Fashionlines Online Magazine
Fashion & Trends People & Places Art & Design Beauty & Health Shopping About Us Editor's Note
This Season's Trends

Customize Your Style >
Chantal's Secret:>
Risks and Rewards of the Birkin Bag >
Let the Fur Fly >
Family Jewels >
LA Finds >
Ins and Outs of 2005 >
Young Parisian Chic>
Couture Snowbunny>
Haute Couture Fashion Week>
São Paulo Fashion Week >
In the Bag >
Hollywood's Hottest Shoes >
The Best RTW of Europe >
Looking for Fashion's Spring >
LA Finds Spring 05 >

Featured Designers
Vivienne Westwood >
Jenni Kayne >
Brasil Anunciação >
as four Interview >
New West Coast Designers >
Elsa Schiaparelli >
Louis Verdad >
Au Bar with Alber >
Fashion Blues >
Passing the Torch at Geoffery Beene>
The Legend of Winston>
LVMH Sells Lacroix Couture >
Spring 2005 Carol Christian Poell >
A Jeweled Passion >
Sculpture to Wear >
Coco Kliks Interview >
Alber Reaches the Summit >

Runway Report
Haute Couture - Spring '05 >
São Paulo Fashion Week >
Paris Men's Wear - Fall '05 >
Paris - Fall '05 >
Milan - Fall '05 >
NY - Fall '05 >
LA - Fall '05 >
London - Fall '05 >
SF Fashion Week >

From the Cupboard of Ages Past

By Timothy Hagy

PARIS, January 25 - It's somewhat ironic that at the time Karl Lagerfeld sold off every piece of his personal Louis XVI collection at Sotheby's, he would choose porcelain from the Age of Enlightenment as inspiration for his Chanel couture collection. And of course it worked, like everything else Karl touches, but elegance aside, you wonder what Elvis might have thought at the sight of his granddaughter, Kylie Minogue, surrounded by a long line of mink-clad dowagers and stuffy fashion editors. Maybe he would have just laughed.

Models with white powdered hair meandered gracefully around a fountain, and if there was a blemish to be found in this quintessentially Coco day and eveningwear, it was not more evident than an occasional beauty spot.

For all the charm of the collection, Karl drew more attention from the set of rings he wore on each of his fingers, and the crystal belt he tucked beneath his Dior Homme short-tailed jacket. Those are also the trinkets that interested the hoards of teenagers waiting patiently out in the cold last November for a chance to snatch up one of his pieces designed for H&M. China is a very delicate ornament, easily shattered.

 








Contact Us | Subscribe | Visit the fashionlines-lookonline-zoozoom forum | Fashionlines Archives | “Jewels By Christine” | Search

© 1998-2005 Fashionlines.com. All rights reserved.

NARS at Beauty.com