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/fa/ - Fashion

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>> No.13257358 [View]
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13257358

>>13257005pics or it didnt happen

>> No.10307388 [View]
File: 21 KB, 226x298, klaus-kinski-1-sized.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10307388

>>10306729
In what ways was Sruli ahead of his time?

In design "utility" objective there is very little semblance between Sruli Recht's and Carpe Diem. Outside of the members of Carpe Diem Devoa and sometimes Rick are probably the only companies who had similar ideas to in garment utility.

Same can be said material wise, except Carol or some sort of improvised Antwerp student collection would be more apt.

Sruli Recht evidently did incorporate more classical menswears looks but I don't think that was at all the root conjuncture of his clothing- definitely something more about flamboyant alpine survival vis. Kinski.

Laser cutting doesn't announce futurism, it was then, and still is now a tool used in costuming and a lot of creative fields. It's not that one piece designs were not-"acceptable" but rather they always looked limp and functionally unorthodox/defunct- in a CCP way except without the presentation quality.

In Sruli's work an accordance to "futurism" can perhaps be found in the pattern methodology (which both Carpe Diem and Issey Miyake had done, and done better) and what it envisioned for clientele- modality (which Marvielab made a much more tempting take on).

What I'm saying here is what you're saying is pretty badly founded.

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