The Daily Telegraph

WHOSE LOGO IS IT ANYWAY?

Logomania is upon us. Is it high time to wear your brand on your sleeve, asks Stephen Doig?

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Before Savile Row and the Dries Van Noten store on Paris’s Left Bank became dangers to this editor’s overdraft, there were Tommy, Calvin and Ralph. This triumvirat­e of American brands – that’s Hilfiger, Klein and Lauren, of course – represente­d a holy trinity for a Scottish teen who thought logo jumpers the pinnacle of style.

It was the Nineties, and these brands were unashamed in flying their own flags (sometimes literally) across their heavily branded clothes.

It’s 2017, and while everything else has changed, logos are once again front and centre. Even if you protest that wearing designer logos is frightfull­y nouveau and crass, you can’t deny that it’s back.

As a general bellwether, where Gucci leads, many follow – that’s certainly the case with designer Alessandro Michele’s bold, brazen logo sweaters and double-g belts, which many a street style “star” have re-adjusted the tuck of their shirts to showcase. Full disclosure: I have succumbed to Gucci’s bells-and-whistles approach, with a sweater where the word “Gucci” is slashed across my midsection. Perhaps the affection for something branded never went away after all. Elsewhere, Calvin Klein, the original champion of the logo T-shirt, is in the midst of a renaissanc­e at the hand of Raf Simons, the former Dior designer. Now you have to call it Calvin Klein 205W39NYC, but those iconic T-shirts from the Nineties are still there, if reworked, appealing to shoppers’ vintage nostalgia. At Ralph Lauren, the house last month launched a pop-up at Selfridges with a reissued collection from the 1992 Summer Olympics, all of it emblazoned in typically Nineties fonts. At Burberry, the heritage outfitter reintroduc­ed its much stigmatise­d yet still iconic check pattern in its AW17 show. While it’s not a typeface logo per se, it’s as identifiab­le as any spell-it-out mark (and created by my ancestor; he couldn’t have foreseen Big Brother contestant­s in the design one day). If you’re still allergic to acting as a walking billboard, perhaps it’s best to look at the labels (quite literally) that play with the ways they show off their wares.

Gucci has produced pieces in faded, love-worn designs that look hauled from some family treasure chest in Florence. Quirky French brands Maison Kitsune and Ami turn their logos into retro scrolls, and Belgian designer Dries Van Noten has celebrated his work with Britain’s finest historical mills, including Lovats and Fox Brothers, by putting their sign frontages on sweaters. It’s his way to give a shout-out to the quiet champions of British craft instead of himself. What’s in a name, anyway?

 ??  ?? Poetic licence: Dries Van Noten’s ode to traditiona­l British manufactur­ing
Poetic licence: Dries Van Noten’s ode to traditiona­l British manufactur­ing
 ??  ?? Maison Kitsune Palais Royal bag, £50 (mrporter.com) A Patch shirt, £175 (amiparis.com)
Maison Kitsune Palais Royal bag, £50 (mrporter.com) A Patch shirt, £175 (amiparis.com)
 ??  ?? Calvin Klein T-shirt, £57 (farfetch.com)
Calvin Klein T-shirt, £57 (farfetch.com)
 ??  ?? Ditch Miller hoodie, £115 (saturdaysn­yc.com)
Ditch Miller hoodie, £115 (saturdaysn­yc.com)
 ??  ?? Washed T-shirt, £340 (gucci.com)
Washed T-shirt, £340 (gucci.com)
 ??  ?? Stinky rat portfolio, £48 (farfetch.com)
Stinky rat portfolio, £48 (farfetch.com)
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

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