Los Angeles Times

Sneakers matter for Roger Vivier

The revitalize­d legacy luxury brand says it’s just giving the people what they’re craving.

- By Adam Tschorn adam.tschorn@latimes.com

So many European luxury labels have stepped into the highend sneaker game in recent years that the news is hardly worth spilling ink (or slinging pixels) over when another brand sprints into the arena. But Paris-based Roger Vivier, which rolled out its first two sneaker styles for spring and summer 2016, is a standout — even among the legacy luxury brands.

That’s because the 53-year-old French label’s namesake founder was as much a sculptor as a shoe designer, a man who focused almost fetishisti­cally on the heel. In his hands, women’s shoes approached the ornamentat­ion of a Fabergé egg: adorned with jewels, feathers and ruffles, combined with eye-catching colors rarely seen outside a crayon box. Vivier’s career achievemen­ts included designing a pair of gold kidskin pumps with ruby-studded heels for Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation (1953), whittling heels down to stiletto proportion­s (1954) and introducin­g a handful of new heel shapes including the commashape­d “Virgule” heel (1963) that would go on to become a signature of the brand.

After the designer died in 1998, the brand was acquired and relaunched in 2004 by the Italian leather goods group Tod’s, whose Diego Della Valle tapped creative director Bruno Frisoni to helm Maison Roger Vivier. In the years since, Frisoni has breathed new life into the brand, translatin­g its design DNA into new products including handbags, sunglasses, small leather goods and jewelry.

Since the first style Frisoni chose to revive a dozen years ago was the Belle Vivier — a patentleat­her pump with a bold chrome pilgrim buckle on the vamp that became wildly popular after Catherine Deneuve wore a pair on screen in the 1967 film “Belle de Jour” — there’s a certain symbolic significan­ce in the inaugural sneaker offerings, which hit the three U.S. Roger Vivier boutiques (including South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa) and Neiman Marcus in early February. One version of the rubber-soled Sneaky Viv serves up leather, canvas or silk satin versions of a classic, slip-on skate shoe silhouette with pilgrim buckles — formed out of baguette-shaped crystals — at the vamp. The other, a side-zip version of the same silhouette, references the iconic buckle shape in a tiny rectangula­r zipper pull emblazoned with the initials “R.V.”

“The Belle Vivier was a neutral, minimal proposal,” Frisoni said during a recent trip to Los Angeles. “It was just a pump with a thick heel and a buckle on the front.… For me, this [sneaker] silhouette is today’s equivalent.”

Frisoni said the decision to add sneakers to the luxury brand’s offerings was a simple one. “Sneakers became the most requested piece,” he said with a shrug. “Roger Vivier is a shoe brand and whatever shoe it is that people need — that people crave — that needs to be Roger Vivier.”

While the Sneaky Viv vibe may be more casual than the rest of the brand’s shoes, which range from $500 to $4,000 (with some exclusive styles costing more), you and your wallet would be sorely mistaken to think that the price tag was equally low-impact because the debut collection walks out the door in the $725-to-$1,325 range.

Despite the early success — and the fact that well-shod celebritie­s including Cate Blanchett and Jaime King have been dashing through airports and turning up at art exhibition openings wearing them — Frisoni said he’s determined to take a grow-slow approach.

“We have a high-top slip-on for winter and we may introduce a lace-up, but we won’t grow too much because [Roger] Vivier is not supposed to be a sneaker brand. [Sneakers are] something that are intended to be an indispensa­ble part of the collection — a staple.”

The fall and winter collection, which will hit retail in mid-July, hints at how Frisoni is moving beyond the buckle in translatin­g the Roger Vivier DNA for the sneaker set. It includes a slip-on in an exploded black-and-white houndstoot­h print, another covered in crystals and the aforementi­oned high-top festooned with feminine frills around the ankle and vamp.

While sneakers might never become truly acceptable to wear on the Hollywood red carpet, the high-end versions Roger Vivier is offering might be considered a step in the right direction.

 ?? Roger Vivier Roger Vivier ?? AAAA //// Roger Vivier - Sneaky A PILGRIM BUCKLE is the lone embellishm­ent of the top Sneaky Viv model; the crystalliz­ed version above goes all out.
Roger Vivier Roger Vivier AAAA //// Roger Vivier - Sneaky A PILGRIM BUCKLE is the lone embellishm­ent of the top Sneaky Viv model; the crystalliz­ed version above goes all out.
 ??  ?? SKETCH by Frisoni of the Sneaky Viv by Roger Vivier. AN EARLY SKETCH of an elaborate take on the Sneaky Viv model, by Frisoni above, and the finished frilly product.
SKETCH by Frisoni of the Sneaky Viv by Roger Vivier. AN EARLY SKETCH of an elaborate take on the Sneaky Viv model, by Frisoni above, and the finished frilly product.
 ?? Antonin Borgeaud ?? DESIGNER Bruno Frisoni has rebooted the RV brand.
Antonin Borgeaud DESIGNER Bruno Frisoni has rebooted the RV brand.

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