Mackage
fall/winter 2005
Mackage's seeming
allergy to full-length silhouettes is in full bloom for Fall 2005. These
nether-revealing mini-creations of Elisa Dahan and Eran Elfassy offer
some luxuriant warmth as well as temperature-raising pizzazz.
Mackage mirrors
the Milan runway this season by reconfiguring the London youthquake
movement of the sixties with their Burberry-flavoured trench coats with
rounded lapels, teardrop buttons and catch-all pockets. Collars are
up and belts are in their women's line, and fur trim on hoods gives
a definite Canadian look to a collection that is otherwise so energetically
devoted to Old World romanticism. One example where this modernization
doesn't seem to work, however, is in their twenty-first century take
on the caped redingote, a bulky, unflattering contraption.
Lime-green and umber
walk the line of colour miscegenation, giving unusual verve to empire-waisted
treated leather jackets. Some of the most intriguing coats include one
that only give glimpses of glinting, supple leather patches as delightful
bits of fashion foreplay. These experiments don't quite resound the
same way in their menswear pieces. The boxy, awkward cuts don't give
any shape definition, and the flashy zippers and decorative swatches
only serve to cheapen what might have been designed with a classic look
in mind.
Mackage's silhouette
modifications, however, reach their targets. The curving lapel for women
helps to sufficiently break up the symmetry of a label that can sometimes
be tediously fixated on it.
Daniel
Cox
Fashion Editor
Marek Wlazlo
Photographer
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The Canadian Fashion Stage
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