I spend each day of every fashion week looking forward to the end of Paris Fashion Week when I can sit down and flip through the incredible clothing, intricate stories and impressive ideas showcased by the Japanese fashion designers. This fashion stitches itself into my brain and never loses it's vividness.
Junya Watanabe's collection featured styling so unsettling that each look shape-shifted as I looked at it. The blank doll masks gave the entire collection an eerie and ghostly quality. Who were these figures? Jailbirds? Extra's in Where's Waldo book? Sailors? The ghosts of fashion past?
The vivid hair suggested some personality to go with each look, as did the diverse collection of hats, but the masks created an upsetting sameness.
The collection had a decidedly nautical bent, but the masks keep me from seeing the whole lot as sailor clothes. Individual pieces are quite wearable for Watanabe, but the overall effect is stunning and avant-garde.
Junya Watanabe's collection featured styling so unsettling that each look shape-shifted as I looked at it. The blank doll masks gave the entire collection an eerie and ghostly quality. Who were these figures? Jailbirds? Extra's in Where's Waldo book? Sailors? The ghosts of fashion past?
The vivid hair suggested some personality to go with each look, as did the diverse collection of hats, but the masks created an upsetting sameness.
The collection had a decidedly nautical bent, but the masks keep me from seeing the whole lot as sailor clothes. Individual pieces are quite wearable for Watanabe, but the overall effect is stunning and avant-garde.


This may not be my favorite Yamamoto collection of all time. However, Yamamoto's final look proclaimed "This is Me" over and over. Indeed. This is him. (And the inflatable skirt seems to suggest that declaration is keeping him afloat).


Kawakubo moved beyond simple deconstruction and reconstruction to reference multiple personalities--as if embodying one style wasn't enough so each look had to tackle several. As much has chaos seemed to reign, the collection held itself together and emerged cohesive and beautiful.



In an effort to be cool, edgy and forward thinking, fashion often forgets the pure joy of fun clothing. Chisato brings to life a playfulness and spark too often absent from the world of high-fashion. The colored on prints are perfectly childish, yet completely appropriate for any grown woman. Leopards, butterflies and clouds evoked childhood and imagination in the best possible way.
These clothes aren't just the over-the-top playfulness usually worn only by pop starlets (though there is plenty of that). Many pieces possess an unexpected timelessness without being stodgy, boring or the same. I'm looking forward to this line's next 20 years.


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