14/06/2011

Manuel Ritz / A Matter Of Balance

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Manuel Ritz / A Matter Of Balance

Manuel Ritz dares you to experiment this season. The reinvigorated 1980s icon’s latest collection echoes cues in its storied DNA, and once again is a “complete world,” a reference of style unto itself. The label’s vision for the season is parsed out in four distinct moods: the main collection, the Black, the White of Color, and finally, Evening. Each is an element of the brand’s sweeping personality, and a common thread of extroversion and effortless suave runs through the entire line.

2DM’s Vicky Trombetta shot and art directed the season’s ambient, fresh campaign and lookbook, and Trombetta together with video maker Matteo Cherubino made this evocative video of the collection, A Matter Of Balance. Edited by Daniele Testi with music by Alessandro Bartoli and drawing on the brand’s heritage and this collection’s cues, the video and campaign bring the collection to life. The romance and emotionally-charged words of the sentient, erudite man embodied in Manuel Ritz’ spirit are born out in the textures and shapes of the collection. The models are Jheremy Dufour and Rhyan Thomas

Matter of Ballance – Manuel Ritz – Matteo Cherubino from 2DM / Blogazine on Vimeo.

Beginning with the heart of the collection, there is a strong tendency towards classic, wearable fabrics, and clean, classic lines. The White of Colour is perhaps the most fashion forward of the family, with the lightest fabrics and a strong element of deconstruction. This element of the collection is freedom, forward. Black, on the other hand, is tailored, mysterious and rendered in sumptuous fabrics. Evening tops the line and takes the collection into rarified air. It is dashing elegance. Romance. Class.

By reaching into its history for strength and breathing fresh new air, Manuel Ritz this season is a fruitful combination of its storied past and its thoroughly modern outlook. It’s simply A Matter of Balance.

From the Bureau

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14/06/2011

Fendi / Fatto a Mano For the Future

Fendi / Fatto a Mano For the Future

Handmade is true luxury. From the simplest trinket to the most intricate work of handblown glass or hand-stitched leather, the rarity and exclusivity of a unique (and sometimes even imperfect) object put together piece by piece by human hands cannot be exceeded. And no matter how far the quality of factory-produced objects may come, there is magic in the details of an object so inextricably linked to its creator.


As big fans of the artisanal and supporters of initiatives that encourage the using of hands, we’re happy to announce that Fendi is bringing its Fatto A Mano For The Future handmade design initiative to Florence in collaboration with IED Firenze. Slated to open tomorrow during the week of Pitti at the brand’s boutique on Via Degli Strozzi, the exhibition will feature several very limited-edition works by working designers.

For the event, designer T. Robert Nachtigall will be working together with a Fendi craftsman to create a series of leather-bound lamps and chandeliers with the highest-quality materials. And lest you imagine that handmade automatically equals low-tech, Nachtigall is informing his designs with an expertise in high-tech textiles, interaction design and robotics to create fantastical artisanal hybrids that actively add to their environments.

Artisanal sci-fi sounds like a lovely future.

Open from 10am to 7pm, June 15th and 16th at Fendi, Via degli Strozzi 21-r in Florence. #famftf on Twitter.

Tag Christof – Images courtesy Giuseppe Palaia – Special thanks to Annaluisa Franco & T. Robert Nachtigall 

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13/06/2011

The Editorial: Scally Drag, Dandy & Fashion Future

The Editorial: Scally Drag, Dandy & Fashion Future

Under the header “Let’s Push Things Forward” in the current issue of i-D, Jo-Ann Furniss gorgeously summed up the uneasy tension that is men’s fashion. Her jam-packed paragraph touches on fashion’s current state of flux, and brilliantly points out that “There are two big battles to fight here: against the ‘gentleman’s wardrobe’ and ‘scally drag.’” She goes on to say she’d like to say “fuck you” to them both.

Harsh words. Count us in.

So on the eve of Pitti, as Florence’s hotels and bars are filled with international dandies and their punctilious wardrobes, Scott Schuman is likely licking his chops. Florence (especially during Pitti) doesn’t have to worry much about scally drag (unlike London and Milan), but it’s clear on a Pitti stroll through the Fortezza that the dandy paradigm has stagnated. The gentleman’s uniform has gelled around a vague mixture of midcentury, and the requisite neatly buttoned shirts, rich fabrics, formal accessories, and a subscription to Monocle. Pitti is The Sartorialist’s day in the sun. And his photos of the event’s looks are exactly the same from year to year. Yawn.

Now, gentlemanly attire is lovely up to a certain point. The return to formal elegance after decades of slop has been a much-needed swing of the pendulum back in the right direction. And the inspirations for the gentleman’s wardrobe are truly eternal: they are the bedrock of men’s fashion, and the undiluted points of departure from which all mens fashion invariably draws. Just as the Leica rangefinder’s pure, functional form has survived countless iterations (and inspired gorgeous modern interpretations like the Olympus Pen and the Fujifilm X100), classic men’s fashion is a paragon of aesthetic balance.

And just imagine how much more lovely travelling would be if the dowdy, number-crunching, cheap-suit-wearing masses of businessmen roaming the world’s airports looked more like their grandfathers and less like they just hit the bargain bin at Coin or Primark or Sears… But is a constant succession of warmed-over and refracted rehashes the most we can hope for?

Bruna Kazinoti for Quest. Somewhere beautiful between sartorial between dark, dandy and flamboyant.

Scally drag – perhaps the most beautifully succinct way to describe the over-the-top looks endemic among party kids and rampant on Lookbook (bravo, Jo-Ann) – is quite another story. It is clearly symptomatic of our copy and paste culture. We appropriate and share anything from anyone in vain attempts to rise to popularity on networks driven by “hypes” and “likes” and “reblogs.” The new and false sense of individualism social networks bring counterintuitively makes us all less unique. And, logically, since flamboyance is generally the most effective means of standing out, scally drag is the unfortunate result of the whole world resembling a giant high school.

The cacophonous visual and cultural landscape of our generation means that fashion has fewer solid fountains of influence to draw from. Generations are no longer united by one cultural wave or by one group of influential artists. Fashion, by nature is iconoclastic and rebellious, but scally drag makes clear that fashion today isn’t quite sure what it might be rebelling against. And despite its supreme connection to the zeitgeist, scally drag is just too trashy to drive fashion forward . Ashes to ashes. Dust to dust. Trash to trash. Shock is dead.

But to its credit, the flamboyance is a powerful fight against the almost oppressive new elegance of its gentlemanly opposite.

Earlier in her mini-rant, Jo-Ann says, “I want to see something new that completely slaps me around the face and challenges me in the men’s world; a point of view that feels like it’s coming from a new generation and not just following an older one.” She goes on to cite a tension between auteurs and brands, but it’s rather this tension between beige dandy and flamboyance that could prove most important for fashion’s future.

Vicky Trombetta. Remix and masculinity for the future.

We hope that the two poles somehow begin to look forwards, instead of simply backwards (the dandies) and narcissistically inwards (the scallies). “There needs to be something else. Masculinity is more complex than that.”

Here’s hoping for some pleasant surprises from Pitti this year.

Tag Christof – Images courtesy 2DM / Bruna Kazinoti & Vicky Trombetta
 

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10/06/2011

Roger Deckker / Double 21

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Roger Deckker / Double 21

That’s Double, en français. And as always, this latest issue of the Parisian journal of mode – the 21st – positively drips class, from its lovely textured cover and thoroughly elegant art direction (such wonderfully understated use of type!) to its deep Double Life / Lecture Seule texts, with literary contributors like Philippe Azoury and art critic Étienne Bernard.


With a lengthy feature (and cover) of works by Roe Ethridge – easily one of the finest photographers working in fashion today (he’s represented by Andrew Kreps Gallery in New York and Gagosian in LA) – the issue is a feast of well-curated imagery. Other highlights include a feature on Aleksandra Woronieka by Serge Leblon, work by Julia Hetta and stylist Hannes Hetta, and a feature shot and styled by Camille Bidault-Waddington.

And 2DM’s Roger Deckker makes a very attractive 12 page appearance, with an editorial featuring the gorgeously gap-toothed Tanga who here channels Joni Mitchell and the 1970s at its most striking. The piece was styled Charlotte Collet and fashion includes Stella McCartney, Céline, Irié, Missoni, Prada and others.

Tag Christof – Special thanks to Stiletto

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08/06/2011

Ilaria Norsa / Hannelore Knuts for Tar

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Ilaria Norsa / Hannelore Knuts for Tar

In the world of modelling, there’s legendary and then there’s Hannelore. The “Belgian Wave” wunderkind has left an inestimable mark on the world of fashion. She graced three consecutive covers in a row for Vogue Italia in the early 2000s (Sozzani knows when she’s on to a good thing), and has walked for countless big names. More recently, she’s appeared on the cover of hardbacks Grey and Self Service, as well as in Industrie, Dazed & Confused, Purple, 032c, Muse and, of course, several international editions of Vogue.


For the shiny new issue of Tar – which we’ve yet to see in the flesh – 2DM’s Ilaria Norsa styled Hannelore for photographer Leonora Hamill. The 18 page spread, appropriately billed “Holy Hannelore,” was shot in the lavish trappings of a home in one of Milan’s most glamourous neighbourhoods. And as is usual for an editorial styled by Norsa, the fashion is equally as decadent as the backdrop: here Hannelore wears the likes of Trussardi, Fendi, Alberta Ferretti, Stella McCartney, Vuitton, Vhernier, Giorgio Armani, YSL, Dries Van Noten, Vherner, Hermès and several others.




Tag Christof – Thanks to Barbara Spinelli at Tar

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01/06/2011

Icons: Dolce & Gabbana 1990-2010

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Icons: Dolce & Gabbana 1990-2010

2DM was mentioned in Dolce & Gabbana’s lavish new monograph: 1990-2010. We received a couple of the massive, hardbound and fabric covered (and tastefully gold-accented) editions in the studio earlier this week.

The work, which is a panoramic view of their seminal men’s fashion work over the past two decades, is full of quotes from the indefatigable duo, sketches of the pieces that would eventually become “icons,” and hundreds of photographs (mostly black and white) from the industry’s very best photographers including our very own Roger Deckker.

From the Bureau

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23/05/2011

Kilimanjaro 12 / Thinking Of Collective

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Kilimanjaro 12 / Thinking Of Collective

The twelfth issue of one of our very favourite cult magazines Kilimanjaro has hit newsstands. We’ve previously called it the “indefinable, iconoclastic and always original art/culture/fashion/film publication,” and this newest issue carries on its lovely tradition of true editorial experimentation. We loved the odd tabloid format of their last issue – and just about a year later, as magazines themselves increasingly become an endangered and ever more transitory species, the same observation about Kilimanjaro’s inventiveness rings true even now: “Filtered through the sensationalism, disposability… and the bigotry of this most hyperbolic and transitory of mediums, the serious discourse and creativity of this issue’s contents are amplified…”

This time out called “Thinking Of Collective,” the magazine comes in clever “ten of clubs” boxed set and takes on an a multilayered, onion-like form, with various supplements and features together making up the issue’s structure. And in terms of fashion, it’s stepped up quite a bit, featuring exclusive content from Yves Saint Laurent and, fittingly, gold foil throughout. And, there’s a new supplement called Kiliman, which contains twenty-five gorgeous pages of high-end mens fashion including pieces from YSL and Yamamoto. All this on tasty peach newsprint.


We’ve talked with the project’s mastermind Olu Michael Odukoya several times about past issues, including a 2010 interview, and remain impressed by his projects. And since we’re name dropping, this issue includes appearances from musician Damo Suzuki, Roman Signer, Martin Creed, Hauser & Wirth, Elad Lassry, and a full-colour supplement from Heinz Peter Knes.

Tag Christof – Images courtesy Kilimanjaro

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17/05/2011

2DM / Hero 5 & Simon Nessman

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2DM / Hero 5 & Simon Nessman

We previously shared Bruna Kazinoti and Ana Murillas’ fantastic editorial on Malthé Madsen for the most recent issue of eye-candy-fest Hero.

Now that we’ve finally gotten our hands on the entire issue, we’re glad to share quite a bit more about the issue, including more excellent work from the 2DM universe. This month marks the start of a new section in the magazine, billed REFS – a reference of contemporary fashion. It’s to be a digest of the best models, photographers, stylists and hottest brands.

For the new section, Vicky Trombetta shot Kieran Martin in Christopher Shannon and styled by John Colver. Céline Marioni styled Amuary Baudoin in for photographer Antoine Seiter. And in case you hadn’t gotten enough Bruna Kazinoti last time around, she also shot Jack Manhood in Versace and styled by Harry Lambert.

This month’s cover features curly-haired god Simon Nessman, and inside you’ll find an 18 page feature on the Canadian model extraordinaire by Fabien Kruszelnicki and styled by Stevie Westgarth.

Hero’s hot, as usual.

From the Bureau – Thanks to Juan Alvarado

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13/05/2011

Sean Frank / Alexander McQueen

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Sean Frank / Alexander McQueen

Sean Frank‘s career in filmmaking is just beginning, and already he’s making waves. His fashion work evinces the sensitivity of a much more seasoned artist, and he has quite the knack for crafting cinematic tension. The 22-year-old Londoner got his start in New York, where he shot the short film for 3.1 Phillip Lim to accompany the label’s lookbook shot by 2DM’s Vicky Trombetta. He’s since been at Alexander McQueen, and his newest, a gorgeous, shimmering behind-the-scenes film of the label’s Autumn/Winter 2011 collection has been burning up the blogosphere from its release.

Hot on the heels of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art’s smash hit Alexander McQueen retrospective, “Savage Beauty,” Sean’s films take on an even greater poignancy. They come at a pivotal time for the Alexander McQueen universe, as its creator passes into legend and the label searches for its voice without him at the head.



Sean studied graphic design at both Goldsmiths and Central Saint Martins, and his sensibility as a visual designer certainly shines through in his films. “I’ve always had a passion for cinema and film, and for how it has the ability to momentarily transport you to another place while giving insight into different worlds and ways of seeing,” he told us in a short conversation yesterday. He draws inspiration from a range of artists, and interestingly, the wabi-sabi of everyday life.

Sean’s young work is extremely promising, and we can’t wait to see what might be up his sleeves over the next few seasons.

Tag Christof – Film and still courtesy Alexander McQueen – Special thanks to Sean Frank

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11/05/2011

Mathieu Flamini / Tung Walsh for GQ Italia

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Mathieu Flamini / Tung Walsh for GQ Italia

AC Milan’s is fresh off a victory this weekend over the AS Roma. And just in time for the festivities, Milan star forward Mathieu Flamini graces a 10 page spread in as this month’s Uomini di stile feature in GQ Italia. One of 2DM’s London boys, Tung Walsh, shot the the big-time calciatore and native Marseillaise on a gorgeous Triumph scrambler for “Fuori Dal Campo Come Steve McQueen” (Out of the Field Like Steve McQueen).


He even paid us a visit last month while in Italy for the shoot. And as usual, Mr. Walsh’s work shines – and these portraits are an incisive look into the footballer’s highly stylish side. Mathieu is dressed in everything from Woolrich, Closed, Fred Perry, Fred Mello, Tag Heuer and Gant, to Firetrap, Roy Rogers, Dirk Bikkembergs Sport Couture, Dries Van Noten and Yamamay.

The issue’s cover features an army-capped, bare-chested Bar Rafaeli (reason enough to buy the issue), a look look back at Bob Dylan, and a gripping piece on the women of Chernobyl. Of-the-moment and smart, this month’s issue of the Italian version of this most iconic of men’s fashion magazines is as good as ever, and we’re thrilled for Tung’s debut on these pages.


Tag Christof – Images courtesy GQ Italia & 2DM

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