Friday, May 23, 2014

Dion Lee Line II S/S 14/15

Dion Lee Line II S/S 14/15

A vacant warehouse in Danks Street, Waterloo set the scene for Dion Lee's Line II RTW MBFW collection. As the fashion pack gathered for the highly anticipated show melancholy music echoed throughout the open space. Lee's collection embodied tailored sporting luxe tinged with masculinity. An interplay of drapery played a starring role in the collection. Feminine silhouettes oozed of energised cool. Deconstructed glamour best describes the aesthetic.

Look 1 comprised of an ebony, body con, crew neck sweater featuring elongated sleeves and double white racing stripe detail on the forearm. A chambray, asymmetrical, knee length skirt with origami folds created the illusion of a denim shirt wrapped around the waist. The look was finalised with a buttery soft, leather biker jacket worn nonchalantly around the waist. Footwear consisted of Roman gladiatorial sandals, toughening up the look.

A sleeveless pinstripe blouse worn buttoned to the neck featured denim bust pockets. The blouse was teamed to the staple denim jacket and black free flowing midi skirt. Rachel Rutt modelled a figure hugging, cobalt, funnel neck, fine merino knit which was paired to a navy, white and grey candy striped skirt. Details included a wraparound waist band resembling an obi and asymmetrical drapery.

Athleticism was evident on a streamlined pair of trousers complete with double white racing stripe cascading down the outer seam. A utilitarian pinstripe blazer in monochromatic black and white was worn ever so casually, insouciance reigned supreme. A crisp white trench with chambray collar and mid wash denim sleeves was a chic addition with uncluttered lines very much in attendance. A simplistic, muted dove grey, midi length dress with plunge v-neck detail and spliced under the bust cut-out feature was minimalism at its best.

The classic oxford shirt was updated with cut-out elbow detail twinned to a white leather vest attenuating the waist. The aesthetic resembled that of a straight jacket. The look was complete with hip hugging, voluminous trousers with zipper detail on the outer hip. Wearability continued to dominate on the runway with a waxy leather biker jacket in boxy proportions which was married to a cropped turtleneck sweater in black with white stripe detail. Languid, black trousers created a relaxed silhouette. A functional black parka with colossal sized pockets was paired to a snow white, turtleneck, crop knit and noir drawstring subtle peg leg trousers.

A sumptuous torso baring, high neck leather bralet was teamed to an androgynous peak shouldered blazer, elbow cut-outs created the illusion of a cape coat. A high waisted black and white midi skirt lent an understated bourgeois feel to the look. Athleticism references were prevalent on a midnight college bomber jacket with striped waist band and leather cuffs. An enticing knee length skirt with provocative thigh high split added a hit of exhibitionism. 

A two tonal vivid mandarin and tomato cutaway racer dress in sheer silk featured an orange sherbet halter crop worn underneath for modesty. The skirt featured wraparound fluid lines caressing the thighs.

By Courtney Jones.

No comments:

Post a Comment