| Valentino, On to the Future
 PARIS, March 6, 2005 - One of the big surprises
              of the Paris season was Sunday's Valentino show, where the Roman
              designer decided to switch his attention from the red carpet to
              the blue sofas at Starbucks. "I want my clothes to be
  worn on the street so that they become real for the women that wear them",
  he wrote in program notes.  And the succinct and linear collection he
  presented was a major change from past seasons, where yards and yards of diaphanous
  chiffon floated in long trains, and toga-gowns were the specialty du jour.
  There were no togas today, but lots of highly wearable pieces that seemed tailored
  for a younger generation. And for the first time, boys hit the runway along
  with the girls - following the same modus operandi now used by Karl Lagerfeld
  for Chanel and Christian Lacroix for his ready-to-wear shows. The women's pieces
  were in turn influenced by masculine codes, with lots of slacks worn with sharply
  tailored jackets, a terseness running throughout. 
 But there was lots of romance to be found, even as the soundtrack sang out "It
  may be winter outside - in my heart it's spring". By the time a poppy-red
  evening gown with taffeta ruffles burst into bloom at the finale, that spinning
  theme of seduction had more than won over a surprised throng of guests, buyers
  and editors. And as always, Valentino's velvet glove shown through in the eveningwear,
  even in it's subdued form. Elsewhere an I-Pod hung from a belt, and sparkling
  brooches were used sparingly as trimming. One of the guys got the most beautiful
  mink coat of all - but there was enough fur flying to keep the most ardent
  Fashionista smiling.
 
 While other designers have been desperately clinging to the sixties this season,
  Valentino had the gumption to move on to new turf. That's where the world now
  is, and that's what made this collection so natural.
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