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  • London stalling

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    Sept 23 2006

    London stalling

    The revival of the Sixties label Biba was a small bolt of glitz in
    a humdrum spring 2007 showing

    With reports from Guardian News Service, Reuters and Associated Press.

    British actor Hugh Grant was front-row for the hottest fashion ticket
    in London last week -- the revival of iconic Sixties label Biba,
    synonymous with flowing scarves, caftans and glamour. The brand that
    helped to define the era as worn by Mick Jagger, Marianne Faithfull
    and Brigitte Bardot came back to life as a more luxurious line for
    the 21st-century hippie.

    The British capital was clearly hoping to recapture a bit of bling,
    and ditch its reputation as the poor cousin of more glamorous events
    in New York, Paris and Milan.

    "We are not a traditional capital for fashion, but we are a very
    creative crucible," said Stuart Rose, chairman of the British Fashion
    Council, which organizes London's twice-yearly shows.

    The designer directing the revival is Bella Freud, Sigmund's
    great-granddaughter. Biba, the King's Road boutique and clothing line
    founded in 1964 by Barbara Hulanicki, was revolutionary for making
    fashion accessible and for making shopping a leisure activity. It was
    the first fashion superstore and celebrity hangout, a grand aesthetic
    in which art nouveau was mixed with old Hollywood.

    Freud's modern take stayed true to the original colour scheme of
    mulberries, blueberries, rusts and plums, but added more modern
    textiles for her collection of jumpsuits, pinafores and print shirts.

    The rest of the week was lacking in excitement, save for a fly-in from
    Giorgio Armani. Many of the designers presented work best described as
    "avant-garde," translated as "not very commercial." Only in London
    would one of the most keenly awaited shows of the week be by a young
    designer, Gareth Pugh, who last season sent models down the catwalk
    in latex body suits affixed with what appeared to be rubber balloons.

    Yet the fact is, for all the much-vaunted affection for the surreal,
    the biggest designers are those who make serviceably pretty basics.

    Paul Smith is the most successful British designer, thanks to his
    adroitness at tricking out tasteful floral dresses and pastel men's
    suits. Yet, like many commercial designers, Smith occasionally tries
    to show he can do something a little different.

    And so men's wear for women seemed to be the theme, with models
    wearing slim-cut men's blazers and low-slung shorts with boxers
    peeking out over the top. Trousers were either tapered or, somewhat
    more flatteringly, slouchy.

    There were some sweet pieces toward the end, such as Jayne
    Mansfield-style shorts suits, white shirt dresses and body-following
    cocktail outfits.

    Armani hosted his first London show, featuring stars such as U.S.

    actor Leonardo Di Caprio and singer Beyonce to show off a new range
    of clothing for the anti-AIDS initiative "Product Red."

    "Product Red" involves brands including clothing company Gap and
    mobile phone firm Motorola that will donate part of the profits from
    the branded products to fighting AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

    Also showing in London, Paris-based Garen Demerdjian, a
    Lebanese-Armenian designer, presented a layered look with shorts and
    skirts over long leggings, high cinched belts and leather jackets.

    His models, stone-faced with tangled hair, walked slowly down the
    catwalk sporting hues of brown, green, apricot, black and silky white
    amid flashing lights and trance-like music.

    And even though the collections were ostensibly spring/summer, John
    Rocha presented a collection of cropped cargo pants, silk shirts and
    parkas in shades of black, ivory, stone and khaki.
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