Tag Archives: Saint Laurent

The Niki Baby Bag by Saint Laurent

Born under Anthony Vaccarello’s creative direction, the Niki bag first made its appearance in Saint Laurent’s Spring/Summer 2018 campaign, in which Kate Moss flaunted a fur coat with the leather bag dangling on her shoulder. And you know it can only be a rock star if a bag makes its debut on the arm of the one and only Kate Moss. The Niki bag was destined to become a modern classic that goes beyond seasons and trends.

With Saint Laurent’s rock ‘n’ roll legacy running deep, its rectangular structure and flap closure are borrowed from elder sibling, the Loulou bag. Reinterpreted in a softer, wrinkled leather that lends a hint of grunge and nonchalance, the bag comes finished with the unmistakable chevron stitching and Cassandre logo. As alluring as it is versatile, the Niki bag comes with a roomy interior and thoughtful pockets to keep close your daily essentials: iPhone, AirPods, journal, purse, hand sanitiser, hand cream, lipstick. Meanwhile, the convertible chain equipped with a leather pad ensures the comfort of the wearer’s shoulder.

This season, Saint Laurent presents the new Niki Baby bag rendered in dark toffee quilted vintage crinkled leather. Muted and monochromatic, this rendition lets the silhouette do the talking as it complements any attire to exude a sense of strength and confidence sans the need of loud colours and logos.

 

Visit ysl.com to find out more.

This article was originally published on www.lofficielmalaysia.com.

 

Charlotte Rampling Becomes Saint Laurent’s New High Priestess In Its Latest Fashion Film

Saint Laurent, the French luxury and trend-setting house, sure knows how to stage their runway to showcase their new collection. For its SS’21 collection, first unveiled on December 15, the house has brought us to an unknown desert. This time,  Saint Laurent’s Creative Director Anthony Vaccarello brings us to a spooky mansion .

The house’s SS’21 collection is reinterpreted by Argentine filmmaker Gaspar Noé through a fashion film titled Summer of ‘21, The provocative film director has previously collaborated with Saint Laurent on a film, Lux Aeterna, which has debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in 2019.

Clocking in just under eight minutes, the fashion film begins with a female running through the dark woods while her screams pierced through the otherwise silent forest; she’s being chased by an unknown entity. As she sprints away from the shadows, a mansion appears in a distant, taking her chances, she enters. The scene changes and everything is now bathed in hazy, red light then we are greeted with award-winning actress, Charlotte Rampling who plays as the high priestess, admiring herself in front of a mirror. She’s decked out in the season’s outfit: a flowy gown trimmed with feathers around the neck and the wrists.

The film continues to transport us where models — Anok Yai, Antonia Przedpelski, Sora Choi, Grace Hartzel and many others — strut and saunter from one sofa to another. They are clad in various pieces like leather dresses, hot pants and silk blouses with floral detailing. The models seem to be waiting and while doing so, they play chess, check their phones, all the while a remix of Donna Summer’s I Feel Love by SebastiAn plays in the background.

Then, a signal is given, all the models, as though in a trance, make their way to a concert hall where they are seated (socially distanced, no less) facing the stage. All eyes are on the stage, the curtain raises and Rampling emerges. Yellow light shines on her, she lifts her hands up as though she’s receiving adoration by many people. This is symbolic because after a tumultuous year, everyone is looking forward to a fresh start to the upcoming decade and Rampling represents this new dawn that’s about to unfold.

Here is the video:

By Joseph Low

 

Saint Laurent Luxury Upcycling – Helmut Lang Breathes New Life Into Anthony Vaccarello’s Abandoned Ideas

At the Saint Laurent flagship in the former Colette space on Rue St. Honoré, the much anticipated yet highly unexpected collaboration with elusive former fashion designer Helmut Lang, depicts a new and invigorating vision for a post-pandemic fashion industry. This special collaboration, dubbed “Helmut Lang curated by Anthony Vaccarello”, is part of a larger Saint Laurent Rive Droite project, where Anthony gives his creations to an artist in exchange for a set of unique sculptures.

Artistic Upcycling: Helmut Lang Breathes New Life Into Anthony Vaccarello’s Abandoned Ideas

Handpicked by the Creative Director himself, Helmut Lang – whose body of work in fashion reflect a strict construction that can only be seen as an underground influence upon Anthony’s vision – has long grown into a deep source of inspiration and fascination, “For my generation, he is the ultimate designer of the ’90s. I consider him at the same level as someone like Coco Chanel for the way he brought realness into fashion, something that everyone is still copying. Helmut was the first to stand up against artificial promotional messages, his vision and art direction brought everyone back to the real and meaningful essence of fashion.” Regarded the ultimate embodiment of minimalism, modernity and restrained opulence, Helmut Lang’s inventions, unorthodox way of life and mysterious charm, has earned him a reputation for being the person to always make unfailing decisions.

Paying careful attention to modern issues like sustainability, durability, lasting power of the ever-shifting nature of fashion collections and cycles, Anthony Vaccarello’s collaboration with Helmut Lang presented the perfect opportunity to expand his perception of the designer. Straying away from Lang’s common associations with denim and workwear clothing, Anthony finds that Lang is in fact an ideal interlocutor for a project that is also a dialogue.

Questioning the very definition of luxury and the meaning of the clothes’ function, Helmut Lang has worked closely alongside artists such as, Louise Bourgeois and Jenny Holzer. Unable to help himself, Lang’s one-off collaborations quickly turned into a habit during the 21st century, making him the pioneer of artist-and-fashion-designer-led assignments. These close links put new interrogations at the forefront of the ever-evolving fashion industry: fashion a form of applied art, the time-frame of fashion creations, and its more or less perennial impact on global culture, which are probably the only few that are still at the heart of today’s discussions.

Unlike his other projects, the invitation to work with Saint Laurent seemed far too appealing to pass on, for a number of reasons. In an email interview with Business of Fashion, Helmut Lang, who is now a full-time artist since 2005, expressed his great honour and excitement, stating, “I always had the utmost respect for the work of Yves, and Anthony has created an unparalleled vision for YSL, furthering the house’s legacy in a truly contemporary way. Anthony was the first person in fashion to engage in a collaboration focusing on my artwork. As I collaborated with artists in different ways throughout my time in fashion, it was intriguing to be in the reversed position.”

With a unique ability to turn items, either raw or discarded, into pieces of art, the “Helmut Lang curated by Anthony Vaccarello” collaboration is based off a selection of clothing and accessory prototypes, alongside garments and jewels left unfinished and deserted. Shredded, mixed with a pigmented resin to then be moulded in aluminium, these former fashion objects have become primal totems with unique textures reminiscing both, a precious past and a promising future, thus allowing the remaining testimonies of Anthony Vaccarello’s creativity to be morphed into a new life. The finalised sculptures will be displayed at Rive Droite, first in Paris, then in Los Angeles, where the full collection will be available for sale.

By Julia Roxan

 

Saint Laurent Rive Droite Holiday Collection, the ultra-luxe gift collection for all

‘Tis the season to be jolly, giving and loved; and Saint Laurent brings even more excitement to our holiday season with an ultra-luxe holiday gift collection.

And let us say this straight off the bat, you cannot get any fancier than what Saint Laurent has prepared at the Saint Laurent Rive Droite boutique in Paris and Los Angeles, where they partnered with Pinewood Forest in Morvan, Pierre Hermé and even Baccarat to create a long list of mind-blowingly luxurious gifts!

First, we present to you the range of Baccarat crystal decor that Saint Laurent prepared, which include an ashtray, a vase, a crystal heart and a pair of glasses. All painted in shades of black (which is an iconic hue for the Maison), your party will never be as luxurious as one decorated with these home decor masterpieces.

And what Christmas/holiday celebrations be without the perfect tree? Saint Laurent has worked with Pinewood Forest in Morvan, France for a special range of Nordmann pine trees, which are cultivated for 9 years to ensure an ideal height of 170cm and come decorated with neon ornaments in the shape of lightning bolts, hearts, stars, and music notes.

For the food lovers and gourmet connoisseurs, look no further than the Pierre Hermé Paris Bûche De Noël Carrément Chocolat, a Christmas log dessert so decadent that it is covered in gold leaves and made with the best selection of chocolate made with various techniques. Are you salivating yet?

If not, add that with the Pierre Hermé praline box (which, by the way, is also covered in gold leaves and you are definitely set for the season.

For that simple yet luxe gifts for your friends, family and lovers, the Snow Globe (available with the Eiffel Tower or L.A palm trees) would be the perfect little gesture. Else, Saint Laurent has also prepared an array of stationeries including pencils, sticky note holder, notepads, metal bookmarks and leather notebooks.

And for the finale, we present to you the bigger luxurious goods like the Zai Saint Laurent Skis set and a special “No Hell” designer tee and hoodie (which is a wordplay of “Noel”).

Making the holiday celebration an incredible chic one, Saint Laurent Rive Droite has since evolved the concept of the Maison, from fashion and beauty to a full-fledged lifestyle connoisseur – one that leads you to a life of luxe and chic experiences. Definitely the type of festive celebration we can stand for!

 

Swipe below to see the full Saint Laurent Rive Droite Holiday 2019 collection:

 

This article was originally published on www.lofficielmalaysia.com.

SAINT LAURENT Rive Droite—tethered by history, stretched by ambitions

The House of SAINT LAURENT opened two special museum-like flagships featuring limited-edition articles, books, vinyls, skateboards, yoga mats amongst other bric-à-brac. Curated by Anthony Vaccarello, the two boutiques do not shy away from the signature provocativeness that runs in the brand—from clothings, jewelry and now, even to YSL-branded condoms.

With panache, the House of SAINT LAURENT opened two SAINT LAURENT Rive Droite flagships on 8 June—one in Paris, the other across the Atlantic, in Los Angeles’ Rodeo Drive. These museum-esque boutiques pronounce SAINT LAURENT’s aspiration to requalify the brand and an allusion to SAINT LAURENT’s legacy; or as YSL’s creative director, Anthony Vaccarello, puts it, “enlarging the universe and DNA of Saint Laurent”.

In both the Parisian and Californian flagship, the brainchildren of Vaccarello adhered assiduously to the iconic monochromatic layout, as with its testy apparel. Like the other YSL boutiques, the signature interior design—the immaculate white marble floor edged by large mirrors and black marble panels—is not lost with the new flagships, but rather, is enhanced by a myriad of bric-à-brac and furniture, and transformed into a retail destination for “expression, exchange and lifestyle”. Perhaps, considering YSL’s chic and edgy vogue, it is even provocatively appropriate to feature a portrait of a woman’s bare posterior in a netted pantyhose.

Apart from the usual men’s and women’s ready-to-wear apparel, the highly curated boutiques also offer limited-edition articles as well as books, vinyl, vintage, and even novelty pieces like skateboards and yoga mats. If that hasn’t yet raised any eyebrows, consider this—YSL branded condoms are on sale.

When interviewed, Vaccarello explained, “We want to be more immersive for the consumer, and possibly reach some people who wouldn’t necessarily come to Saint Laurent, but who could – through this boutique – better understand the universe I’m trying to create.” True to his words, Vaccarello has intentions to universalise the spacious boutiques by hosting exhibitions, concerts and even film screenings to forge a more holistic brand identity.

While Vaccarello’s seeming frivolous use (or underuse) of some of the world most expensive land area may be puzzling to some, it is actually a stroke of genius. According to a Forbes’ interview of branding and marketing expert Olga Panacenko, the culture of ‘exclusion’ that luxury brands once embrace does not necessarily fit with Gen Z and millennials; rather, these marques need to be more culturally inclusive to woo the young money. This is precisely the reason for the birth of the two new flagships. The immersive and open concept of SAINT LAURENT Rive Droite plays down the sense of hyper-commercialisation as customers can now unpretentiously step foot into the boutique to learn about YSL’s heritage and distinctive style per se.

Paradoxically, without feeling pressurised to buy, it creates a stronger personalised brand-customer loyalty (and possibly better sales) that transcends the realm of the physical merchandise—the brand loyalty that increasingly affluent young adults identify with nowadays is grounded in the experience, heritage, and human feelings associated with the consumption of the product. This strategy is not unique to YSL. Hermès also has been meticulously sculpting its brand image for years by featuring veteran craftsperson at work to spread the artisanal-quality and authenticity of the brand. Being able to relate to the intangible-but-emotive qualities of the brand, young customers will be more willing to shell out.

Safe to say, LUXUO is not surprised if these experience-based emporiums rake in more revenue than the conventional minimalist boutiques.

Yves Saint Laurent once said, “I had had enough of making dresses for jaded billionaires.” Thus, when the namesake designer Yves Saint Laurent first founded his boutique, SAINT LAURENT Rive Gauche, in 1966 along the left bank of River Seine, he promulgated the eponymous Rive Gauche line that helped democratise luxury fashion in the sixties. That said, the Rive Gauche line is not a haute couture knock-off; each piece in the collection was afforded as much care, or even greater dedication, to nudge Parisian towards high-quality ready-to-wear fashion against YSL’s haute couture-oriented contemporaries.

53 years on, the house of SAINT LAURENT came full circle—except now with stores worldwide and as today’s fashion pride—to establish SAINT LAURENT Rive Droite along the right bank of River Seine, as a nod to YSL’s first Rive Gauche boutique and collection. Metaphorically traversing the River Seine from the left to the right bank, and religiously abiding by the house’s distinctive palette in face of luxury fashion’s changing paradigm, the new museum-like emporiums are the ultimate embodiment of SAINT LAURENT’s perpetuating relevance in fashion.

By Leon Ngiam