Clothes that could make air travel glamorous again - well, almost
PARIS — Let’s just be delighted, shall we?
Not to forget all that ails the world, but can’t we have a pause, take in a little oxygen before diving back into the terrible dayto-day? There is that recurring feeling when you’re reading the newspaper, the cable crawl, your Twitter feed, that you’ve suddenly stopped breathing. It’s not an anxiety attack; it’s paralysis. An inability to process it all.
So, off to the fashion runway! But let’s agree not to take any of it personally. Don’t consider the cost. No asking, “Who would wear that?” Not today. Because have you seen Instagram? Someone, somewhere will wear anything.
On the runway for spring 2018 at Maison Margiela, creative director John Galliano took a trench coat, pulled it apart and turned it into a dress.
He turned others into skirts. He trimmed their skeletal remains with feathers.
He took a bit of lush cotton fabric that looked like a towel, something that you’d wrap around your head after a shower, and made it into a skirt and an evening coat. He made it fancy and sophisticat- ed. It still sort of looks like a towel. But it also looks like clothes.
He took the accoutrements of air travel – the inflatable neck rest, the favourite pillow, the eye mask, the “priority” luggage tag, all symbolic of the desperate way fliers try to make a wholly uncomfortable experience bearable – and transformed them into charms. The point of it all was to “appropriate the inappropriate.”
But these clothes and accessories are more than just wry jokes or bits of whimsy.
Because they are executed with elevated technique and breathtaking skill, they rise above the joke to become something enticing on their own.
They are not an answer to any of the world’s great problems. But they are not a mindless distraction either. They are a well-timed break.