Chanel
by Christine Suppes
German monasteries in the twelfth century were bitterly cold spaces in which
discussions were held in large common rooms that surely claimed the lives
by death from pneumonia of many monks. Thus the fashionistas arrived at
the near freezing Grand Palais for the Chanel show, to be given a white
CC oversized wrap and a stainless CC thermos of hot tea. A Chanel client
next to me preferred her (non-CC) silver flask of brandy, which she clutched
in her overly manicured Dragon Lady nails laced with diamond rings of various
over sizes. Her long suffering male companion kept stealing white CC wraps
in which to enfold her until she looked like a big, fat drunken mummy. I
was so cold I nearly asked her to share her flask with me. Then the show
began, and what a show. The set was constructed like a NASA rocket site,
in which younger than young and skinnier than skinny models in flat, delicate
boots and mini dresses traversed. Some entered the rocket and disappeared.
Beautiful jeunes filles, one lovelier than the next in sculpted suits or
heavenly deconstructed evening ensembles circled the stage. The something jarring
occurred: a model in a long gown, evening jacket and high heels appeared----now
the show for the older client began. I confess I saw so many beautiful clothes
in this part of the show that I forgot the chill. Black and white are still
Mr. Lagerfeld's favorite colors, just as supreme modern elegance is still
his mantra. When he appeared at his finale like the count of an old Teutonic
castle in his painted on black jeans and matching Ugg boots, the rocket ship "took
off" to
reveal all of the models on a high circular stage. Mr. Lagerfeld is an eccentric
genius, and I am always amazed.
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