fashion for faith in four colors: A/W 2014
Showing posts with label A/W 2014. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A/W 2014. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

TRENDS // INTERNATIONAL TALENT SUPPORT - 2014

International Talent Support is a platform for creative minds, now in its thirteenth edition. It was created to offer visibility, support and a voice to young talents from every corner of the earth, and continues to do so. It gives young designers the chance to set their creativity free through financial opportunities, work placements and the chance to have their work shown to a jury made up of real experts. Be on a look out for future competitions and you can learn about the ITS here

Below is ITS' 2014 Trend Report which is a collective report based on the 2014 applicants and analyzed by Angelo Flaccavento who is a fashion writer based in Italy.  The original report can be viewed here

THANKS

We would like to thank all of the ITS 2014 applicants for sharing with us their precious treasures! And a special thanks goes to the designers whose images have been fundamental and so enriching for this report.

INTRODUCTION

We have been researching creativity for over thirteen years now and we always have two objectives on our mind: on the one hand our attention focuses on spotting the new ITS generation, on the other we aim at detecting any signal arriving from the world of creativity. We do our best to read between the lines and like gold miners we look for every single speck of gold. The result we wish to achieve is a snapshot free from the structures of conventional thinking, able to capture universal and across-the-board feelings tracing, if possible and if present, a common will and desire. A connecting thread that goes from Argentina to Zimbabwe passing through Australia, Belarus, China and linking Indonesia to Alaska, Japan to Iceland, South Africa to Malaysia. Thus different cultural realities that convey and rework the same message by giving their own personal interpretation are mixed together, without necessarily losing their identity. In a globalised world the message is clear: the same interrogatives seem to be puzzling creatives all over the world. Each one of them gives their own personal answer. Sometimes the reactions from people both physically and culturally far apart can be shockingly close. Furthermore we would like to underline that the images we used were not chosen on the basis of an evaluation of merit, but because they clearly visualise the trends we have detected. Many other collections referred to the same trends, though not presenting images that could be used in this report.

ANALYSIS

This year the analysis of the trends has been carried out by Angelo Flaccavento, an independent fashion writer based in Italy contributing to a roster of Italian and international publications. He works out of Sicily, where he still lives, traveling most of the time.

Fragmentation rules and the hyper-personal dominates, in every possible field. The global scenario obeys to the pervasive logics of digital culture – we’re all part of the plug generation, whether we like it or not. Chronology has been erased for good to be replaced by a sort of eternal, all-mixing, polymorphous and ever-changing present. Everything, or almost everything, is acceptable and relevant at the same time: highbrow and lowbrow, past and present, streamlined and baroque, fast-forward and rewind.

The state of young fashion creativity passing through the ITS lenses makes no exception. This is said without a hint of judgment: the world we live is one, and the stimuli we receive are, more or less, the same, depending on how fine-tuned are the antennae capturing them. It’s how we separately process the inputs which creates personal results. What follows, thereafter, should be intended as a series of paths, traced lightly with the thinnest of pencils. This trend report, for lack of a better definition, is a non-dogmatic map: a compendium of suggested journeys into a cluster of images, based on this writer’s point of view over iconographic materials which, out of necessity, are just a selection. In other words, there is no pretense of universal value: the raw stuff is not, hence the map cannot be. Period. This said, the fastidiously particular can sometimes be more accurate than the vastly encyclopedic. Or at least, it attempts to. After all, we are talking about submissions coming from 279 schools and 63 different countries for the present edition: a pretty wide cross-section making for a rich and layered specimen.
The picture, at a glance, looks familiar. Curiously, strangely familiar. It suggests some sort of déjà-vu crowded with esthetic doppelgangers. The relevant traits of the entries, in fact, strike a cunning resemblance with existing mainstream fashion trends. Atmospheres as well as design, but also surface treatments and silhouettes, do not question the status quo. On the contrary, they enforce it. The urge to add a personal touch or give an individual interpretation is kept for the subtle details, without bursting into anarchic slash ‘n burn. It is embedded in elements that need to be explored up-close to truly appreciate their diversity: on the outside, the effect is a kaleidoscopic brand of conformity. Also, the rawness and mandatory – yet oh-so-exciting – imperfections usually associated with student productions are replaced by a striking level of polish and professionalism. Everything looks, one way or another, market-ready.

Surprising? Maybe not. In a scenario flooded ‘til saturation with fashion-related visuals, transmitted in real time from fashion shows and events and then left floating forever in cyberspace or pinned on social medias, it must be pretty damn hard not to fall under the spell and be visually seduced by what recurs the most. Furthermore, the majority of the researches that lead to the creation of a collection, today, happens not in libraries or in dusty archives, over books or actual samples, but virtually in the infinite and infinitely flat libraries provided by Tumblr and the like. On the web, although chronology is rather non-existing, the hic et nunc, the urgency of the present wins, if only for mere quantity. This, for methodology.

The pervasive influence of the web however, is deeper and far more impactful. It informs clothes whose prime and sometime sole point of interest is the visual aspect, and at worst the frontal view – the camera-friendly one, in other words. Design deliberately eschews not only the third dimension, but also the fourth – movement. In this respect, it is impossible to underestimate the impact that Instagram is having on fashion design: to jump out of the screen and cut a dent, even only for a nanosecond, into the collective subconscious, a creation has to be bold, unremittingly graphic; it has to seduce and entertain the eye, blatantly. Which explains not only why prints – geometric and pixilated, more than phytomorphic or naturalistic – are dominating the scenario, but also how much the outline is used to define shapes and silhouettes.

   INSTAGRAM-O-RAMA   

High-impact visual strategies are on everybody’s minds: this is fashion design at its most Instagram ready. Prints rule, adding an eye-pleasing level of intricacy to clothes that seem to be conceived in the flat vacuum and infinite possibilities of an AutoCAD file. The outline takes center stage leaving the secluded realm of the drawing board to turn into a defining element of the silhouette, both as a decorative and structural element. The approach, in general, is graphic: bold blocks of contrasting colors define shapes or highlight them; cuts follow seemingly abstract paths. The riddle is mind-blogging: making what’s flat ready and apt for a living body.
Trends Report


   REDESIGNING THE BODY   

This is a primal drive that the virtual world has brought to new levels of creative elaboration. The body, fashion’s main actor, is not taken for granted. On the contrary, it is a starting point: a base that can be endlessly morphed and unapologetically redesigned, sometimes even adding new parts to it. Accessories are crucial in this sense: shoes that empower and estrange; helmets that hide and protect; decorations that double and strengthen parts of the anatomy. Otherwise, it’s the expert use of cuts: the more traditional way to turn the existing body into a fictional reality, erasing functionality once and for good.
Trends Report


   3-D   

As a natural reaction to the widespread preoccupation for everything that is flat and easy to read on a rather flattening digital image, the sculptural joys of 3D continue being explored, as they have been over the past few years. The choice runs the gamut from dramatic silhouettes to crafty interventions – multiple pleats, sequence folds, overlapping flaps – which the use of the non-color white strips away of any drama in favor of solemn serenity.
Trends Report


   LAB-LIKE   

Experimentalism at its most Zen-like yet unremitting: fashion enters the laboratory and undergoes a subtle process of transformation. The environment is clean, dominated by white and transparencies that suggest layers of skin made ready for new implants. Emotional outburst are kept under control, as is any excess. Design is minimal, cuts are straight. Yet, one can feel the slight undercover frisson of something happening wherever you cannot immediately detect it.
Trends Report


   HARD   

This is an alchemy that is historically well-represented at ITS, yet one that shows no sign of weakening on the designer’s minds: bringing hard elements, metallic ones in particular, into the soft realm of fashion, making for a captivating dialogue between firmness and movement, thickness and weightlessness. Metal can be an accessory, a detail, or a whole surface: it enforces certain parts of the silhouette, redesigns them, protects the wearer. It captures, most of all, an enduring futuristic utopia: fashioning wearable stuff out of incongruous sources.
Trends Report


   INCOGNITO   

Who does not dream of having an alternate identity, or maybe already has many on any given social network? There is a vaguely political agenda to the abundance of covered faces. This is, again, a trend that’s been recurring insistently over the years. At this turn, however, it’s not about the rather sinister gesture of erasing any recognizable features: it is about the possibility to explore an incognito dimension to infiltrate the world and turn up the tables. In other words, it’s more Philip K. Dick than Eraserhead.
Trends Report


   IMMATERIAL   

A new dialogue between the dress and its surrounding space arises, skipping predictable design instances. It’s not about clothing as architecture or habitat, but something rather more subtle. Light is brought onto the dress, as are transparency and movement, in an attempt to dematerialize compact surfaces and make them move, unpredictably yet in a way that is somehow controlled. Hence the abundance of polished metallic elements that reflect and refract light; hence variable fabric densities; hence long dancing fringes. Fashion is sublimated and its corporeal materiality vaporized.



Friday, April 4, 2014

TRENDS // PATTERNBANK - PRINT + PATTERN TREND REPORT . A/W 2014-15

Here is Patternbank's latest Print & Pattern Trend Report for Autumn/Winter 2014/15.  Patternbank is an exceptionally great resource with over 20 years in the print, graphics and fashion industryTheir global research brings you essential inspiration ideas for graphics, prints and patternsmaking Patternbank a valuable resource and intelligence tool for any business, designer or buyer.  To stay informed of their reports, sign up for the Patternbank Weekly Digest here.  Go here to view and purchase the report. 




In this report Patternbank delivers the key Autumn/Winter 2014/15 print and pattern trends seen at the recent New York, London, Paris and Milan Runway shows. Our trend team have analysed all the relevant designers collections to capture the seasonal key print trends and colour stories from the shows. This handy report brings you the key print insights making this report an essential tool for your seasonal print and pattern developments.
  • 11 print trend stories for Autumn/Winter 2014/15

  • 38 pages of inspirational print forecast intelligence

  • Over 200 on trend hand-picked images

  • Covers New York, London, Paris & Milan A/W 2014/15 shows

  • 4 colour trends for Autumn/Winter 2014/15

  • $50 via PayPal


This 38 page report includes 11 inspirational print trends :

Arts & Crafts / Wing Detail / Constructed & Colour Blocked / Crazy Cartoons / Heraldry & Badges / High Contrast / Paint Splatters / Photographic Blow-Ups / Over the Rainbow / Stars & Spots / Whimsical Animals






Wednesday, March 5, 2014

TRENDS // DESIGN OPTIONS - A/W 2014 - S/S 2015

DESIGN OPTIONS is a Los Angeles based trend and color forecasting company, providing trends from a west coast 
perspective. Here is a peek of their early A/W 2014  palettes for Womens. You can also visit them at the L.A. Textile show, March 10-12 at the California Market, Booth #801. They'll be presenting their Spring/Summer 2015 fabrics, prints, textures and key color direction for both the Apparel and Home Furnishing markets. 

Go here to learn more about their services or contact West Coast rep, Tara Packer, fashionista@earthlink.net.


    NEW YORK    FASHION WEEK   

"Rowley put quite the effort into the scene, and the clothes were thoughtful too. A colorful series with an early-seventies vibe-insert Rainbow Brite reference here-".  Our 70's Revival palette was on dispaly, with playful pops of pink, mustard and chocolate making for a prismatic presentation.



    PARIS    FASHION WEEK 

 "Such optic motifs spiraled throughout the lineup in rave tees and rave sweats.  And they were paired with trippy florals and 3-D corsages that lurked luridly on shoulders."  Our Spellbound palette, consisting of bold jewel-tones: jade, cobalt, crimson and citron, only amplified the psychedelic nuance of the collection.



   MILAN    FASHION WEEK   

Our Winter Wonderland palette, with soft pastels shades of baby blue, sage green, camel and mocha, was the centerpiece of the collection.  Fur was everywhere including curly teddy bear shearling, goat hair, beaver, ink which added that extra touch of softness and luxury.


"We did a lot of research specifically into texture, to give the knits structure," said Angela Missoni.  So wool was felted, boiled, double-faced, furred, and undoubtedly creatively abused in other ways.  The collection works into our Double Take women's palette with its cinnamon, rusty browns, soft taupe and a zesty,  burnt orange accents.



    LONDON    FASHION WEEK    
"In their colorfully hand-painted finery, they were quintessential artists' muses, women who would arise from their pose, casually drape themselves in a cashmere blanket or throw on a mohair coat, and go for a wander in the garden.:  Our Model Movement palette evokes Fall in the garden with it's mossy sahdes, dusty rose and weathered ocher hues.

Friday, February 21, 2014

TRENDS // TREND COUNCIL - PRE-FALL 2014 RUNWAY COLOR HIGHLIGHTS

Trend Council is a fashion trend forecasting company who delivers expert analysis and design inspirations. Their team provides a great wealth of consulting services for all your company's design needs.  Trend Council focuses on the Ladies, Juniors, Mens, Young Mens and Active markets. To learn more about their services, go here.






Tuesday, February 18, 2014

TRENDS // PATTERNBANK - NYFW PRINT + PATTERN HIGHLIGHTS AW14/15


Patternbank is an exceptionally great resource with over 20 years in the print, graphics and fashion industryTheir global research brings you essential inspiration ideas for graphics, prints and patternsmaking Patternbank a valuable resource and intelligence tool for any business, designer or buyer.  To stay informed of their reports, sign up for the Patternbank Weekly Digest here.  

Patternbank brings you their key print highlight report on the recent New York A/W 2014/15 Fashion shows. 

Go here for Part I and here for Part II New York Fashion Week Print and Pattern Fall 2014 highlights for their full reports.

    THAKOON   

Vivid Technicolour Blooms – Super Scale Placement Prints – Ikat Applied Florals – Applique and Embroidered Looks – Brush-mark Stripes – Soft Plaids – High Contrast Pattern – Colour Blocked Panels – Pattern Mix-ups – Asymmetrical Layouts




   MARA HOFFMAN   


Graphic Checkerboard Prints – Moroccan Textile References – Engineered Star Prints – Bedouin Jewellery Patterns – Egyptian Camel Motifs – Complex  Ethnic Arrangements – Monochromatic and Optical



   BAND OF OUTSIDERS   


Painterly Brush-mark Florals – Cartoon Popcorn Prints – Offset Patterns – Floral Clusters – Background Colour Graduation – Ditzy Florals – Tromp L’oeil Tricks – Dark backgrounds – Artistic Floral Paintings




   MISSONI   

Abstract Rock Star Images – Marbleised Jacquard Pattern – Abstract Kaleidoscopic Effects – High Contrast Pattern – Marble and Textured Surfaces – Mashed-up Prints – Contrasting Scale – Earth’s Surface




   NICOLE MILLER   


Complex Feather Prints – Kaleidoscope Pattern build-ups – Dark Studies – Graduated and Merging Pattern  - Blurring and Distortion – Damask Florals – Distorted Ikat – Peacock Feathers



   PETER SOM   

Midnight Carnation Blooms – Bouquet Placement Prints – Motion Blurs – Border Pattern Mixes – Graduation in Texture – Herringbone and Check Mixes – Tonal and Monochromatic – Orange Colour Bursts


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

TRENDS // PATTERNBANK - PRINT AND PATTERN FALL 2014 HIGHLIGHTS

Patternbank is an exceptionally great resource with over 20 years in the print, graphics and fashion industryTheir global research brings you essential inspiration ideas for graphics, prints and patternsmaking Patternbank a valuable resource and intelligence tool for any business, designer or buyer.  To stay informed of their reports, sign up for the Patternbank Weekly Digest here.  

Patternbank brings you their key print highlights from the Pre Fall 2014 collections. Even though these pre season collections are not as print heavy as other seasons, there are still some interesting developments that caught their eye.

Go here for Part I and here for Part II Print and Pattern Fall 2014 highlights.

    THAKOON   
Fractured Geometrics – Plaid Exploration – Twisted Classics – Herringbone-esque Pattern - Mixed Pattern - Modern Floral Use

   ZERO + MARIA CORNEJO 
Crazed Pattern – Textural Allover Prints  - Monochromatic Colour  - Modern Tie-Dye Effects – Brushed Movement – Overprinted and Masked Pattern

   THAKOON   
Micro Pattern – Asymmetric Prints - Simplified Florals – Bold Graphic Repetitions – Simple Form

    FENDI    
Solid Colour Placement - Dip-dyed Ombré Look – Masculin Colour Blocking – Weave and Texture Mixes – Oversew Effects

   NICOLE MILLER   
Plaid and Floral Combinations – Geometric Embellishment – Native Funk & Flash Inspiration – Indian Embroidery – Crazed texture with Soft Plaid – Dip Dye – Boho Pattern Mixes

    MISSONI   
Textured Repeats – Intense Pattern Build-ups – Linear Doodle Repeats – Irregular Stripe Forms

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

TRENDS // TELIO . FALL/WINTER 2014-15 COLOUR FORECAST

Telio is a textile company was established in 1952 in Montreal, Canada in 1952. With their global presence, they offer designers, manufacturers and retailers a superior quality, original product tailored to their specific needs. They also have an in house Research & Development department that provides fashion-forward trends and expertise. To learn more about Telio, go here and to view their inspirational blog, Textures, go here.

Below is their Fall /Winter 2014-2015 Colour Forecast collage curated by Katelyn Bishop.  Go here to see the full details and to view visual credits.

    REGAL SENTIMENT   




    PEACEFUL DAWN   



    MOODY NATURE    



    ELECTRIC SHOCK