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Bin day: why trash fashion is still inspiring designers
Carrier bags, supermarket shoppers, bin bags and litter have hit the runways for years. One man’s trash and all that, eh?
Carrier bags, supermarket shoppers, bin bags and litter have hit the runways for years. One man’s trash and all that, eh?
Editor Matthew Whitehouse on this issue's 40-page cover-story, shot by Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott and featuring clothes made entirely by new designers.
New ideas. By new graduates and bedroom designers. Celebrated here.
Off the Rails: Not literally, duh. But the designer’s psychedelic prints are a much-needed boost of sartorial serotonin during these bleak times. Slip on, slip out.
Creative director Sergio Zambon remembers his hedonistic past in some of London’s most-loved (and now closed) nightlife venues for the house’s optimistic offering, titled 2 Moncler 1952 Man.
The siren call of netted fabrics, sheer dresses and tattered, asymmetric hems is taking fashion by storm. Is it some much-needed escapism, or does it point to something a little more political?