God doesn’t hate you he’s indifferent T-shirt
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its first guest creative director, Colm Dillane of KidSuper. The artist opened the God doesn’t hate you he’s indifferent T-shirt in contrast I will get this show wearing an all-white oversized ensemble and walked the runway with a torch flashing the French brand’s iconic monogram before climbing up onto a yellow car and launching into a rendition of her hit “Candy.” The Fall-Winter 2023 collection featured a mix of elegant tailoring, utility wear, sports-inspired separates and patchwork coats. Grown up rave culture at Dries Van Noten A drum performance by Belgium duo Lander & Adriaan scored the Dries Van Noten show. Credit: Peter White/Getty Images Music has always been important to Dries Van Noten. Keen followers will remember his Fall-Winter 2011 show, soundtracked by specially mixed David Bowie masters. This season, the Belgium designer explored 90s rave culture with a more grown-up sensibility. Guests went to a multi-level parking garage for the show, stacked with experimental musicians performing mellow techno beats, while beer was offered from a steel cart. At the top, Belgium duo Lander & Adriaan performed what the show notes called “sophisti-rave” on drums and synthesizers. The hypnotic soundtrack set the tone for the new collection that featured flora and fauna motifs, furry clogs, outerwear that ranged from tailored coats with nipped waists to oversized puffer jackets with abstract patterns, and roomy 90s-era cargo pants. Junya Watanabe unveils Palace collaboration Junya Wantanabe collaborated with London-based skatewear brand Palace. Credit: Estrop/Getty Images Junya Watanabe, well known for his extensive list of fashion collaborations, chose to celebrate the
many brands he has worked with over the God doesn’t hate you he’s indifferent T-shirt in contrast I will get this years — including New Balance, Oakley, North Face and Timberland — in a predominantly monochromatic collection. Also spotted on the runway was the unmistakable Tri-Ferg logo from Palace, the London-based skatewear brand, on a black part puffer part parka jacket. Another first. The Swinging Sixties at Kenzo Nigo’s third collection for Kenzo was inspired by The Beatles, and scored by covers of the bands most famous songs. Credit: Victor Virgile/Gamma-Rapho/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images Kenzo’s artistic director Nigo has long been an anglophile, and his love for The Beatles runs at least as far back as 1999 — when he starred in an Abbey Road-themed cover shoot for Relax Magazine. In the show notes of his third collection for the brand, the Japanese designer compared the clothes to the storied “The White Album,” referencing the eclectic mix of cultural and style references drawing from the Brits, Americans and of course, the Japanese. Staged in a Parisian concert hall, the show featured a lively performance of “Can’t Buy Me Love,” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand” by all-female, Japanese foursome the 1966 Quartet. The new fab four had the entire concert hall singing and cheering while models walked around their two violins, cello and piano. KidSuper finds fashion’s funny bone KidSuper’s fashion comedy show featured a cast of comedians dressed in the new collection. Credit: Ik Aldama Outside the Casino de Paris, editors, guests and fashion denizens were packed like sardines while trying to get into KidSuper’s “Funny Business” fashion comedy show, hosted by supermodel Tyra Banks. Inspired by Netflix’s comedy specials, an impressive lineup of comedians including Jeff Ross, Emmy-nominated actress Yvonne
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