So Un-Hedi Like, Céline’s men in spring 2021 turn to Eboys as their muse

Celine Spring’s 2021 men’s display was not the typical 1970s wink of hedi Slimane, with tight blazers, flared trousers and striped dress stories that fashion audiences are used to.Instead, half Tunisian, half Italian, but French The artistic director gestured with his head to teenagers and what they wore in their rooms while creating videos of Tik Tok in the boredom of the pandemic.On the theme “The Dancing Boy”, Celine digitally displayed the heavy collection of logos, with Tik Tok Eboys as muse.a “documentary,” notes the House “the collection encompasses existing eboys and skate culture, a sincere portrait of a generation who took credit for confinement and isolation to assert and emancipate himself artistically.

Tik Tok has a widely used platform for fashion shows this summer.For Arab Fashion Week, the Arab Fashion Council collaborated with Tik Tok Arabia to provide Fashion Week.And Balmain’s artistic director, Olivier Rousteing, broadcast live his recent exhibition at Tik Tok on the Seine in Paris.

The concept of the collection dates back to December 2019, when Slimane photographed Noen Eubanks in London. It is the beginning of a series, “Portrait of a Teen Idol”, while the winter collection was being developed, as well as “The Dancing Boy”. But in March, the collection ended in Saint Tropez.

What was also another was the soundtrack, “They Call Me Tiago”, created through Canadian rapper Tiagz.Spectators and spectators at Céline fashion shows are accustomed to the French luxury fashion space that offers single-title songs that last up to 15 minutes.with 6 artists to participate in the exhibition of the editions, as a collective exhibition.With drone shots of cameras zooming back and forth on Formula One tracks, the Paul Ricard Circuit in the south of France, Celine Hommes [Men] was able to keep the audience interested.

Fleeing the 1970s, Slimane took men to a very Californian second-hand tent atmosphere in this collection, combined with 1980s windbreakers, trucker-style checkered shirts, jeans, fisherman’s hats, jackets and thick T-shirts with the logo, and not hats.With a nod to the eboys, Slimane has not set aside the looks of skate culture. The shoes returned us to the psychedelics 60s with palm-printed wrestling boots, floral prints, a tie dye and tops.

While Slimane took us to a more relaxed teenage taste for the Spring 21 men’s clothing collection, we hope to be back in the 70s for his next autumn/winter exhibition in Paris, because he simply can’t do it himself.

With experience in foreign policy and having worked for a few years in Washington, D.C., I found myself in a completely different field: fashion journalism.

With experience in foreign policy and having worked for a few years in Washington, D.C., I found myself in a completely different field: fashion journalism.I’m an American living in the Middle East, covering everything similar to fashion, getting to know haute couture and women’s pr.t-porter.Having spent time in work department stores in Beirut, I developed an eye for sewing and learned how to translate complex and detailed collections.I have written for Harper’s BAZAAR Arabia, GQ Middle East, Vogue Arabia, Refinery29 and NPR. Bags, shoes and coats are my weaknesses, so you can locate me regularly by browsing those sections of department stores and flea markets, as well as attending the fashion shows of Paris Fashion Week, which cover the latest collections of Arab and European houses.I don’t write about fashion, I write about devoted topics.

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