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- <text id=91TT1955>
- <title>
- Sep. 02, 1991: Denim Goes Upscale
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FASHION, Page 71
- Denim Goes Upscale
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Designers are transforming the humble fabric into sexy, colorful
- party gear
- </p>
- <p>By Martha Duffy--Reported by Farah Nayeri/Paris and Linda
- Williams/New York
- </p>
- <p> Novelty is king in high fashion. From the unexpected to
- the outrageous, it writes the rules of the upmarket game. This
- season, boutiques are full of dressy clothes in bright colors--limes and lemons, oranges and magentas. Nothing new there.
- But wait--the surprise element is that the costumes are made
- of that old standby of working clothes and off-duty wear, denim.
- A humble cotton twill, typically a weave of indigo and white,
- it has always meant durability and comfort. Now it also means
- class.
- </p>
- <p> "I would do anything but blue jeans in denim," designer
- Rebecca Moses says cheekily, "including very ladylike dresses
- and jackets that are embroidered and covered with rhinestones."
- Zang Toi, a Malaysian who is Seventh Avenue's latest find, is
- looking for a little shock value too. ``I had to do something
- completely different," he says. "I went with bright red and
- shocking-pink denim, with metallic gold stitching." One of his
- best sellers is a sexy little bustier dress in bold colors. His
- next line includes a two-layered frolic: a chiffon pleated skirt
- over a pink denim sheath.
- </p>
- <p> The house of Chanel has lent its great international
- cachet to upstart denim. German-born couturier Karl Lagerfeld's
- romance with the fabric is a weapon in his war against what he
- calls "the diktats of fashion," whereby certain garments and
- accessories can be worn only in particular settings--silk for
- splendor, denim for fun. In his designs for Chanel, the maestro
- is mixing up materials--tweed, denim, grosgrain--with such
- sleight of hand that some of his efforts look more formal than
- his variations on the house's classic cut.
- </p>
- <p> In Milan, Italy's irrepressible gadfly Franco Moschino
- points out that the Tois and the Lagerfelds are
- Johnny-come-latelies. Moschino has used denim for years in his
- clever, occasionally rude collections. He sells to royalty and
- rock stars--in fact, to anyone who is secure enough or
- desperate enough to want to stand out. Right now he is making
- shirts with looped embroidery across the chest. "I use denim as
- a symbol of our times," says Moschino, "in the same way that
- Andy Warhol, in his Pop Art, used wartime camouflage painted
- over faces, to give them a contemporary impression." He notes
- another important virtue of denim: "It makes you look younger."
- </p>
- <p> Denim is hardly the first Cinderella to be invited to
- fashion's gaudy ball. Coco Chanel, always well ahead of the
- game, made jersey into a chic material in the '20s. In the '30s
- gingham was popular with American designers, and it's turning
- up again this year. Today rayon is undergoing a renaissance,
- from something that made up Harry Truman's sport shirts to the
- fabric of favor for mimicking silk among most top-of-the-line
- designers.
- </p>
- <p> For the moment, designer denim is a hot item, but when the
- fad is over, it is unlikely to decline in ignominy like the
- Nehru jacket. Instead it will probably become part of fashion's
- standing repertoire of alluring textiles. "Denim is the one
- thing everyone owns," says Donna Karan, who uses it extensively.
- From now on, it is likely to be found in garment bags as well
- as on coat pegs.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-