Not ANOTHER bare hip bone! All-star model cast walks Anthony Vaccarello's runway on bank of the Seine at Paris Fashion Week Anthony...
Not ANOTHER bare hip bone! All-star model cast walks Anthony Vaccarello's runway on bank of the Seine at Paris Fashion Week
Anthony Vaccarello has developed a big reputation for tiny clothes in a very short amount of time.
After model Anja Rubik showed up in the designer's leg-baring white gown to this year's Met Ball, Mr Vaccarello's name has become synonymous with 'hip' - both the bone and the club cool.
In a similar round-up of sexy and fearlessly body-baring clothes, Miss Rubik opened and closed his Spring show in Paris today, walking alongside top models Karlie Kloss, Arizona Muse, Cara Delevingne and Jourdan Dunn.
And miss Rubik's final look was nearly as revealing as the dress that put him on the fashion map just four months ago.
She sauntered in the black billowy one-sleeved number, which at first glance looked like its fluid silk had simply been slashed with a pair of scissors, twice, once at the leg and once at the opposite shoulder, revealing that famous hip bone and one long paralleling arm.
This, according to Style.com, 'drove the photographers to distraction. We heard catcalls.'
After miss Rubik showed up in the designer's leg-baring white gown to this year's Met Ball, Mr Vaccarello's name has become synonymous with 'hip' - both the bone and the club cool
Explaining his inspiration backstage, the designer said he used the image of a woman walking into the ocean fully dressed, then walking out again. What might that look like?
Mimicking the way her wet clothes might cling to her legs and hips, his collection was full of fuller, more spacious above-the-waist shapes, paired with tight asymmetrical miniskirts made from wrapped pieces of shirred lamé that clung to the small amount of model thigh they covered.
Most of the time the wrap-around silhouettes split the skirts directly in the middle, directing all eyes to the models' inner thighs
Explaining his inspiration backstage, the designer said he used the image of a woman walking into the ocean fully dressed, then walking out again
Some of his toga-style tops, and draped-around mini dresses which used zips and cord to hold them together, used the fabric so sparingly that they appeared like dried out shipwreck survivors.
He stuck to a palette of black, white and molten metallics, showing off the slippery silk collection to club music along the Seine river
News Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk
Anthony Vaccarello has developed a big reputation for tiny clothes in a very short amount of time.
After model Anja Rubik showed up in the designer's leg-baring white gown to this year's Met Ball, Mr Vaccarello's name has become synonymous with 'hip' - both the bone and the club cool.
In a similar round-up of sexy and fearlessly body-baring clothes, Miss Rubik opened and closed his Spring show in Paris today, walking alongside top models Karlie Kloss, Arizona Muse, Cara Delevingne and Jourdan Dunn.
And miss Rubik's final look was nearly as revealing as the dress that put him on the fashion map just four months ago.
She sauntered in the black billowy one-sleeved number, which at first glance looked like its fluid silk had simply been slashed with a pair of scissors, twice, once at the leg and once at the opposite shoulder, revealing that famous hip bone and one long paralleling arm.
This, according to Style.com, 'drove the photographers to distraction. We heard catcalls.'
Explaining his inspiration backstage, the designer said he used the image of a woman walking into the ocean fully dressed, then walking out again. What might that look like?
Mimicking the way her wet clothes might cling to her legs and hips, his collection was full of fuller, more spacious above-the-waist shapes, paired with tight asymmetrical miniskirts made from wrapped pieces of shirred lamé that clung to the small amount of model thigh they covered.
Most of the time the wrap-around silhouettes split the skirts directly in the middle, directing all eyes to the models' inner thighs
Explaining his inspiration backstage, the designer said he used the image of a woman walking into the ocean fully dressed, then walking out again
Some of his toga-style tops, and draped-around mini dresses which used zips and cord to hold them together, used the fabric so sparingly that they appeared like dried out shipwreck survivors.
He stuck to a palette of black, white and molten metallics, showing off the slippery silk collection to club music along the Seine river
News Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk