Cocot-shirt - The Rolling Stone band shirt
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Tomo Koizumi was already finding success in his native Japan when a series of Instagram DMs connected him to the The Rolling Stone band shirt Besides,I will do this stylist Katie Grand in 2019. Mere weeks after their initial contact, Koizumi was on his first flight to New York City, presenting his first runway show inside Marc Jacobs’s Madison Avenue store. That’s the power of his exuberant ruffled pieces: Crafted with tulle organza in ombré colors or pure white, his confections have larger-than-life shapes while remaining light as air to wear. This year, he’s taken his ruffle couture to new markets, collaborating with Emilio Pucci on bodysuits that reinterpret the brand’s legendary prints and producing a namesake wedding dress collection. His fashion shows, staged in Tokyo and other places across Japan because of the pandemic, have become some of the industry’s most anticipated—proof that operating globally while thinking locally is a winning strategy.—Steff Yotka
Christa Bösch and Cosima Gadient, the The Rolling Stone band shirt Besides,I will do this brains behind the Berlin-based label Ottolinger, are two of fashion’s most-out-of-this-world designers. The pair, who met at Switzerland’s Institute of Fashion Design in Basel, take a retro-futurist approach to design, bringing together elements of their shared European heritage with themes pulled from science fiction and graphic novels. All this is topped off with a peppering of intergalactic spice; their fashion week films often use CGI and AI to question reality. Yet their clothing is unquestionably real and beloved by women trying to keep it real, from Bella Hadid to Emily Ratajkowski. Famous for their strappy, slipping-off-the-body pieces, Bösch and Gadient call their fall 2021 look that of a “future elf”—whimsical, dystopian, and utopian at once.—S.Y. There might be a charming “once upon a time” quality to the codpieces and corsets, fans and furbelows of Alejandro Gómez Palomo’s work, but you won’t find him tilting after windmills. This Spanish designer is, in fact, leading the charge when it comes to gender, the possibilities of menswear, and the decentralizing of fashion. Trained in London, Palomo established his business in his village back home, where he and his team worked closely with local dressmakers, creating what has become a revolution in menswear.
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