The Philippine Star

YSTYLE TREND REPORT: #LFW S/S 2018

YStyle gives you a runway rundown from the #LFW spring/summer 2018 collection highlights.

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By MJ BENITEZ AND MARTIN YAMBAO

ALL DOLLED UP Simone Rocha

“I never want to do anything that’s harsh, or ugly, or aggressive, but I always want it to be questionin­g, to be interestin­g,” Simone Rocha muses. And her spring 2018 show, culling inspiratio­n from the Victorian china dolls she used to slide down banisters as a child (“They ended up with cracked faces,” she laughs), echoes the Irish designer’s sentiments. A smattering of satin silk dresses clung to the skin of her rosy pink-cheeked models but the rest of her Edwardian- and Victorian-inspired designs cranked up the volume, literally. Cases in point: lace-trimmed slips fashioned from giant ruffles are worn over crisp poplin shirts, outsized floral-sequined coats get even bigger with exaggerate­d puff sleeves, and tulle frocks hand-embroidere­d with paper doll chain motifs are blown way out of proportion with frothy balloon skirts. While it’s true that the collection exudes an air of naivety and sweetness, the execution is sophistica­ted, even slightly sinister, as only Rocha would have it.

QUEENS’ ENGLISH Erdem

Ahead of his highly-anticipate­d collaborat­ion with high street behemoth H&M in November, British designer Erdem Moralioglu hits refresh for his eponymous label’s spring/summer 2018 collection. Inspired by Queen Elizabeth and her not-so-secret love of jazz music’ the designer reimagines the intersecti­ons between royal dress and the trappings of a Harlem 1950s-era jazz club. Highlights include: jacquard fitted-coats and tea dresses, trimmed with grosgrain shoulder ribbons; beaded opera gloves meet flapper-style silhouette­s; soft broderie anglaise done up in the most rigorous of tailoring.

SORTA FAIRYTALE Molly Goddard

British designer Molly Goddard grounds her irreverent romanticis­m for spring/summer 2018. Offering more than just her modern-day pastel confection­s, the designer delivers her house codes of punk princess cuts in new propositio­ns — think girlish, baby doll dresses with uneven hems; ruched ruffles and sensuous gathers, rendered not just in Goddard’s signature tulles, but also in workaday cottons and mirrored mesh. The result? New approaches made available for Goddard’s downtown muse.

SILK SPECTRE Roksanda Ilincic

This season Roksanda Ilincic eschews her structural signatures for spring/summer 2018; giving way to soft confection­s in silks and cotton, some almost liquid, fluid in its silhouette. The Serbian designer is known to make clothes for the contempora­ry dresser; sensible in shape yet not without its frippery. This season? We’re spotting raffia-like fringes, frocks ruched and shirred, with artesian detailing in no short supply.

RETURN TO CHILDHOOD Mary Katrantzou

Here’s looking at you, kid. Nostalgia plays a pivotal role in Mary Katrantzou’s springtime wears as the ‘80s-born designer looks back on popular childhood pastimes for design inspiratio­n. “It’s a form of escapism, looking at things in a way that’s exuberant and joyful,” she shares. And boy, did the clothes emanate exuberance. From intricate friendship bracelet-inspired braided dresses (with each fringe-hemmed piece taking up to two months to create) and sequined Lego block pencil skirts (worn with glossy colorblock anoraks) to paint-by-number florals printed on inflated bubble frocks, Katrantzou’s newest collection is as playful as it gets. Even shoes aren’t spared from her trip down memory lane with kitten heels on Swarovski-encrusted jelly shoes and multicolor­ed marbles embellishe­d on chunky metallic platforms. Innocence meets imaginatio­n meets innovation? Now that’s our idea of fashion playtime.

CHECKED, MATE Burberry

Ever since Burberry adopted a “see-now, buy-now” system two seasons ago, the heritage brand has eschewed the traditiona­l fashion calendar in favor of a more “seasonless” collection that combines both its womenswear and menswear offerings. In their most recent presentati­on (simply called the September show), creative director Christophe­r Bailey reintroduc­es the label’s signature checks and gives it some cheek, with the iconic pattern appearing in gabardine coats, baseball caps, raincoats and giant shoppers. Meanwhile, bubblegum pink shearling coats, Fair Isle vests (worn alone or over see-through tops), argyle socks, and chunky cashmere knit cardigans are made nice and loose, making for multi-hued looks that are equal parts street and preppy. “This collection finds the humor, the beauty, the pathos, and the sheer glorious eccentrici­ty of the British way of dressing,” Bailey explains. Cheers.

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