The Dior Show Closed With Karlie Kloss's Naked Ass
LatestThe spring Christian Dior collection walked in Paris earlier today. Dior still has not replaced fired creative director John Galliano, who lost his job after being arrested for hurling racial abuse at a couple in a Paris café six months ago, so studio head Bill Gaytten took the bow at the show’s conclusion. Karolina Kurkova opened, wearing a houndstooth ’50s-style blazer and a cream organza skirt. Karlie Kloss, wearing a black lace dress with a sheer pink skirt, closed — meaning the last thing the fashion press saw was her nearly-naked butt sashaying back down the runway. (And a million bad bloggers hit publish on totes original “cheeky” puns…) The collection was restrained (contrary to the insanely haphazard couture show Gaytten oversaw): neat, even prim, clothes that owe a big debt to vintage styles and the house’s own archives. Kimono sleeves, full skirts, boat necks. A sort of Dior greatest-hits album — with all the nostalgia, familiarity, and the cashing-in that term implies. It was, dare we say it, a tad boring. Orlando Bloom and Leighton Meester are among the celebrities who showed. When asked about Galliano’s replacement, C.E.O. Sidney Toledano reportedly told the press, “Show some patience!” [AP]
“Marc Jacobs is still seen as the frontrunner for the job, though talks have been tough and recently at a standstill, sources said.” And the Galliano scandal does not appear to have tarnished the Dior brand: Toledano reports that the fall collection, which of course Galliano mostly designed, has been selling very well. [WWD]
Style.com’s Meenal Mistry reports that Paris cabbies maintain a passing familiarity with the goings-on at Dior. [@MeenalMistry]
Also without a creative director this season is Ungaro, which cut ties with Giles Deacon just last month. (Deacon’s fall collection is shown at right.) Ungaro has seen a revolving door of creative directors since Emanuel Ungaro retired in 2005. Literally everyone has had a try at designing Ungaro, up to and including Lindsay Lohan. The house thinks it can get by on “heritage” styles for this season, and obviously there’s a design team in place, but going leaderless is a risky move in fashion. The press hates it, for one thing, because the press is very invested in the notion of the designer-as-individual-genius: the Great Man theory of Fashion, if you will. And customers, too, are infected by this idea; part of what you’re paying for when you buy a $3,000 dress is the knowledge that it was touched by a highly trained set of human hands working from a unique aesthetic vision. Right now, you can’t buy Ungaro dresses (or Ungaro anything else) at any U.S. department store. They’ve all dropped the line. [WSJ]
Olivier Rousteing‘s first collection for Balmain has been warmly greeted by critics. Suzy Menkes calls it “a hit.” Christina Binkley says, “Toreador jackets, tight leather pants and beaded tunics were pure ‘Balmain,’ which is to say, sexy, wildly embellished with metallic details, and impossibly expensive.” Which is to say Rousteing finally made Balmain look as expensive as it is overpriced, we suppose. [IHT, WSJ]
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