Men’s – Prim And Perverse. JW Anderson AW24

Jonathan Anderson said in his autumn-winter 2024 preview: “Eyes Wide Shut is one of my favorite films, and I actually think it’s a great Christmas film.” It was, however, two viewings last summer that led to this JW Anderson collection. “I’ve never made anything about a film before,” said Anderson. “This is also the sexiest we’ve ever gone – as far as I can go.” Fashion world has a great affection for this Stanley Kubrick fim. Lately, Puppets & Puppets had an entire collection dedicated to this spicy romance-thriller. In case of Anderson, the result was a diverse design range, spanning from prim to perverse: both in menswear and women’s pre-fall, at moments in a Prada-ist manner (fun fact: in the 2000s, the Irish designer used to work around Prada at Brown Thomas in Dublin; there he met Manuela Pavesi, Miuccia’s right-hand, where she consulted the brand’s merchandising). For the collection’s hero print, Anderson contacted Christiane, Kubrick’s widow, regarding her paintings that the director used in his films (including A Clockwork Orange and Eyes Wide Shut). These paintings were what spanned the triptych knit jersey dresses: other pieces featured a portrait of a family cat, a pot plant with a barcode still on its tub, and a car interior. Said Anderson: “I thought what was interesting is the psychology of this idea of bringing someone from the background to the foreground.” This was about as literal as Anderson got. The collection contained neither Christmas trees nor masks – although Nicole Kidman was on the soundtrack, delivering the near-to-last line of dialogue – however a palpable spirit of twisted bourgeois eroticism ran through the darkened runway as fil rouge. Red, with all its implications, headlined in an oversized velvet evening jacket for men. The jacket’s womenswear counterpoint was a red velvet jumpsuit with one disordered, asymmetrically cut leg that seemed at the intersection of sleepwear and evening wear. Anderson’s own recurring predilection for shorts was satisfied afresh via some wonderful rib knit pieces – sometimes partnered with cardigans, sometimes not – from whose edges oozed suggestive, unsettlingly domestic whorls of satin. Dressing his female and male models in tights over panties gave a less figure-skating aspect to the trophy underwear trend.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Men’s – Synthetic Environments. Prada AW24

“In this moment you can’t avoid talking about subjects that are relevant. For instance, nature.” As Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons jointly explained, the thinking behind their Prada autumn-winter 2024 menswear collection was intimately entangled with the notion of our natural environment – how we are insulated from it, and how to go back to it. Simons addeded: “Most people’s screensavers are nature but then at the end we sit in this very synthetic human made environment.” A menacing tension felt palpable once the models, dressed as corporate commuters, walked on the raised glass floor with a stream running through a meadow beneath. The patches of highland greens contrasted with the synthetic green of the wool caps worn on the runway. The collection itself consisted of ultimate classics of menswear, as Simons listed for “the businessman, the working man, the thinking man.” Most wore ties. The Prada twist was touches that subverted these safe spaces of identity, enticing the wearer to surround himself with nature. Narrow-fit raincoats, tweed chore jackets, three-button gray topcoats, and gold buttoned naval outerwear all offered a route outdoors. This was a Prada outing that offered safeness and quintessence, clothes-wise.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Recreation. Bode AW24

For autumn-winer 2024, Emily Adams Bode Aujla explores the evolution of athletic wear and character-building through the lens of American institutional sport and competition. The charming, vintage-y collection confirms once again that Bode could potentially head to Ralph Lauren in the future and be a stately successor of the all-American style. This season, the designer reimagines leisure and athletic apparel from the 1770s-1970s, and muses on sports and recreation being vital to our understanding of virtue, community, and history. Fantastic lace pieces were appliquéd with figures playing sports. There were colorful lurex sweaters decorated with field hockey sticks, knitted cardigans with intarsia basketball players, and a particularly elegant white silk jacquard with a tonal football print. The inspiration also manifested itself in more practical ways; like the handsome dark gray three piece suit; the waterproof, super-light zip jacket and matching pants decorated with patches; or the simple, unlined wool jacket inspired by the kind that football players wear to stay warm on the bench. Elsewhere even simple knit sweaters and t-shirts inspired by the design of hockey or football jerseys proved just as special.

Autumn 2024 also marks the third outing for Bode Aujla’s dedicated womenswear collection, and it’s worth noting that it’s developing into something pretty remarkable. Between the beaded 1920s slip dresses, the lavishly embellished knits and bra tops, the 1930s-inspired bias cut chiffon dresses, and super delicate (and super sexy) silk underpinnings and matching pointelle tank tops and panties, a sense of real pleasure and indulgence permeates her women’s clothes. Lately, there’s been lots of conversations regarding the ways in which women designers approach making clothes for women; oftentimes, the focus is on the fact that they design for women’s “real lives” meaning wearable, meaning comfortable, meaning suited for a wide range of bodies. Beyond all this, Bode Aujla is also tapping into women’s fantasies; their desire to wear beautiful things just for themselves. If anyone happens to join in their fun, well, that’s a bonus.

And here are couple of Bode goodies that have caught my eye lately…

ED’s SELECTION


Oslo Fair Isle Intarsia Wool Cardigan

Brodie Jacquard-knit Alpaca-blend Sweater



Grenier Fringed Embroidered Silk-twill Jacket


Frog And Pony Cropped Flocked Striped Cotton-blend T-shirt



Corinthia Embroidered Silk-blend Crepe De Chine And Guipure Lace Chemise

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Dirty Glam. DsQuared2 AW24

 

No one does a show in Milan like Dean and Dan Caten. Their autumn-winter 2024 DsQuared2 show was about the idea of twins. Who better than the Canadian brothers should have a say in the representation of “the two sides of the coin,” as they said backstage? Drawing upon their own reality of being a sort of day-and-night double version of each other offered the Catens the occasion for an entertaining show – fun, uplifting, with the right amount of camp and lots of maximalist mashed-up styling. The cast was obviously made of sets of twins, one of which was dressed in Dsquared2’s typical grungy daywear; upon entering a “makeover machine,” the other twin emerged glammed up in the evening version of what the first was wearing. The set, a shiny white box, served as glossy backdrop for the finale coup-de-théâtre, with the Catens taking their bow – Dan looking macho in fitted black jeans and an alluring see-through glittery chiffon shirt, and Dean playing the diva in a flame-red hairdo and black corset dress slashed at the front revealing a great pair of legs, teetering with consummate confidence on ultra-high stilettos. They brought the house down. As for the clothes in the co-ed show, there was great outerwear of the outdoorsy, furry, and fringed variety; fabulous distressed and patched denim; fair isle knits, cargos, destroyed tees, trapper hats, and sequined chaps, all jumbled together and styled with slinky abandon. For evening, black dominated, with body-skimming and plunging necklines for the girls, and sultry slim tuxes with femme undertones for the boys. Haley Wollens’ styling makes DsQuared2 look hotter than ever. Fashion for the Catens is going in just one direction: sexy, sassy, with humor to spare, and entirely guilt-free.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Men’s – British Boy. S.S. Daley AW24

Pitti Uomo had two guest designers this year: the punk-at-heart Magliano and the very-English S.S. Daley. The latter had a big announcement to make: the minority-investment boost from Harry Styles, who’s a frequent collaborator and muse of the brand. The musician wears Steven Stokey-Daley‘s clothes at such frequency that one might easily say that the London-based brand is Harry Styles-coded. But it’s really the other way round.

Back to the autumn-winter 2024 collection: it was a story of an Englishman in Florence, playing fast and loose with the entrenched emblems and rites of passage of the British upper class boy’s school culture. The themes – some familiar S.S. Daley heartland classics, wrapped up in the kind of storytelling twists he once called micro-subversions – might have been less theatrical in their delivery than usual, but they came with a flourish of polish and confidence. On came a lad wearing a tail-coat, shirt, and no trousers – partly an echo of the wastrel party-going culture of Oxford in the 1980s that was captured by the photographer Dafydd Jones. But partly, too, it was the introduction of his queer evocation of a diary by an Oxford student in 1935. “He always opened each entry with writing about being ‘in Eliot’s room.’” Stokey-Daley had stacks of pillows installed as a conceptual set. “So the idea is that this suddenly becomes this abstracted version of Eliot’s room – and it’s more a conversation about that sort of shared living. Underwear, pajamas, sporting wear, boys in tails.” A huge, quilted piped-edged duvet coat and a couple vast ‘tapestry’ knitted blanket ponchos riffed on the morning-after idea of rolling out of bed wrapped in your bedclothes. Alongside this, the designer had been reading “The Last Panic,” a short story by E. M. Forster about a young English boy’s “carnal awakening” with a fisherman while on holiday in Italy. Hence the symbolic oversize fish-print that turned up on a shirt later in the collection. But, really, ‘reading’ S.S. Daley doesn’t require crib notes and reference studies. The point of his clothes, ever since he was a student himself, is that they’re never costume. They are very British, of course, but just always a little cleverly, quirkily left of the generically classic.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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