Life & Style | Beauty & Fashion
Wild and sporty
From parkas and hoodies to rainbow colours and crazy prints — designers mix things up a bit at London Fashion Week
- Image Credit: AP
London Fashion Week is winding down — but not before some of Britain's brightest young designers showcased the inventiveness, eclectic range and irreverence that the British capital's fashion scene has to offer.
On the final day of womenswear shows at the week-long style extravaganza, two talented designers, each with their own distinctive visions of femininity, delivered some of the most covetable clothes seen during the week.
Fluid silk-dipped back gowns, fur-trimmed pencil skirts and beaded satin shifts in rich berry reds, turquoise and vivid purple at Roksanda Ilincic painted a picture of refined, aristocratic allure, but this season the Serbian designer decided to mix things up a bit by adding a sporty, urban theme.
Ilincic, who is best known for her glamorous evening wear and has dressed the likes of Michelle Obama, said she used parkas, hoodies and leisure wear because she didn't like how women always feel that they have to look immaculate.
The clothes may be casual, but they are far from slovenly looking. Sweatshirts had fur hoods and silk panels, while the printed puffer jacket, seen at other shows this week including Christopher Kane, was white with artistic, hand-painted black ink stripes.
"As a designer you can't do the same thing over and over again," Ilincic said after the show. "It's about keeping it fresh and evolving."
Rich colour palette
While Ilincic's beloved jewel tones — worn with clashing lemon court shoes — made up the collection's rich colour palette, the designer closed her show with a series of pristine white outfits. The last model, who wore a slim, long white wool dress with a frill hem and luxe fur hood, looked like a regal snow queen.
"It's quite wintry," Ilincic said of the white designs. "It's like a breath of fresh air."
Greece-born Mary Katrantzou was the other show that wowed the crowds Tuesday — though her aesthetic could not have been more different.
For her keenly awaited new collection, Katrantzou displayed experimental silhouettes, opulent rainbow colours, and crazy prints of pencils, spoons and typewriters.
Her admirers wouldn't expect anything less. Since her debut at the capital's fashion week in 2008, Katrantzou has gained a wide following with her unique flair for artsy design, extraordinary prints and architectural cutting.
Inspired by the colours of a crayon box, the designer opened with a series of garments that played with exaggerated structure: These included the designer's signature stiff lampshade-shaped skirts, ruffled waistlines, and baby doll shaped dresses that had ruffled chiffon skirt layers billowing dramatically from the chest down.
Old typewriter
Then there was an eruption of intricate, all-over prints, which included hyper-real bows, clocks and spoons. One of the models wore a red dress incorporating a print of an old typewriter, while another sported a long-sleeved, high-necked maxi dress that was covered with a green garden maze print. A third wore a witty pair of yellow trousers with a pinkish waistline — the trousers resembled a giant pencil with eraser.
If that wasn't enough, one skirt was composed of dozens of actual pencils. She closed her show with a series of dresses with Victorian-inspired details including corsets and high collars.
While Katrantzou's show was wild, but also admirably creative, fun and different — design duo Meadham Kirchoff went even further.
The pair — Edward Meadham, who is English, and Benjamin Kirchhoff, who is French — threw trends and seriousness to the air and delivered a totally fun, outrageously styled show full of glitter, tinsel and a '70s disco vibe.
Circus-style face paint, psychedelic rainbow colours and sequinned, flared-leg trouser suits were paraded out in a feel-good finale to ABBA's Dancing Queen, which made the usually sombre fashion crowd erupt in grins and giggles.
More from Beauty & Fashion
More from Life & Style
Life & Style editor's choice
-
'Hypnotism cured my diabetes'
When Linda Robson was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, she found an unusual way of tackling it
-
Driven: Renault's desert Duster
This Renault may sound like it was named after a hoover. One thing's for sure — the Duster is here to clean up
-
Study in style: InsideOut video shoot
Go behind the scenes at InsideOut's May 2012 home office shoot




