Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Chanel in Cannes


 After viewing only half of Chanel's newest Cruise Collection
my mind started thinking
"this is not going to work, no way, cannot believe
the lack of creativity in design, kinda boring."


 
Evidently, Tim Blanks of Style.com felt almost the same
but he used a whole lot of words, which follow.
And, I promise, I did not read the article before I looked
at the photos of the collection.



Antibes, France, May 9, 2011


By Tim Blanks


"Billion-dollar babes." Karl-ette Caroline Sieber nailed the essence of the Cruise collection that Lagerfeld showed for Chanel tonight. The venue—the Hotel du Cap, in Antibes on the French Riviera—is, as the designer himself pointed out, possibly the most expensive hotel in the world, and he booked out the whole joint a year ago for however many days it took to get this show on the runway. Plus, he'd flown in a cast of top models and glamorous front-row horseflesh. Plus plus, he accessorized his looks with real jewels, diamonds, and pearls, like the comet of sparklers that traced the armhole on Karolina Kurkova's top. "Too much may not be enough," Lagerfeld mused at show's end.






He was reflecting on the world of difference between Saint-Tropez, where he showed his last Cruise collection a year ago, and Antibes, which is a few hours down the coast. "This is the other side of paradise," he said, meaning that the Hotel du Cap defines a degree of extravagance that former fishing village Saint-Tropez doesn't aspire to. But, diamonds aside, quite how the notion of a schism of excess crossed over to the clothes Karl showed wasn't as clear. He claimed he was inspired by Rita Hayworth and Aly Khan, former hot-blooded habitués of the Hotel du Cap, but the lean silhouette he opted for was more cerebral than sensual, even if the opening hits of broom yellow and lilac did suggest local summer flora and the soundtrack was pumping red-hot Prince. Jackets were seamed close to the body, skirts ended below the knee in a kick pleat. Then the collection expanded into an almost-infinity of options. "I saw everything from a day at the beach to a wedding," said the actress Rachel Bilson.






Which meant that this collection lacked the focus that made Fall's ready-to-wear, for instance, such a dystopian tour de force. Kristen McMenamy in a bathing suit and dramatic black and white wrap shared runway space with Stella Tennant in a pleated mid-calf dress in navy crepe that was topped by a long, sleeveless vest. Such variables are a smart commercial move, given that Chanel's Cruise collection stays in stores longer than any other of the collections that Lagerfeld designs each year for the label. Judged as a series of stand-alone items, it was easy to extract some immediate winners: the full trousers slashed up the calf, the floaty three-quarter-length dresses with the shirred midriffs,



or Natasha Poly's white beaded sheath. Elsewhere, Lagerfeld's claim that it is his "job to challenge" produced a hard-to-get-around oddity like the hybrid thong-boot footwear. Perhaps that could be rationalized as the shoe for someone who has everything else her heart could possibly desire, in keeping with what the designer saw as the spirit of the locale. But there are some desires that are clearly better left unsatisfied. "



Go to this link to see another article about the Hotel Du Cap,
which is truly one of the most beautiful, elegant hotels in the world.
This article makes it sound like the party was fabulous even though
the outfits weren't.
Oh, well...



Does anyone other than me think Kaiser Karl is trying to be
"all things to all people" which minimizes his focus on what
he really does extremely well...designing for Chanel?

?
to see more of the fablously beautiful Hotel du Cap
& the pool bar known as Eden-Roc
  in
Cap D'Antibes
click below:

fashion series seems to have begun, ladies...

& welcome to ALL of my new followers, please leave a comment
so I will know how to reach you...
xx's






Photobucket



8 comments:

  1. yawn is what I thought!! There was one black and white dress that I thought was really elegant and beautiful but out of 75 pieces!! And those wierd sandals that go up to your knees! eek! Too minimalist. It simply wasn't the glam factor we expect from the house. xo

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  2. I have to agree with you, not very inspiring!

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  3. Un-inspiring, Un-flattering and very Un-interesting...
    you were so right!

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  4. To me this is very out of character for Kaiser Karl, and I feel as if the entire collection is very misplaced.. I am left with a feeling of confusion.. I really don't know what to say of it all.

    xx C

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  5. Most the designers I see today have no taste. Not all but most. As far as Hollywood and the Movies 85 %
    stink. What has happened to Talent?? Where are the Cole Porters and George Gershwins? CoCo
    will that go down the tube as well.
    you only have to find architect Design Magazine 1970's and compare the work today. Is it the schools????

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  6. The shoes crack me up. Seriously. But like all creative people, our juices ebb and flow. We should just call this the Ebber Flow collection. It will wash away soon and unfortunately the dollars spent on it as well! XO, Kelly

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  7. Ebber Flow Collection! Perfect, Kelly. The sandal boots are the single hallmark item of this collection and will probably sell out at 1000% markup...but, hey, that's fashion, isn't it?

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  8. I love Tim Blanks. You're both right! There's pictures of him on my blog. We see each other out a lot xx

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