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  • Grown-up aesthetic bridges generation divide

    The Guardian, UK
    Sept 22 2004

    Grown-up aesthetic bridges generation divide

    Jess Cartner-Morley, fashion editor


    At any catwalk show, the front row tells its own story. At Betty
    Jackson yesterday, the glam duo of Jo and Leah Wood, wife and
    daughter of Rolling Stone Ronnie, encapsulated the secret of the
    designer's success.
    While London fashion week suffers from an uneasy generation gap,
    divided between older designers who struggle to make headlines and
    young ones who make headlines but precious few sales, Jackson
    maintains a following among old and young.

    The fashion climate is well suited to her designs. Both London and
    New York have confirmed that bare midriffs are out and ladylike
    dressing is in - at least for six months - meaning Jackson's grown-up
    aesthetic is back in the spotlight.

    For next summer, her skirts and day dresses are knee-length; her
    elegant trousers are worn low-slung but with a T-shirt tucked in.
    Shirt-dresses in safari-brown cotton, and frocks in butterfly-print
    silk, are worn with low-heeled metallic summer sandals - useful
    clothes but with a healthy dose of frivolity.

    Jackson describes her inspiration as the "decadent days of the 30s
    together with the louche international lifestyles of the 70s". For
    evening, she sent out a showstopping long, pale column with art-deco
    silver beading and a glamourous bead and feather-trimmed kaftan.

    The 30s and 70s have cropped up repeatedly this season. New York had
    Ralph Lauren's 30s gowns and Luella's "1970s Pacha" look; London has
    seen Elspeth Gibson's stunning 30s satin dresses and trousers in
    classic Claridges shades of eau de nil and cream, and FrostFrench's
    Studio 54 glam.

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    Far from being a coincidence, the emergence of these decades was, in
    fact, inevitable - fashion ploughs through revivals at an alarming
    rate, and the last two years have seen the 40s, 50s, 60s, and 80s.
    Next season, it might be time for the 90s.

    Earlier in the day, it was the turn of five emerging designers.
    Unfortunately, most did little to challenge the stereotype that young
    London designers' collections are ugly, unwearable, and badly
    presented - one expected a pair of one-legged trousers to appear any
    moment. There was a ray of hope, however, in Gardem, the collection
    by Garen Demerdijan, a Lebanese Armenian born in 1975 and based in
    Paris.

    Although yesterday was his first catwalk show, he has run a small
    business since 2001, and has been stocked in the directional London
    boutique Browns Focus for six seasons.

    Yesterday's collection had a sophistication of outlook and quality of
    execution that set him apart from other young hopefuls.

    Trendwatch Socks & high heels

    Ankle socks with high heels, a favourite with the Hoxton fashionista
    wishing to convey glamour and subversion, have this week become a
    staple look.

    At Jessica Ogden, left, socks were worn with chunky wedge sandals for
    a nostalgic, schoolgirl effect. At Gardem, footlets - mini-socks that
    leave your ankle and the top of your foot bare - made an unlikely
    appearance, in black under strappy sandals.

    But it was Paul Smith who showed the week's newest combination. Long
    ribbed socks almost to the knee were worn with loafers: very English
    eccentric. Should you be tempted to follow suit, look for
    fawn-coloured socks. A colour similar to but slightly darker than
    your skin colour makes this a surprise leg-lengthener.
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