Showing posts with label Givenchy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Givenchy. Show all posts

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Perfection: Givenchy Haute Couture, FW12.13


PARIS, July 3, 2012
By Nicole Phelps
Riccardo Tisci brought together dueling impulses in his Fall Couture collection: On the one hand, he returned to the simple lines of the sixties, when Hubert de Givenchy was at the center of the Paris scene. On the other, he riffed on the look of gypsies, specifically the gypsies you encounter in present-day southern Italy, where he's from. The haute and the street—it's the kind of mix this designer loves.

After seven years at the house, the Tisci codes are instantly recognizable, and copied nearly as quickly. Beaded fringes will be multiplying at the fast-fashion brands as quickly as machines can string them. Here at the mother ship, of course, the beads were painstakingly strung by hand, red and black ones in a pattern that together created a mosaic design to match the embroidery on the top of a floor-length cape. It was the collection's pièce de résistance, and under it, the model wore a jumpsuit made from jersey on top and beaded velvet on bottom, complete with attached open-toe, kitten-heel booties.

Beyond It factor, which he has in spades, technique is the thing at Tisci's Givenchy. The black nappa fringe on a dress boasting intricate leather embroidery extended all the way to the ground, and a halter-neck gown came with a built-in cape that was obsessively embroidered with sequins not on its outside but on its inside.

You felt like Tisci was fighting his own impulses with a pair of nude-colored dresses that featured sheared mink bodices and narrow, unadorned wool and cashmere skirts. And yet that was intriguing, too. It's more than likely that his signatures—a lavishly beaded and fringed cardigan that shaded from cappuccino at the neckline to deep espresso at its hem, for instance—will be the collection's hot tickets. But those restrained column gowns pointed in a new direction, one that's worth exploring further.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Givenchy Haute Couture S/S 2012 Paris

Each crocodile scale was cut out individually, dried, numbered, then hand-sewn to a nude body stocking.
It took 350 hours to create this gown.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Givenchy Fall/Winter 2010 Campaign

Fall/Winter 2010
Photographed by Mert & Marcus
Models : Lea T., Malgosia Bela, Catherine McNeil, Simon Nessman,
Mariacarla Boscono, Jonathan Marquez, Ming Xi, Joan Smalls,
Paolo Roldan, Dafne Cejas, Willy Cartier

Givenchy Fall/Winter 2011 Campaign

Naomi Campbell
Photographed by Mert & Marcus
Models : Naomi Campbell, Natalia Vodianova, Mariacarla Boscano,
Kristin McMenamy, Jonathan Marquez, Rob Evans

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Givenchy, Haute Couture Spring 2011

Squeal!!!!  Beyonce in Givenchy Couture in her newest video!!!! LOOK!

Review by Tim Blanks
The last time Riccardo Tisci showed a couture collection for Givenchy, the zipper pulls were bones. This season, they were wings. Fashion's favorite goth took flight with a new obsession: Japan. Not the land of obis and geishas, he said, but the Japan of robot toys and the dancer Kazuo Ohno, whose intensely ritualized style of performance, called Butoh, was a huge influence on Tisci's friend, the singer Antony Hegarty. When Ohno died, Antony and the Johnsons performed a tribute concert that so inspired Tisci, the dead man became a sort of muse for the designer. And this was the result. According to Tisci, Ohno provided the romance, the melancholy, and the palette (the color of dried flowers). Robots, meanwhile, influenced the appliqués, the shoes, and the huge hats by Philip Treacy (couple this with Armani last night, and Treacy is clearly the go-to guy for sci-fi headgear).

Liana Loves...

Liana Loves...
Take a peek at my favorites!