Versace MFW S/S 15 Showlist

sore

Super Star
Jan 25, 2012
2,322
1,515
Vanessa Moody (O)
Maartje Verhoef
Ondria Hardin
Lexi Boling
Kate Grigoreva
Anna Ewers
Sasha Luss
Lina Spangenberg
Sabina Lobova
Chiharu Okunugi
Ine Neefs
Niki Trefilova
Julia Bergshoeff
Lindsey Wixson
Alexandra Elizabeth
Mariacarla Boscono (C)
Elisabeth Erm
Binx Walton
Daria Strokous
Blanca Padilla
Hanne-Gaby Odiele
Taylor Marie Hill
Mariana Santana
Katlin Aas
So Ra Choi
Elena Peter
Stasha Yatchuk
Kremi Otashliyska
Kat Hessen
Josephine van Delden
Waleska Gorczevski
Dasha Denisenko
Nastya Sten
Malaika Firth
Kasia Struss
Julia Nobis
Anine van Velzen
Joséphine Le Tutour
Isabeli Fontana
Suvi Koponen
 
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Vanessa Moody

Maartje Verhoef

Ondria Hardin

Lexi Boling

Kate Grigorieva

Anna Ewers

Sasha Luss

Lina Spangenberg

Sabina Lobova

Ine Neefs

Chiharu Okunugi

Niki Trefilova

Julia Bergshoeff

Lindsey Wixson

Alexandra Elizabeth

Mariacarla Boscono

Elisabeth Erm

Binx Walton

Daria Strokous

Blanca Padilla
 
Hanne-Gaby Odiele

Taylor Marie Hill

Mariana Santana

So Ra Choi

Katlin Aas

Elena Peter

Stasha Yatchuk

Kremi Otashliyska

Kat Hessen

Josephine van Delden
 
Waleska Gorczevski

Dasha Denisenko

Nastya Sten

Malaika Firth

Kasia Struss

Julia Nobis

Anine van Velzen

Josephine Le Tutour

Isabeli Fontana

Suvi Koponen

Kate G #2

Lexi #2

Sasha #2

Ondria #2

Ine #2

Mariacarla #2

Maartje #2

Anna #2
 
I actually really love this collection. It's fun and flirty and really fitting that this is a SS collection.
I don't see any gigantic catastrophic thighs either! :luv:
 
Review Style.com

Knowing Donatella Versace's love of balls-out rock, thinking back to the Versus show in New York and St. Vincent's storming performance at the after-party, it's easy to assume that what Donatella did tonight was a direct reflection of her recent experiences. Straightforward silhouettes, bold color, and no embellishment added up to her strongest collection in a long time. She didn't need to fanny around with eveningwear. That's what couture is for. Instead, she offered a starkly modernist, color-blocked, crystal mesh take on cocktail dresses (the kind of cocktail that will carry you through till dawn—and a lifetime of regret). Isabeli Fontana's outfit was just one of a dozen that would, as Raymond Chandler memorably defined femmes fatales of another era, "make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window."

True, the crystal mesh was a slam dunk in the vein of vintage Versace, but the real achievements of this collection lay elsewhere: in the comparatively quiet sophistication of the prints, the Warholian reconceptualization of the house's Medusa signature, the motif of rings artfully dissected with real metal. And in the hyper-athleticism of pared-back pieces bifurcated by angular graphic sashes. Or in the peculiar, naive energy of sharp black tailoring defined by oversize white stitching. It was like there had been some kind of overlay on Versace, a sensibility that was slightly to the left of the label's tradition. Slinky sexy, yes, but also fiercely don't-give-a-damn physical.