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Fendi Runway Spring 2008

Fendi Spring 2008

For Spring 2008, Fendi took us on a psychedelic trip with eye-popping optical illusions. Circles swirled on everything from a young and fresh-looking multicolored halter dress to a sophisticated black and white circle skirt with matching capelet.

If easy, white dresses ever seemed boring, they are far from that now. Lagerfeld cinched them at the waist with multicolored belts created from individual rectangular tiles. Do those belts look familiar to you? They remind me of the Lego belts at Marc by Marc Jacobs. The one thing I must have from this runway – one of the squishy, oversized clutch bags shown covered in circles or in camel with stitched Fendi logos.

Fendi Spring 2008 Fendi Spring 2008
Fendi Spring 2008 Fendi Spring 2008

Pucci Runway Spring 2008

Pucci Spring 2008

What impresses me each season about Pucci is the way they continue to be modern while reaching back to vintage Pucci touches in their use of color, prints, and classic shapes.

For Spring/Summer 2008, designer Matthew Williamson went digging in the crates of classic Pucci and added swingy fringe, bold embellishments and chunky jewelry. One look that made me swoon was a gold mini-dress with a smattering of mosaic-like tiles at the neck and around the hem.

He paired more modern gold lame and sequins with the vintage shift and mini shapes and then remixed Pucci’s juicy color bursts of tangerine, aquamarine into feathered and fringed minis or one-shoulder maxidresses. Williamson’s suede shoulder bags carried geometric shapes, more tiles, and dreamcatcher inspired decorations.

Some posh girls might find these looks hard to wear in their everyday lives, but the Pucci girl is an eternal bohemian and this collection remained totally true to her.

Pucci Spring 2008 Pucci Spring 2008
Pucci Spring 2008 Pucci Spring 2008

Gucci Runway Spring 2008

Gucci Spring 2008

I strive not to be one of those people who constantly looks back and reminisces about “the good old days”. Yet, every time I see a recent Gucci collection, I can’t help but pine for Tom Ford.

Let’s get this out of the way now: I don’t NOT like Frida Giannini. There’s nothing wrong with the collections she’s turned out for Gucci and there are more than a few things quite right about them. Let’s face it, she’s done wonders for their accessories collections (read: ca-ching, ca-ching) since she’s been there.

That said, I do miss those hyper-sexed up looks that channeled the maneater in every woman — and that says more about me than it does about either Ford or Frida.

Gucci’s Spring/Summer 2008 collection was all about the yin and yang – the feminine and masculine, the black and the white. Giannini sent out monochromatic prints in different silhouettes – full skirts, floor-length columns, and sexy minis – often accented with sparks of sunny yellow or bright pink. My favorite of these black and white looks is a mini with bustle hips and a canary yellow flower centered at the bodice. What I’m still on the fence about are the tough-girl plaids. The cropped plaid jackets and skinny pants work in some looks and in others…not so much.

Giannini also remixed the very successful Gucci “Indy” bag (again) although so far none of her changes trumps the lizard or the ombre versions, both of which I L-O-V-E. Her strength has always been in her accessories and I have no doubt that the ankle cuffed stilettos, open toe booties with V-cut insteps, and large clutches with wristlets will be a hit.

Gucci Spring 2008 Gucci Spring 2008
Gucci Spring 2008 Gucci Spring 2008

Roberto Cavalli Runway Spring/Summer 2008

Roberto Cavalli Spring 2008

Roberto Cavalli surprised everyone this season with his turn toward the girly. Cavalli is known as the house that leopard print built, but for Spring 2008, the designer embraced floral prints, big diaphanous dresses, and sweet femininity. His nod to ‘70’s boho chic aesthetic included simple, white floor skimming dresses paired with chunky, wood-heeled platforms. The standout pieces were a series of flower splashed cream maxi-dresses where color came in one big floral explosion that hovered around the hem or trailed down one side of the gown.

Despite the emergence of floral prints, Cavalli largely stuck to a muted color palette that replicated sunsets shot with white, cream, lilac, and dusk tones. One of my favorite dusk colored dresses was a short, fringed, flapper-esque number with filmy lace peeking below the hem and above the neckline. This is certainly a more restrained Cavalli than that of seasons past, but for those of you who miss the overt sexiness, there was plenty of leopard print on parade in his Just Cavalli collection.

Roberto Cavalli Spring 2008 Roberto Cavalli Spring 2008
Roberto Cavalli Spring 2008 Roberto Cavalli Spring 2008
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