Showing posts with label LAGOS FASHION WEEK DAY 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LAGOS FASHION WEEK DAY 2. Show all posts

Orange Culture Lagos Fashion and Design Week review (conversations in fashion with Ola Ebiti)

16:33:00
If I said I knew nothing about fashion I would lying. I'm learning albeit slowly. To know fashion is to know history. I've got at least half a century of fashion history to learn before I'll feel worthy of the title of fashion blogger/journalist. As with all things there's someone who knows a lot more than I, Ola Ebiti, who I call Babs, because I almost never call anyone by their real name. He's a Fashion Communications student in Newcastle.


Anyway this is Olas's cue...

I have a love hate relationship with the collection. It feel like it's split in two halves. There's the bit I love, and then there's the bit I don't love as much. I really enjoyed the first half of the show, in terms of the newness he brought to the idea of "the native" with the layers and layering, the hems of varying length and the use of translucency when he placed sheer fabrics over opaque ones. 


 However, I got a little bit lost with the printed half of the collection where the vast majority of the pieces were in blues and earth tones.

The sheers shown towards the end are a great alternative for those who like are layers and layering but can't pull it off in fifty degree weather... I'd definitely come back to Nigeria if meant I could wear a sheer coat.


What is most interesting with Bayo, having followed his previous collections and his personal style, is that his designs are rather self reflected. His collections embody his style. When you purchase a piece, you are buying into his world. Off the my head only female designers are known to do such (with Rick Owens being the only male exception I can think of)... It would be interesting to watch him progress especially in the context of menswear.

_________________________________________________________________________
My turn... (by my, I mean me, and by me, I mean Afam. Word!)

Bayo knows how to put on a show. Any other designer would have shown the pieces as they were, without any showmanship or pizzazz. Bayo, gave all his models laurels, reminiscent of ancient Greek society, and had them made up androgynously. And he had them wear white plimsoll trainers. The styling was successful.

That's a girl in the middle. She's Uju. She's a goddess. 




 I like the layers he displayed, and I like that the shirts have an Asap Rocky feel to them. His mixing of the sheer with the opaque is masterful. I will probably end up buying the pieces that Uju has on.

I don't like the brown and blue prints but they slip from memory when the entire collection is looked at together. It is necessary to say that the prints are not bad in themselves. It's just that when they're put together they gain an offensive quality. Had they been styled differently, I may have been raving about them now. 


Ola hit the nail on the head when he mentioned that Bayo's designs are self reflected. His refusal to button up his shirts is shown above. The shirt is forces me to imagine an extremely metro sexual Spanish matador, but that isn't always a bad thing. Some men like to get their tits out. You know? They like to show a little pec cleavage!!


Bayo's obviously one of the pec cleavage loving guys. 

It was a thoroughly enjoyable show. I was pleased to have seen it. And what's more, the international press present have been raving about it too. Anna Rykova, the creative director of Marie Claire, Russia said it was the best she had seen from Lagos at the time it was shown. Nick Remsen, a fashion writer for Style.com, Elle, Interview, and the New York Times Style Magazine said on his instagram yesterday that Orange Culture was the strongest label he'd seen in Lagos so far.


Happy Days,
Afam


Lagos Fashion and Design Week day 2 (Behind the scenes/ Back Stage)

16:46:00
As per usual I made my way back stage earlier this afternoon. Last night was fun even though I was surrounded by photographers who all smelled worse than I did. I'm looking forward to tonight. Fashion people are just so interesting. I do not think I've ever been around so many crazy people. I liked it, but I think the principles of diminishing marginal utility may set in (I may get sick of it... I can't say really)
I took a photo of the man taking a photo. How cool is that. 

That's Toyin. He's a pretty cool guy and model. He's very good. I'm going to do a piece on the top models at Lagos fashion week. WHOOP! FUN TIMES!  I'm psyching myself up for more work.

Models do a lot of waiting around while looking pretty. Look at how long that one is!!! She's also a master of the pose non pose. I saw her move ever so slightly when she saw me taking the picture

Anyway you look at it she's stunning. There's so much beauty in the world. 

She was a little worse for wear. It's lucky that Lola, one of the Maybelline girls was there to patch her up. 

#sleepingonthejob

bored and pissed off. 

He was trying that horsetail and leather groin cover on. 

Models get hungry too. 

I was lucky to see the Maki-Oh fitting. Uju's the tall one at the very end. She's the Nigerian Naomi Campbell. I'm not kidding, she's tall and tan and young and lovely.
It was here that I realised that I'd better get used to nudity. There's a lot of it at these things, and the models really don't give a damn about it. I think this is the closest I've ever come to putting a naked girl on my blog. You don't know which one she is? Look closely. 
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Happy Days,
Afam


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