Sunday, March 6, 2011

Jean-Paul Gaultier looked after by women who, in his words, "do not want to look like their 20-year-old daughter in a characteristic playfully to show fall-winter Saturday during the Paris Fashion Week.


Working with "a little bit ago, looking cliche elegance, plus the soundtrack harking back to 1960, Gauthier tried to" copy images from memory with the materials and effects today. "


French comedic actress Valerie Lemercier joined the parade of models with a towering beehive hairdos that went down the runway and threw a scarf or a jacket in front of photographers, then walked back.


Thrown in the mix of Australian male model Andrew Pejic, 19, beloved Gauthier, 57, for his long, straight blonde hair and androgynous style that made him indistinguishable from his female counterparts.


Earlier in the day, Haider Ackermann, Antwerp designer, whose name appears as a possible successor to the disgraced John Galliano at Christian Dior introduced one of the best received shows of the season.


His sensual and clean collection of the Palais de Tokyo on the grounds of the volume of layered dresses of silk, satin and leather, sometimes with bare shoulders or legs slit high or very low-cut neckline.


The result was a colorful, sexy yet elegant silhouette with a recent Columbia and was born the adopted son of a French couple, who spent most of its existence, living in Africa.


Paris Fashion Week - correctly for the event, which runs through nine days - was opened on Tuesday against the backdrop of the scandal, when John Galliano, chief designer of Christian Dior in 15 years, was fired against a furore in the alleged anti-Semitic remarks.


Galliano has publicly apologized for his behavior in a drunken Parisian cafe, but denied that anti-Semitic, reportedly, he went into a rehabilitation clinic in Arizona before the trial in France over his alleged remarks.


Dior went ahead without the Galliano on Friday and unveiled its autumn-winter collection, sending members of his studio team in white coats for the standing ovation at the end of the show - the moment when a bright London-bred designer generally accepted theatrical bow. own self-titled


Galliano label, majority owned by Dior, was scheduled to stage his show on Sunday, but this event has been reduced to a simple presentation for buyers and journalists only.


In other show on Saturday, the avant-garde Dutch design duo Viktor and Rolf lowered drawbridge and sent the army of robots in a sharply-sculpted garments inspired by medieval knights.


From their faces made up to look sun-burned red, the model came from a sort of underground hell to parade down the runway at Les Tuileries to combat techno beat.


The tone of the establishment of open mind - a dark jacket with big, fancy collar - followed by a pleated skirts and dresses in white, black, leather and metallic shades, sometimes with a stylized floral detail at the shoulders.


Evening wear featured a heavy tuxedo dress cinched with a wide belt.


Australian origin, the Paris designer Martin Grant kept a characteristically sharp and sophisticated in its Fall-Winter show in the School of Fine Arts, which opened to the beat of Bobby Womack's "Across. 110 I Street


Capture the spotlight - and probably be loved by the client - a glossy poppy-red cloak with a fur collar coat, which was long enough to almost kiss the floor.

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