• FASHION,  Runway

    Saint Laurent Ready to Wear S/S 2017 PFW

    Anthony Vaccarello’s official debute as the Saint Laurent designer makes a sexy bold entrance in sleak leather goth looks. “She’s certainly not bourgeois or classic. She has a huge respect for Saint Laurent, but not in the first degree. So I thought of her taking a vintage dress and cutting into it.”  – Vaccarello on the Saint Laurent girl. See the Saint Laurent Ready to Wear S/S 2017 collection presented at Paris Fashion Week below:

  • CULTURE,  FASHION

    Anthony Vaccarello Officially Replaces Hedi Slimane at Saint Laurent

    The rumored replacement of Saint Laurent’s creative director Hedi Slimane has now been confirmed and changes have taken place immediately. Hedi Slimane has been paired with Saint Laurent for around 4 years and now has stepped down with Anthony Vaccarello as the new confirmed creative director. His first collection with the brand will take place on October for Spring/Summer 2017 season. “I am extremely grateful for the opportunity to contribute to the history of this extraordinary house,” Vaccarello said in a statement, calling founder Yves Saint Laurent “a legendary figure for his creativity, style and audacity.”   Saint Laurent’s President and CEO Francesca Bellettini stated Vaccarello is a “perfect fit” for the house, claiming he “impeccably balances elements…

  • Anthony Vaccarello Ready to Wear F/W 2015 PFW
    FASHION,  Runway

    Anthony Vaccarello Ready to Wear F/W 2015 PFW

    Anthony Vaccarello Ready to Wear Fall Winter 2015 at Paris Fashion Week leans into the shadows and finds power there. The collection feels dark, sleek, and charged with an almost sci-fi tension, as if the clothes were designed for a future that values precision, confidence, and a little danger.

  • Anthony Vaccarello SS 2015 PFW
    FASHION,  Runway

    Anthony Vaccarello S/S 2015 PFW

    Anthony Vaccarello’s Spring Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week was not interested in whispering. This was a collection that spoke clearly, boldly, and with a very sharp point of view. Words became the clothes, literally. Typography took center stage, moving across the body in stark black and white, sometimes oversized, sometimes reduced to a tease. It was graphic, clever, and unmistakably Vaccarello.