Dudes and their Diors

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Kris Van Assche presented his own menswear collection today in Paris, and there are some pieces that are truly unique. I really love the hybrid clothes that he presented, especially the black hoodie top that turns into a dress shirt at the bottom.

I can't wait to see what he has in store for Dior Homme.
 

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From Style.com:

Before the start of the Dior Homme show, one front-row attendee fretted that the runway, stained with slush from the shoes of the crowd, would sound an off note. She needn't have worried. Just before the first model came out, the baize was pulled up to reveal a gleaming, pristine runway below; like the rest of the set, it was pure iPod white.

That's a marker of Kris Van Assche's spit-shined Dior Homme, where rigor is a cardinal virtue. He was making, he said after the show, rigorous clothes for the future—not 50 years into it, but "fashion for tomorrow." He leaned on technical fabrics and fabric treatments more than ever before, and honed his palette and silhouette. Tomorrow's suiting is a sleek, shaved version of today's. It zips where we might button, whether on a suit jacket or an ultrathin cardigan. It speeds around the curves so fast that it requires safety belts, which circle many of the pieces with nickel buckles.

Van Assche was musing on the codes of menswear as a sort of received wisdom—almost literally as a genetic code, ready for the modifying. History provides some of the raw material, but so does parentage: in his case, Dior Homme, which was built on the slick black suit. The shadow of Van Assche's predecessor, Hedi Slimane, stretched out over the proceedings, more than usual as the fashion world prepares for his first Saint Laurent menswear show. Van Assche was adamant about his own changes to the house DNA. He swatted away the description "skinny," the constant tag of Slimane's Dior Homme; in its place he offered "sporty."

However you described it, the collection was impressive—maybe more impressive than lovable—in its pared-down essentialism. It was certainly beautifully realized. The zippered and buckled suits and outerwear were clothes with the fat burned off: the most basic of basic black, white, and navy (though a few had pinstripes in gray and Dior's bloodshot red), fitted to the millimeter. No wonder the designer was referencing Andrew Niccol's Gattaca. One risk of evolving so far, so fast is that you sideline desire. There was austerity here—Van Assche preferred to call it "calmness," in contrast to the world's present chaos—but that's not a quality to quicken the pulse. But if he didn't always attend to the heart, he didn't neglect the mind. What was the significance of the new insignia, a triangle circumscribed within a circle, that appeared on suits and sweaters? "You're supposed to ask," Van Assche said. "That's the point."

Here are some looks which I love:
 

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More looks:

I really need one of those belts! I love the inclusion of dark purple in the Dior Homme colours as well.
 

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The shoes: (I love the buckles)
 

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The buckles: (they are in the collars, too)
 

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The purple (close-up) and the patent finishes:
 

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And finally the bags. I love the briefcase with the folded-over zippered closure with buckle. It's really chic!
 

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Some backstage pics from WWD.

The cardigans look amazing!
 

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I love the sharpness of the silhouettes but overall I am getting a very Gucci-meets-Burberry vibe. The buckled hardware in particular is very Gucci Spring 2010:

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The zip-up suit jackets and cardigans are cool though.
 
eminere™;23786123 said:
I love the sharpness of the silhouettes but overall I am getting a very Gucci-meets-Burberry vibe. The buckled hardware in particular is very Gucci Spring 2010:

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The zip-up suit jackets and cardigans are cool though.

Yes I thought of Gucci too when I saw those buckles. I have two belts with this buckle from Gucci and I LOVE them! I can't wait to get a Dior one.
 
Here is an article by Tim Blanks of the Saint Laurent menswear collection (Fall 2013) by former Dior Homme designer Hedi Slimane.

If it wasn't exactly a manifesto—the show last October for his first women's collection had already fulfilled that function—Hedi Slimane's menswear debut consolidated his OCD approach to his gig at Saint Laurent. His manipulation of every minuscule detail leading up to and surrounding the show practically guaranteed anticlimax. The invitation? A visual journal by L.A. polymath aesthete Brian Roettinger. The model casting? Unheard-of indie band members from England, France, and the U.S. The music? Something by SF muso Ty Segall, which managed to combine the garage racket of the Stooges with the primitive electronic howl of Hawkwind. The set? A whirling industrial construct, Conrad Shawcross meets Close Encounters. All of that added up to shoulda-been-fabulous. But we're forgetting about the clothes. And maybe Slimane did, too.

The kindest thing to be said about Slimane's first official men's collection was that he made a guy to go with his girl. If Kate Moss was the ideal woman for the satanic L.A. gypsy he presented for Spring, her husband, Jamie Hince, would surely do full justice to the rock avatar Slimane marched down his men's catwalk for Fall. You don't even want to go there with the skinny; that is already such a cliché in the lexicon of Slimanery. "Slim man," geddit? This was just as much about the plaid shirts, distressed jeans, drainpipe leathers, trailing leopard-print scarves, girlfriend's bits and pieces (cue Julia Nobis and company on the runway to underscore the androgyny), vintage coats and cavalry jackets…a rock prototype that can be traced from its origins with the Strolling Bones back in the Dark Ages of geetar bands all the way through its elucidation by an endless number of bastard spawn up to the jangly here and now, although Nirvana are a particularly pointy way station. All of it is thrilling in theory and practice, but it was a surreal incongruity to see it spotlit in a very expensive fashion presentation. Slimane's passion for the music he loves, the bands that make that music, and the lifestyle that surrounds it is entirely understandable, laudable, and well served with integrity by his photographic tributes. When he spun his ardor into high fashion today, it made a lot less sense, especially as the kids who are the prime components of his vision can already shop this look for zilch down the funky end of any L.A. boulevard.

Source (with photos): http://www.style.com/fashionshows/review/F2013MEN-YSLRG


Having been his first menswear collection in years after exiting from Dior Homme, I have to say that I agreed with Tim Blanks' review. The collection wasn't very impressive. I always thought that his collections for Dior Homme were supreme (and better than Kris Van Assche's), but this Saint Laurent collection left me with a "that's it?" feeling.
 
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