By now it’s abundantly clear that as far as fashion trends go, 2020 will be remembered for the sweatsuit. That said, the notion that comfort should be forever tied to athleisure is shortsighted. As Duro Olowu puts it quite simply, “ease doesn’t have to mean track pants.”
Today, at his charming store in London’s Mason’s Yard, the designer presented his easy and elegant fashion antidote to these unprecedented times to a handful of editors and buyers. Olowu’s fashion acumen is rivaled only by his knowledge of art, and this season he drew on the work of Emma Amos, the acclaimed African-American painter who passed away in May of this year.
The designer has been experimenting with new skirt shapes, and the sarong-like midi-length silhouettes felt especially in step with the moment. He touched on Amos’s use of collage with a stunning patchwork print on a sweet full skirted dress that was fastened with a bow at the waist. Of the other 1950s-leaning looks in his lineup, the white dress that was embroidered with palm trees was especially fresh; a clear sign that there are reasons to get dressed again on the horizon.
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