If you’re anything like this editor, Capitalism ruins everything around me shirt you probably look forward to fashion month for the new collections debuting on the runways as well as the street style looks that are snapped outside of the shows. I find both equally inspiring, but the outfits fashion-industry veterans are wearing always have a big impact on how I’m getting dressed and the new-season items I add to my wardrobe. With fashion month upon us, I was curious to get a preview of the pieces and trends insiders will be wearing this season. Ahead, some of the best-dressed people in fashion are sharing a sneak peek at the cool brands, spring trends, and exact pieces they are planning to wear everywhere from New York to Paris to attend the shows for the spring/summer 2024 collections. Lauren Santo Domingo’s fashion month picks are steeped in some of the spring 2024 trends she is gravitating to. Among the most street style-worthy? Sweaters styled as scarves and chocolate paired with black. Perhaps her biggest point of focus, though, is great outerwear primed for cold winter days. “It’s all anyone really sees after all,” she explains.
Capitalism ruins everything around me shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt
The spring/summer 2024 showcase was set against an uncertain economic and political backdrop, Capitalism ruins everything around me shirt which may have led many designers to approach their collections with extra consideration. The customer has become more mindful too, further aware of their consumption and the downright privilege that it is to be a consumer right now. Yes, there will always be an appetite to shop, but there is a deliberate attempt to be less ostentatious about it (read: there will be far fewer logos this season). Of the trends, many carried on from previous seasons, not just the last. In addition to what Page observed above, from the palette to the prints down to finer details such as jewellery, big bags and ballet flats, it felt like we’d seen much of it all before, but this time with a renewed appeal. No big leaps were made—which is good in terms of our bank balances and wardrobes—and our editors were able to envision themselves wearing much of what they saw in their daily lives. Let’s hear it for the wide-leg trousers!. The more directional trends we did see were there to spark joy at a time when it felt like it might have been in short supply. There was a celebration of colour throughout, which could have quite easily taken over this entire trend report. Red continues to dominate, with Hermès’ designs acting as a stoic antithesis to the candy-pop looks that lined the Versace, Prada and Eudon Choi runways. There was shimmer but with a shakeup; silhouettes were stronger and the overall sweetness was distilled. Florals, for spring? They’ll never be groundbreaking, but with seismic petal proportions and blooms that jump off the toile they’re delicately attached to, there’s new life to be found in the trend that we assumed we’d seen everything from.
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