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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Tim Blanks and Imran Amed Recap The Season That Was

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 11 October 2022

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

BoF’s editor-in-chief and editor-at-large walk through the highlights and unforgettable moments of fashion weeks in Milan and Paris. 

Background:

Fashion’s Spring/Summer 2023 season was jam-packed with debuts, returns and chatter-inducing moments. Alessandro Michele was inspired by his mother and identical twin sister for his “Twinsburg” Gucci presentation which featured 68 pairs of identical twins. Rick Owens drew a dress from a 700 million year-old jellyfish. Dior and Yves Saint Laurent crafted elaborate grotto and fountain backdrops for their collections, while Dries Van Noten staged his Paris comeback in lockstep with Japanese designers including Junya Watanabe, Noir Kei Ninomiya and Jun Takahashi for Undercover — BoF editor-at-large Tim Blanks’ favourite of the season. 

“To me that felt like one of the best commentaries on the pandemic that we've had from fashion — of everything that's passed, everything that's lost, everything that's been lost,” said Blanks. “And then at the same time, the celebration with the fact that he's still there.”

Key Insights:

  • In Milan, four major houses — Ferragamo, Missoni, Etro and Bally — debuted the first collections from new designers, with hopes to replicate the success big names like Tom Ford and Alessando Michele have been able to create for Gucci, said Tim Blanks. 
  • For Balenciaga, Demna staged a mud-drenched show with battered and bruised, hoodie-clad models that provoked an intense emotional reaction from the crowd, while Nicolas Ghesquière showed an energetic and future-looking collection for Louis Vuitton. 
  • This fashion month, many catered to both in-person and online audiences to varying degrees of success. Valentino, for one, notably struggled with an element of the show just for cameras, another for people outside and an uber-long runway that saw a number of models take their shoes off. 
  • Fashion traditionally provides a sense of escape, said Blanks, but it’s increasingly harder to turn away from the real world. Economies are deteriorating, Russia’s assault on the Ukraine continues and the artist formerly known as Kanye West put a shirt emblazoned with “White Lives Matter,” a phrase deployed by hate groups, on the runway. 

 

Additional Resources: 

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:08.7

Welcome to a special edition of the Bof podcast. It's Tuesday, October 11th.

0:14.3

Tim Blanks and I returned from Fashion Month with a lot on our minds.

0:17.8

Now, I wasn't in Milan, but Tim was there to take in all of the proceedings,

0:22.0

especially for designer debuts, which everyone was paying attention to in Milan, alongside

0:27.4

an emotional moment at Gucci and a standout Botega Veneta show. That was all before we

0:33.3

arrived in Paris, and Kanye West cast a pall over the proceedings. Now, that's not to say there wasn't a lot

0:39.0

of relevant, substantive fashion to pay attention to in Paris as well. It's not just about marching

0:44.6

a whole bunch of clothes down the catwalk. It's really about putting them in the context. You want them

0:50.1

to be seen in whatever that context is, whether it's historical or emotional or psychological

0:55.5

or whatever.

0:56.4

Demna stages his shows in such a way that there's a focal point, that everyone in that space

1:02.5

together is having a shared experience and can see everything that's happening.

1:06.7

So without further ado, here's the season that was with Tim Blanks on the B-O-F podcast.

1:13.8

Hi, Tim.

1:15.0

Hi, I'm Ron.

1:16.0

How are you feeling?

1:17.1

It was an intense couple of weeks.

1:18.5

It always is, but I don't know.

1:19.6

This one felt like I did a lot more work than usual.

1:22.9

Well, you were very disciplined with your daily reviews, and people love them.

1:28.5

But I always love this conversation between you and I, because we can go a bit deeper into the thinking and feeling and impressions behind the words that you so diligently delivered this season.

...

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