Envers
fall/winter 2005
In Envers' Fall
2005 line-up, vests steal the menswear spotlight, particularly a black
one whose stuffed epaulets look like they were slashed off in guerilla
warfare. A tawny leather vest with cowboy frills takes that thread into
different though still rugged territory, while a hook-closure redingote
cape evokes the noble masculine chivalry that is ever-present in any
Envers collection. Then there is the poofy red shawl wrap that does
the same thing, but wrongly.
The red pinstriped
shirt as well as the turquoise and black satin shirt, as simple as they
are, may be the pieces that attract the most consumer attention. The
combination of Envers tailoring and everyday practicality can be irresistible.
If there's something Yves-Jean Lacasse knows how to do-apart from synthesizing
disparate cultures in his clothes-it is to design sweaters to die for.
He helps men stave off the winter chill with an original green and blue
number that gets funky with silhouette in a bulky kind of way.
The sleeveless grey
bouclé knit sweater is a first for his women's line because it
introduces the bohemian pauper look that Dries Van Noten unleashed on
the Paris front row in March. Envers accentuates this tomboyishness
with baggy culottes. Also for women, a V-necked cream knit practically
melts off the shoulders, while holding its own. The multi-coloured off-kilter
top has a grey double-layer, and the fractal possibilities have an out-of-bed
sexiness to them.
Leave it up to YJL
to throw us a curve-ball-didn't I seen that peach top with chintzy faux-jewel
embroidery and fur tassels at the Monte Carlo casino on New Year's Eve?
Daniel
Cox
Fashion Editor
Marek Wlazlo
Photographer
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