Let the bloom, bloom : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Let the bloom, bloom

Florals for spring? Eschew your Devil Wears Prada-inspired sneer, because they can be ground-breaking. Or, at least, they can look new.

Let the bloom, bloom

Models walk the ramp in Prada spring-summer 2016 collection



Alexander Fury 

Florals for spring? Eschew your Devil Wears Prada-inspired sneer, because they can be ground-breaking. Or, at least, they can look new. A few years back, Christopher Kane presented a spring/summer 2014 show whose foliate inspirations were the very definition of abstract. Utilising school biology illustrations, Kane embroidered cross-sections of flowers, or even wove them into lavish, laborious and Latin-annotated laces, while simple sweatshirts were adorned with bisected blooms or words like ‘Petal’ in lace-inlaid block capitals. It was the familiar floral motif presented in a way we had never seen before, and it was electrifying.

Fast forward to spring 2016, and everyone’s at it — rethinking foliage motifs, and trying to make them modern, exciting.  Mary Katrantzou amped-up the contrast on flower-pricked fields and starry skies, blending the two together in dresses that, with undulating folds of fabric, themselves resembled strange tropical blossoms. Erdem turned his brocades inside-out In fuzzy fils-coupe, giving flowery fabrics a three-dimensional feel. And Christopher Kane once again abstracted them, into giant two-dimensional cut-out flowers that wound up looking a bit like fried eggs. 

Even common-or-garden flowers are being reinvented by canny frock-merchants. Vetements — the much buzzed-about and even more copied Paris-based collective — hit a home-run with a traditional floral pattern cut into a baggy, saggy dress, with ruffles and tie-neck. Sounds frumpy — and it could be. But somehow, on everyone, it seems achingly cool (horrible word, but no other option). Meanwhile, Alessandro Michele’s Gucci has strewn posies of three-dimensional flowers across evening dresses — his signature being a corsage clasping the throat. Easily imitated, especially if you still have them from the last time they were fashionable (Chanel also offers a chic line in pin-on camellias – each hand-made in Paris).

Variety marks this trend out, with high street and high fashion designers equally thinking outside of the box. Expect to see florals fractured into patchworks, blown-up into placement prints where a single bloom spans the entirety of a garment, or embroidered onto unexpected garments, like slick leather biker jackets or utilitarian sweatshirts. Oh, and for the more traditionally-minded, it also means you can take your pick from flower-flecked frocks. This spring/summer season surrenders some of the prettiest for years. — The Independent

Top News

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

The annual report of the State Department highlights instanc...

Family meets Amritpal Singh in Assam jail after his lawyer claims he'll contest Lok Sabha poll from Punjab’s Khadoor Sahib

Couldn't talk due to strictness of jail authorities: Amritpal's family after meeting him in jail

Their visit comes a day after Singh's legal counsel Rajdev S...

Centre grants 'Y' category security cover to Phillaur MLA Vikramjit Chaudhary among 3 Punjab Congress rebels

Centre grants 'Y' category security to Phillaur MLA Vikramjit Chaudhary and 2 other Punjab Congress rebels

The Central Reserve Police Force has been directed by the Mi...

First Sikh court opens in UK to deal with family disputes: Report

First Sikh court opens in UK to deal with family disputes

According to ‘The Times’, the Sikh court was launched last w...


Cities

View All