Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

5 reasons to get excited about fashion in 2023

- By Vanessa Friedman

How can anyone feel less than optimistic about a year that starts with a veritable explosion of polka dots?

Ten years after its initial collaborat­ion with Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, Louis Vuitton has again teamed up with Kusama for the first big collection of the year, and it’s a doozy. Hundreds of pieces of LV merch (sneakers, slides, bags, bikinis, bucket hats, coats, skirts and pants for both men and women) speckled with multicolor dots, metallic dots and pretty much every other dot permutatio­n imaginable, like joyful confetti raining down on a sea of logos.

The recently unveiled line raises the bar for what is fast turning into a hackneyed fashion trope. (Running out of ideas? Do a collaborat­ion!) As well as serves as an overture of good cheer for a year that is otherwise cloaked in uncertaint­y.

Yes, we can be nervous about household spending and geopolitic­s and maybe even a COVID-19 resurgence, but take a moment to window-shop past Kusama’s spotty reimaginin­g of the LV world and you’ll find it impossible not to smile. Even better, this is simply drop one of two.

The next batch of goodies featuring more of her signature work is coming at the end of March — a reminder that there are plenty of interestin­g, distractin­g and possibly even thrilling fashion developmen­ts that will shape our self-expression, and wardrobes, in 2023.

What else can you look forward to?

The Gucci vibe shift (and other debuts)

Style-setters of the world were shocked when Alessandro Michele, the designer who transforme­d Gucci from a gold-plated, python-skinned avatar of hard-core aspiration into a big-tent hodgepodge of emotion, product and identity, announced in November that he was stepping down. His departure leaves an enormous void at a luxury megabrand, not to mention pop culture in general, and it raises the question of what happens next: more of the same or a dramatic about-face? Whoever lands at the top will be responsibl­e in part for resetting the mood of the industry.

Speaking of highly influentia­l new jobs: More than a year after the death of Virgil Abloh, Louis Vuitton has yet to name a new menswear designer, but word is that an appointmen­t will happen soon. Though whether an LV or a Gucci announceme­nt will take place before the upcoming season’s big debut — Daniel Lee at Burberry — remains to be seen. Lee is the celebrated designer who left Bottega Veneta under a cloud in late 2021.

Whether he can effect the same turnaround for Britain’s biggest luxury house, and his own reputation, will be the test of London Fashion Week in February.

Phoebe Philo most likely finally returns

When Phoebe Philo, aka the Greta Garbo of fashion, revealed in July 2021 that she would return to fashion with her own brand under her own name, there was a clutching of breasts

and shrieking with joy by an adult female population that had been trying to figure out what to wear ever since Philo left her position as creative director at Celine about five years ago.

After all, it was at Celine that Philo had become the patron saint of smart, grown-up women everywhere, with her embrace of quietly complicate­d luxury minimalism. Now she was coming back, and on her own terms. Joy! Rapture!

More informatio­n was promised last January, but that month, and the entire year, came and went with no news from the Philo camp.

The smart money says that the Phoebe Philo brand will finally make its debut in 2023.

Big- and small-screen style-setters

It is impossible to ignore the fact that movies and streamers have become not only mega-watching events but mega-fashion events, and that costume designers are often as influentia­l as any fashion designer. To that end, two premieres are almost guaranteed to filter into closets everywhere.

First up is “Daisy Jones & the Six,” the Amazon Prime Video series based on Taylor Jenkins Reid’s book scheduled for release March 3, smack in the middle of Paris Fashion Week.

The show stars Riley Keough as the Stevie Nicks-like main character, as well as assorted rock ’n’ roll, flower-power 1970s designs courtesy of Denise

Wingate, the costume designer, which are pretty much guaranteed to shape festival fashion for the rest of the year.

Then in July comes the movie event that has been seeping into collection­s since the first screenshot­s leaked last year: Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie,” with costume design by Jacqueline Durran. Expect a summer of neon pink and yellow, with the related postmodern revisionis­m of the classic fashion palette.

More royal dressing drama

On May 6, King Charles III will be officially crowned, as will Queen Consort Camilla, and while the event will purportedl­y be less grand than the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II back in 1953, it will nonetheles­s provide a moment to reset the royal agenda after the Prince Harry and Meghan revelation­s. Get ready for at least a dollop of pomp and circumstan­ce, as well as some serious bling and historic imagemakin­g by the immediate royal family, including Prince William, his wife, Catherine, and their three always coordinate­d children. Given that Prince Harry and Meghan will reportedly also be invited, the style stakes will be even greater.

That the fairy-tale ceremony comes only a few days after the Met Gala, this year held in honor of Karl Lagerfeld and offering a take on fashion royalty of a different kind, will make it a dressing week to remember.

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Margot Robbie stars in Greta Gerwig’s“Barbie.”Jacqueline Durran was the film’s costume designer.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Margot Robbie stars in Greta Gerwig’s“Barbie.”Jacqueline Durran was the film’s costume designer.

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