Raf Simons' jailbirds kick off Paris fashion week
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Designer Raf Simons kicked off the start to five days men's fashion in Paris on Wednesday, with a collection making it clear he intends to make his audience work for his art.
Last year the Belgian designer - who as well as having his own label is also artistic director at Dior - bussed several hundred photographers, journalists and buyers out to a distant Parisian suburb. This year, he opted for the smart Place Vendome, but sent out e-mails a few hours before effectively warning invitees it was not likely to be a comfortable experience.
"Please note Raf Simons has decided to show his Spring/Summer 2015 collection in front of a standing audience," the message said. Photographers and Smartphone users were also informed that Simons would be using "specific lighting which does not tolerate flash photography".
"Therefore we ask you to please turn off the flash setting on your cameras and phones," the e-mail added. Simons kept his audience waiting 35 minutes before dimming the lights to an eerie red glow and sending out a collection that looked as if it was inspired by prison uniforms.
Long denim shirts, layered tank tops showing off bulging biceps and tattoos and jackets with ID badge prints were teamed with narrow trousers and sneakers with flashing LEDs.Models with long, brushed-forward fringes and long wisps moved about robot-like, starring straight ahead with dead eyes.
There was no such austerity at fellow Belgian Walter Van Beirendonck's colourful and eccentric "Whambam!" show, although an ability to suspend disbelief would have been useful. Embroidered tail coats with pieces cut out and others left dangling from the back were teamed with wide cropped trousers, coloured sashes and big sandals.
Boiler suits in green and red, meanwhile, came covered in frills and military-style epaulettes. Elsewhere, French designer Christophe Lemaire brought the fashion crowd back down to earth with a collection that was all about stylish workwear from big, breezy linen-cotton parkas to tapered trousers and shirt-jackets.
The famously gimmick-free Lemaire, who is also creative director of womenswear at Hermes, told AFP there was "nothing artificial, no concept - just clothes". "It's very much about workwear, work ethics, but trying to find this balance between functionality, elegance, ease and lightness," he told AFP backstage.
"It was sporty but still sophisticated, I hope," he said, adding that the suits had a "soft Japanese 1980s feeling. Beautiful, soft, wool gabardine suiting. Casual suits that are between shirts and jackets," he said. (Helen, AFP)
Photos: Raf Simons Spring/Summer 2015 collection