyranny of “-cores,” and the transient dopamine hit of viral moments. With the exit of maximalist maestro Alessandro Michele, an overall mood of minimalism in fashion, and a renewed interest in investing in classics, there was a level of restraint running through this season. These were not short-term infatuations. They were clothes to fall in love with.

    And there was a sense of time longer than a TikTok nanosecond—an affinity for the meandering run times of classic cinema, the attention span of a former world, the patience it takes for a designer to build a legacy, and the time-consuming craft that’s required to create pieces that can be worn forever.

    prada fall 2023

    Prada fall 2023.

    Courtesy of the designer.

    Miuccia Prada famously helped pioneer the idea of “ugly chic,” but this season was a meditation on beauty. And on uniforms, which have been a point of fascination for the duo. She and Simons referred to them as “sartorial representations of care and responsibility,” a sign of steadiness in a shifting world. Uniforms, in a way, are about time: the investment of skills and the persistence of labor. Utilitarian pieces like military jackets and duffel coats were juxtaposed with inordinately pretty and social event-worthy items (bridal gown-inspired 3D embellished floral skirts, candy-colored pumps.) It felt like their way of closing the gap between two diametrically opposed slices of fashion: quotidian fare and occasion dressing. Why is beauty restricted to certain socially-sanctioned moments? Why can’t we treat the everyday as an event, too?

    dior raw fall 2023

    Dior fall 2023.

    Courtesy of the designer.

    At Dior, Maria Grazia Chiuri looked to the 1950s, which don’t get as much of an airing in a fashion industry currently besotted with the ’90s and aughts. Drawing from the life and style of Catherine Dior (the house founder’s sister, a flower farmer and French Resistance fighter) and the singers Edith Piaf and Juliette Gréco, she crafted beatnik-existentialist uniforms that nodded at the undersung radicalism of the period. For Chiuri, clothing can absolutely be as intellectual as a Left Bank café society habitué. She called it “the tactile embodiment of a form of thinking, a means of approaching, of tuning into the world.”

    bottega veneta fall 2023

    Bottega Veneta fall 2023.

    Swan Gallet

    Bottega Veneta’s Matthieu Blazy followed up last season’s “Kate Moss in (luxe leather masquerading as denim) jeans and a flannel shirt” moment with sharp trenches, shirting and suits. While it had its maximalist moments, the collection demonstrated his power when it comes to low-key luxury. In his hands, even a simple white tank and jeans combo looked newly irresistible.

    bally fall 2023

    Bally fall 2023.

    Courtesy of the designers.

    Two young designers making much-anticipated sophomore efforts—Bally’s Rhuigi Villaseñor and Ferragamo’s Maximilian Davis—showed they could play in the big leagues with their fall collections. Called “The Persistence of Time,” Villaseñor’s collection was inspired by Hollywood, and it felt imbued with cinema’s heritage and history, whether it was the après-skiwear of Old Hollywood icons or the vestiges of red carpets past. Clearly, Villaseñor was one of many designers rethinking their own personal tempo. To quote from his show notes, “his approach eschews the fleeting moment for the full movie.”

    ferragamo fall 2023

    Backstage at Ferragamo fall 2023.

    Courtesy of Ferragamo.

    Davis also looked to the silver screen, and the past. He went back to the rich text that is the house’s cinematic heritage, particularly in the 1950s, the era that saw Salvatore Ferragamo outfitting Marilyn Monroe and Sophia Loren. “I was interested in using their glamour and beauty, and their way of dressing, as a reference, but looking at how we could make it feel modern,” the designer said in his show notes. He wanted to focus on “the more romantic side” of the decade, with elements like off-the-shoulder necklines and full skirts. But Davis’ midcentury starlet had an edge to her, too, one that came out in candy-wrapper surfaces and pops of fire hydrant red and highlighter yellow.

    the row winter 2023

    The Row winter 2023.

    Courtesy of the designer.

    And at The Row, always a bastion of Carolyn Bessette-style reserve, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen turned out grand gestures, like exaggeratedly oversized, knotted capes, or dresses with dramatic opera gloves. Despite their heightened quality, the clothes felt like they existed in real life, not on a runway—particularly in the case of a bright red coat clutched to the chest along with gloves and a minibag, the way the designers themselves might in one of their own endlessly-referenced street style photos. Another bright spot: seeing Maggie Rizer pop up on the runway. Along with welcome returns elsewhere this season from Amber Valletta and Jessica Stam, it was a reminder that fashion is at its best when it’s timeless.

    Headshot of Véronique Hyland

    ELLE Fashion Features Director

    Véronique Hyland is ELLE’s Fashion Features Director and the author of the book Dress Code,<https://bookshop.org/p/books/dress-code-unlocking-fashion-from-the-new-look-to-millennial-pink-veronique-hyland/17540227?ean=9780063050839> which was selected as one of The New Yorker’s Best Books of the Year. Her writing has previously appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, W, New York magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, and Condé Nast Traveler.

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  • Ziwe Walked Mugler Fall 2023, and the Runway May Never Recover

    Ziwe Walked Mugler Fall 2023, and the Runway May Never Recover

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    After a three-year hiatus, Mugler is back on the runway — and with quite the star-studded cast. 

    Ziwe made her catwalk debut at the brand’s Fall 2023 show, donning a lacy black set, featuring a mini skirt and long-sleeved bolero, with tall leather boots, matching black lipstick and hair pulled back into a high ponytail. (Was she a Mugler exclusive this season? Either way, she made for quite an iconic guest.) Also modeling the collection was Casey Cadwallader favorite Dominique Jackson, musician Arca and fashion week regular Paloma Elsesser, as well as industry titans Amber Valletta, Eva Herzigova and Debra Shaw. 

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    Angela Wei

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  • Watch the Valentino Runway Show Live

    Watch the Valentino Runway Show Live

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    Tune in above to watch a live stream of the Valentino Le Club Couture runway show in Paris, Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. EST. Homepage photo: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images Stay current on the latest trends, news and people shaping the fashion industry. Sign up for our daily newsletter.

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    Fashionista

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  • Watch the Marine Serre Runway Show Live

    Watch the Marine Serre Runway Show Live

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    Tune in above to watch a live stream of the Marine Serre Fall runway show, Rising Shelter, in Paris, Saturday at 2 p.m. EST. Homepage photo: Courtesy of Marine Serre Stay current on the latest trends, news and people shaping the fashion industry. Sign up for our daily newsletter.

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    Fashionista

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  • Watch the Dior Runway Show Live

    Watch the Dior Runway Show Live

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    Tune in above to watch a live stream of the Dior Men’s Fall runway show in Paris, Friday at 9 a.m. EST. Homepage photo: Jonathan Rashad/Getty Images Stay current on the latest trends, news and people shaping the fashion industry. Sign up for our daily newsletter.

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    Fashionista

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  • Lucas Bravo — A.K.A. le Chef Hot from ‘Emily in Paris’ — Walked the Paris Fashion Week Runway

    Lucas Bravo — A.K.A. le Chef Hot from ‘Emily in Paris’ — Walked the Paris Fashion Week Runway

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    When Lucas Bravo isn’t being a hot French chef or making Emily Cooper fall madly in love with him, he’s picking up an entirely new side hustle — while still being hot.

    The actor stepped out of the “Emily In Paris” universe and onto the runway as a model for Louis-Gabriel Nouchi‘s Fall 2023 debut during Paris Fashion Week Men’s. Bravo opened the show in a gray double-breasted coat styled with a white button-up peaking from underneath and a gray satin tie. 

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    India Roby

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  • Watch the Givenchy Runway Show Live

    Watch the Givenchy Runway Show Live

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    Tune in above to watch a live stream of the Givenchy Fall menswear runway show in Paris, Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. EST. Homepage photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images Stay current on the latest trends, news and people shaping the fashion industry. Sign up for our daily newsletter.

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    Fashionista

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  • Gucci Bids Maximalism Adieu in First Collection Post-Alessandro Michele

    Gucci Bids Maximalism Adieu in First Collection Post-Alessandro Michele

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    Nearly two months after Alessandro Michele‘s (seemingly non-amicable) departure from the brand, Gucci presented its Fall 2023 men’s collection in Milan, designed by the label’s in-house team.

    The show took place Friday in a dimly-lit roundabout theatre where the trio Ceramic Dog sat center stage playing rock music that got progressively louder and edgier as the show neared its close. In the show notes, Gucci said, “[the] circular formation [of the stage is] symbolic of the collaborative spinning wheel of the creative community at the heart of Gucci.”

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    Brooke Frischer

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  • In Lieu of a New Creative Director, Louis Vuitton Taps KidSuper Designer for Upcoming Menswear Presentation

    In Lieu of a New Creative Director, Louis Vuitton Taps KidSuper Designer for Upcoming Menswear Presentation

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    Louis Vuitton hasn’t enlisted a new creative director since the sudden death of Virgil Abloh in November 2021. Over a year later — and still without a permanent menswear designer — the brand is introducing an entirely new concept for Paris Men’s Fashion Week.

    For the Fall 2023 showcases from Jan. 17 to 22, the French luxury house is teaming up with a number of creatives, WWD reports. The “contributor collective” consists of French filmmakers Michel and Olivier Gondry; stylist and Off-White successor Ibrahim “Ib” Kamara; L.A.-based visual director Lina Kutsovskaya and a “world-famous music star” yet to be revealed. There will also be a guest runway designer, a first for Louis Vuitton: American creative and KidSuper founder Colm Dillane. 

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    India Roby

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