Monday, 7 April 2014

Molly&Bones has moved!

you can now find Molly&Bones goodness at
mollyandbones.wordpress.com

see you there
xx MB

Saturday, 22 March 2014

Battles AW'14 Runway Shots






Runway shots from my graduate collection, 'Battles'

see more at tashdaly.wix.com/mollybones

MB xx

Monday, 17 March 2014

If the world is a megastore, even Chanel's clothes have a shelf life.


In what has become a lavish standard for Karl Lagerfeld, the spectacle that was the Fall 2014 RTW Chanel show laughed in our faces at our idea of excess. If his Spring show recognised the art world as a supermarket, then this is what it would look like if the world was too. 

Hundreds of thousands of everyday supermarket items, rebranded to be Chanel-esque, filled the shelves and lined the runway. There were no bargains to be found at this megastore however, with items marked up 20 or 50 percent.

Nodding to Andy Warhol's pop-art interest in Coca Cola bottles and Brillo boxes and Andreas Gursky's 99 Cent diptychs, it cannot be helped but to interpret the show's references to consumerist culture and the devaluation of high-art. But what exactly was he trying to say? 

Let's take Warhol's perspective; placing high-art and low-art, high-value and low-value items in the same space to obscure the representation of value on items we see everyday, whatever their 'true' value. Reproduction and repetition of an object forces value to decrease, so, what does it say about placing previously unattainable-to-most items (cue Chanel clothing) into a sphere that everybody engages with? On the other hand, how does it effect the average consumer if that previously-unnatainable-to-most items is placed into their most routinely surroundings at a price of 50 percent more? Naturally, consumers desire what is least unattainable to themselves. For example, I want a Chanel purse with all of my heart and truly think my life would be better if I had one. Of course, it will be a long time before I can afford to buy one, however, if the price of said Chanel purse was to increase by 50 percent would I want it more or less? Obviously, I would want it more. The classic supply-and-demand theory means fewer people will own said Chanel purse, therefore on owning said Chanel purse I would become even more special than an even larger number of people who cannot own said Chanel purse. By placing the clothes (unattainable) in a supermarket (attainable), the line is not necessarily blurred, but in fact, emphasised.

On the other hand, there is a direct relationship between the clothes themselves and megastore/mass-produced products. PVC pleather intentionally made to resemble rubbish sacks, bags packaged in styrofoam and cling-wrap like meat cuts, bags the shape of egg-cartons and styrofoam used for fruit all featured in the collection. Of course a consumerist society -particularly fashion - is totally disposable and has a high turnover. Chanel pumps out 6 collections per year, and although the value we place on the clothes remains high, their shelf life is little more than fruit on the shelves of a megastore.

Don't be fooled, I still love Karl more than ever, and this was the greatest and most spectacular show of PFW






MB xx

Tuesday, 28 January 2014

Newsworthy: Karen Walker's new Eyewear Campaign

Karen Walker and photographer Derek Henderson have been collaborating and making magic happen for some time now, but it is the latest eyewear campaign that really makes you sit up and take notice.

In support of the United Nations' International Trade Centre's Ethical Fashion Initiative, Kenyan artisans, who have recently been in the background creating screen-printed and beaded pouches, have been brought into the spotlight in celebration of their work. 

The campaign features some of the Kenyan artisans as the face, to put a face to the hands that have been creating the pouches. The Ethical Fashion Initiative has been backed by other brands such as Vivienne Westwood and Sass & Bide, but none I believe will make as much of an impact as this. 

The result is what you'd expect from a KW Eyewear campaign - a fun celebration of life, and the photos of course are absolutely stunning.



photos via NZ Herald.

Monday, 25 November 2013

Mulberry not showing at LFW

Mulberry has announced they will not be showing a runway collection at the upcoming Fall'14 London Fashion Week in February next year. Following Emma Hill's departure from the brand earlier this year, there is yet to be a replacement appointed. 


The question now is who will be Emma's replacement? Mary Katrantzou and Erdem Moralioglu are among the rumored who may be up for the gig.

MBxx

Saturday, 26 October 2013

Newsworthy: Kate Moss appointed as Contributing Editor for Vogue UK

Announced on 16th October, Kate Moss has been appointed the role of Contributing Fashion Editor for Vogue UK. With her first story due in the upcoming issue, Kate will be working with her own choice of photographers and models.


In Just under a month from now, the high publicised and much awaited collaboration collection between Isabel Marant and H&M hits stores. The collection is filled with cropped pants, textured knits, menswear-style coats and bomber jackets, Marant's so so French style shining through. Just the other night, Marant and her fashionable friends came out head-to-toe in the collection for the launch party in Paris.



 MB xx

Thursday, 10 October 2013