Metal couture

Last updated

Metal couture is a type of adornment or fashion item, made of metal, generally made as art, for fashion photography or high-end couture catwalk. The pieces are generally larger and more significant than jewellery, and are generally worn (either as headpieces or more like clothing), rather than decorating the body like jewellery. In differentiating metal couture from jewellery, as one-off pieces, and generally not practical or useful for the wearer, they are more akin to art, [1] than a standard item of jewellery. They may cover the torso, the neck, the head, or any part of the body. While they can be defined as "a form of jewellery", [2] they can also simply be defined as "fashion designs made from metal". [3] [4] Metal couture can stretch the concept of what is basically metal art, to the point that the metal becomes clothing, somewhat but not exactly the same as wearable art. [5]

Designers who create metal couture may be called "metal couturiers" or "metal couture designers". The designers generally come from a background in jewellery, or in some cases, may have skills in some other form of sheet metal work, for example the skills used to decorate and create historical metal armour.

Because of the size of the pieces, they are generally not made of precious metal as jewellery would be, as this would make them prohibitively expensive. Various types of metal are used for making metal couture, including steel, stainless steel, copper, aluminium, but may include other materials. Metal couture was first featured in fashion shows in the early 2000s, in both mainstream, high-end couture and alternative fashion/subcultural fashion shows. [6] [7]

Some metal couture has featured in product promotional photography, stage shows, art installations and the catwalk. Other items have featured in film, [8] stage, and the video clips of performers including Beyoncé and Lady Gaga. [9] [10] [11] [12]

An early metal couturier was Paco Rabanne, who used metal in clothing for his designs, for film and major fashion labels in the 1960s. [13] Other metal couture designers include Spain's Manual Albarann, who has had his work featured in cinema ( Maleficent ), on stage and in music videos. The jeweller William Griffiths has featured metal couture, including metal underwear and metal corsetry, in fashion shows in London and Melbourne. [14] Laurel De Witt's label Laureluxe has featured her work in a number of fashion shows in New York. [15] [16] Melbourne-based Bernard Lyons, under the label Assassinus, has had metal couture designs featured regularly in alternative fashion shows in Australia since 2005. [17] [18] Jared Holland's Exosthetik studio in Auckland, New Zealand, specialising in complex electrolytic etching, has featured his work in fashion shows and made pieces for the music industry.

Related Research Articles

Costume jewelry Jewelry used to complement a particular costume

Costume or fashion jewelry includes a range of decorative items worn for personal adornment that are manufactured as less expensive ornamentation to complement a particular fashionable outfit or garment as opposed to "real" (fine) jewelry, which is more costly and which may be regarded primarily as collectibles, keepsakes, or investments. From the outset, costume jewelry — also known as fashion jewelry — paralleled the styles of its more precious fine counterparts

Jean Paul Gaultier French fashion designer

Jean Paul Gaultier is a French haute couture and prêt-à-porter fashion designer. He is described as an "enfant terrible" of the fashion industry and is known for his unconventional designs with motifs including corsets, marinières, and tin cans. Gaultier founded his self-titled fashion label in 1982, and expanded with a line of fragrances in 1993. He was the creative director for French luxury house Hermès from 2003 to 2010, and retired following his 50th-anniversary haute couture show during Paris Fashion Week in January 2020.

Thigh-high boots

Thigh-high boots, known also as thigh-length boots or simply thigh boots, are boots that extend above the knees to at least mid-thigh. Other terms for this footwear include over-the-knee boots and, especially when cuffed, pirate boots. Lengths vary from reaching just over the knee to reaching almost to the crotch.

Elsa Schiaparelli Italian fashion designer and couturier

Elsa Schiaparelli was an Italian fashion designer. Along with Coco Chanel, her greatest rival, she is regarded as one of the most prominent figures in fashion between the two World Wars. Starting with knitwear, Schiaparelli's designs were heavily influenced by Surrealists like her collaborators Salvador Dalí and Jean Cocteau. Her clients included the heiress Daisy Fellowes and actress Mae West. Schiaparelli did not adapt to the changes in fashion following World War II and her couture house, Maison Schiaparelli closed in 1954. The house was subsequently revived in 2014.

Viktor & Rolf

Viktor & Rolf is a fashion house which specialises in creating conceptual and avant-garde designs. It was founded in 1993 by Dutch designers Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren. For more than twenty years Viktor & Rolf have sought to challenge preconceptions of fashion, and bridge the divide between fashion and art. Viktor & Rolf have designed both haute couture and ready-to-wear collections. The duo is renowned for their avant-garde designs, which rely heavily on theatrical and performative fashion runways.

Manuel Cuevas Mexican fashion designer

Manuel Arturo José Cuevas Martínez Sr. is a Mexican fashion designer best known for the garments he created for prominent rock and roll and country music acts.

Oumou Sy

Oumou Sy is a Senegalese fashion designer frequently referred to as "Senegal's Queen of Couture".

Fashion design Art of applying design and aesthetics to clothing and accessories

Fashion design is the art of applying design, aesthetics, clothing construction and natural beauty to clothing and its accessories. It is influenced by culture and different trends, and has varied over time and place. "A fashion designer creates clothing, including dresses, suits, pants, and skirts, and accessories like shoes and handbags, for consumers. He or she can specialize in clothing, accessory, or jewelry design, or may work in more than one of these areas."

Dominique Sirop is a French fashion designer and grand couturier.

Nina Ricci (brand) Fashion house founded by Maria "Nina" Ricci

Nina Ricci is a fashion house founded by Maria "Nina" Ricci and her son Robert in Paris in 1932, and owned by the Spanish beauty and fashion group Puig since 1998.

Rohit Bal Indian fashion designer (b. 1961)

Rohit Bal is a fashion designer from New Delhi, India. He designs for both men and women.

Jenny Bannister is an Australian fashion designer, based in Melbourne.

Sabyasachi Mukherjee Indian fashion designer

Sabyasachi Mukherjee is an Indian fashion designer, jewellery designer, retailer and couturier from Kolkata, India. Since 1999, he has sold designer merchandise using the label Sabyasachi. Mukherjee is one of the Associate Designer Members of Fashion Design Council of India and the youngest board member of the National Museum of Indian Cinema.He has designed costumes for Bollywood films such as Guzaarish, Baabul, Laaga Chunari Mein Daag, Raavan, and English Vinglish.

Jorge Manuel is a Cuban-American fashion designer based in Miami.

Josephus Thimister Belgian interior designer

Josephus Melchior Thimister was a Dutch interior decorator and noted fashion designer who launched his eponymous fashion label, THIMISTER in 1997. In 2001, the editor-in-chief of Vogue USA Anna Wintour named Josephus Thimister as one of the Twenty-First Century's best fashion designers. In 2010, Cathy Horyn writing for The New York Times described his couture show and its pieces as, "fascinating (…) quite clear in military shapes and broken elegance. Dresses like melted down family silver". After a brief period with Karl Lagerfeld as an assistant, he worked as a designer at Jean Patou before being appointed director of luxury prêt-à-porter at the house of Balenciaga. It was for the next five and a half years that Thimister would spend reviving the brand with his pure, succinctly modernist vision. He then set up his own Paris-based house in 1997, and thereafter presented both haute couture and prêt-à-porter collections under his name.

Anamika Khanna is an Indian fashion designer who operates from her studio situated in Kolkata. She has been covered by the Business of Fashion (BOF) for being the Indian designer who has blended traditional Indian textiles and techniques with Western silhouette and tailoring. She is the first Indian designer to have an International label: "Ana mika". Her creations are sold online and offline stores across India and abroad. Before entering the fashion industry, Anamika was a classical dancer and painter.

Hayden Ng Singapore based Fashion designer (born 1966)

Hayden Ng is a Singapore based Fashion designer.

Shaun Leane (jeweller) British jewelry designer

Shaun Leane is a British jewellery designer best known for his sculptural pieces created for Alexander McQueen. His eponymous jewellery brand is a four-time winner of the UK Jewellery Designer of the Year award.

Paul Vasileff Australian fashion designer

Paul Sebastian Vasileff is an Australian fashion designer who is the founder and head designer for Paolo Sebastian, an internationally known atelier based in South Australia.

Candice Cuoco American fashion designer

Candice Cuoco is an American fashion designer who finished as a finalist on Season 14 of Project Runway and has been on the sixth season of Project Runway All Stars, where she finished in 12th Place.

References

  1. Ibarra, Sabina, "Q & A with Manuel Albarran", Living Out Loud, May 5, 2014 http://www.lol-la.com/qa-with-maleficent-costume-designer-manuel-albarran/
  2. Ibarra, Sabina, "Q & A with Manuel Albarran", Living Out Loud, May 5, 2014 http://www.lol-la.com/qa-with-maleficent-costume-designer-manuel-albarran/
  3. Mohemad, Dena, "Manuel Albarran Metal Couture", Pushit Journal http://www.pushitmagazine.com/news/manuel-albarren-metal-couture/
  4. Ilbarra, Sabina, "Q & A with Manuel Albarran", Living Out Loud, May 5, 2014 http://www.lol-la.com/qa-with-maleficent-costume-designer-manuel-albarran/
  5. "Metal Couture" The Alternative Fashion Blog, Tuesday, March 3, 2009 http://altfashion.blogspot.com.au/2009/03/metal-couture.html
  6. Jill Stark "The Dark Side of Fashion" The Age, March 17, 2005, p. 25 http://www.theage.com.au/news/Fashion/The-dark-side-of-style/2005/03/16/1110913658383.html
  7. "Style? They've goth it" MX Magazine 11/03/2005
  8. Atkinson, Nathalie, Edmonton Journal, "The Look of Evil Never Goes Out of Fashion; Costumes Mirror Maleficent's Fall from Grace", June 6, 2014, p. 11
  9. Recent Pevonia News and Events http://www.dayspamagazine.com/article/recent-pevonia-news-and-events
  10. Mohemad, Dena, "Manuel Albarran Metal Couture", Pushit Journal http://www.pushitmagazine.com/news/manuel-albarren-metal-couture/
  11. niwdenapolis: MANUEL ALBARRAN'S METAL COUTURE http://www.niwdenapolis.com/2009/11/manuel-albarrans-metal-couture.html
  12. The Alternative Fashion Blog, "Lady Ga Ga More Metal Couture", Retrieved 25 March 2016 http://altfashion.blogspot.com.au/2009/11/lady-ga-ga-more-metal-couture.html
  13. Wayne, George, Vanity Fair, "Heaven Scent", 1 February 2000, p. 104
  14. Drapers Record, "The future stars of fashion shine bright in London", 8 April 2000, p. 14
  15. Laurel De Witt, "LaureLuxe to Present Bold Metal Couture Designs at Couture Fashion", Week New York http://www.couturefashionweek.com/press/laureluxe.htm
  16. B, Jane, "Laurel Lux Metal Couture" Jane B Lashes, Your Beauty is My Passion http://janeblashes.com/the-jane-b-show/passion/1011-2/
  17. Jill Stark, "The Dark Side of Fashion" The Age, March 17, 2005, p. 25 http://www.theage.com.au/news/Fashion/The-dark-side-of-style/2005/03/16/1110913658383.html
  18. "Style? They've goth it", MX Magazine 11/03/2005