×
75 925
Fashion Jobs
URBN
Free People Senior Buyer - Accessories
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
URBN
Free People Senior Buyer - Accessories
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
SALLY BEAUTY CORPORATE
00706 Color Consultant
Permanent · LOS ANGELES
SALLY BEAUTY CORPORATE
Salon Professional (Stylist)- Studio by Sally - 10813
Permanent · DENTON
MACY'S
Retail Fulfillment Associate, Temecula Promenade - Full Time
Permanent · Temecula
MACY'S
Asset Protection Detective, Rosedale Center - Full Time
Permanent · Roseville
MACY'S
Asset Protection Captain, Alderwood - Full Time
Permanent · Lynnwood
MACY'S
Asset Protection Detective, Lenox Square - Full Time
Permanent · Atlanta
MACY'S
Asset Protection Security Guard, Los Angeles dt Broadway Plaza - Flex
Permanent · Los Angeles
MACY'S
Asset Protection Security Guard, Ala Moana - Flex
Permanent · Honolulu
MACY'S
Asset Protection Detective, Cumberland Mall - Full Time
Permanent · Atlanta
MACY'S
Asset Protection Security Guard, Boston - Full Time
Permanent · Boston
MACY'S
Retail Fulfillment Associate, Colonie Center - Full Time
Permanent · Albany
RALPH LAUREN
Selling Manager
Permanent · Tannersville
GUESS
Buying Coordinator
Permanent · Los Angeles
SACK OFF 5TH
Operations Associate
Permanent · CAMARILLO
BLOOMINGDALE'S
Cash Office Associate, Full Time - 59th Street
Permanent · NEW YORK
LEVI'S
Beyond Yoga Hrbp Director
Permanent · Culver City
LORO PIANA
Director, Private Client Relations, Vic
Permanent · NEW YORK
COACH
Director, Material Strategy & Innovation, Sustainability, Coachtopia
Permanent · New York
JCREW
Cdl Class a Yard Driver (1st Shift)
Permanent · Lynchburg
SHISEIDO
Engineer II, Regional Quality
Permanent · East Windsor
By
AFP
Published
Sep 30, 2014
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Click here to print
Text size
aA+ aA-

Paris fashion says non to 'Normcore'

By
AFP
Published
Sep 30, 2014

PARIS, France - Self-aware blandness, aka "Normcore", may be the latest high street buzzword, but for the world of high fashion -- currently gathered in Paris -- the trend is something to be resisted.

US retailer Gap's latest advertising campaign -- with the slogan "Dress Normal" -- has been seen by some as an example of the Normcore trend.

Coined by the K-Hole trend forecasting group, the term is a combination of the words "normal" and "hardcore".


Céline spring/summer 2015. (Source : Pixel Formula)




Wikipedia defines Normcore as a "unisex fashion trend characterised by unpretentious, average looking clothing" with everyday items of casual wear sold by big retail chains such as jeans, chinos, T-shirts and hoodies all falling into the category.

Normcore may be about unremarkable, mass-market clothes -- not the sort of high-quality designer pieces on the catwalks in Paris -- but its celebration of "normal" nonetheless appals many.

In the week that fashion superstar Jean Paul Gaultier bowed out of ready-to-wear after nearly 40 years, his long-time former business partner and childhood friend Donald Potard told AFP he believed the trend towards nondescript clothing was part a broad, creeping blandness that was hampering the creativity of top designers.

"Jean Paul has always been an innovator. I don't see many heirs, at least in France. It's a question of the times," he said of the designer who famously created Madonna's cone bras.

"Today it's less easy to come up with original ideas -- the prizes are going to looks that are all similar," he said.

Potard, who is no longer close to Gaultier, said too many people now dressed like clones, hoping to draw as little attention as possible to themselves through their clothes.

"Everyone is dressing the same way, everyone is in grey, people buy their clothes in chains which sell the same thing in Paris, Milan, Tokyo and London," he complained.

-- 'Everyone in grey' --

Italian designer Giambattista Valli -- the man behind the stunning post-nuptial dress worn by George Clooney's new bride Amal Alamuddin in Venice on the weekend -- was equally dismissive.

"Normality doesn't belong to me. Normality always bored me, it's like, urgh... I love everything extraordinary," he told AFP backstage after his show on Monday.

With over 90 ready-to-wear collections for spring/summer 2015 due to wrap up on Wednesday, the sheer ordinariness of some looks has been noted by fashion watchers.

At Veronique Leroy's collection of re-worked 1920s dresses in boyish cuts, a critic for website nowfashion.com clearly hankered after something a bit more exciting.

"The feeling that this... wardrobe was a bit close to reality couldn't be escaped," critic Liza Foreman wrote.

Tapping into the same "normal" zeitgeist, perhaps, were some of the pieces in Clare Waight Keller's Chloe collection including a hoodie-poncho outfit and a utilitarian-looking denim jumpsuit and skirt.

At Phoebe Philo's Celine collection, meanwhile, one navy ensemble looked a bit like hospital scrubs, while shoes were flat and elasticised.

Another critic, however, urged people not to mistake simplicity for normality.

Reviewing Christophe Lemaire's show for the same website, fashion writer Lily Templeton highlighted the "pared-back quality" to the clothes, adding: "It is their quality and the able hand of the chef that makes this simple fare into a gourmet treat."

Beautifully executed or not, the end of the current trend for "normal" cannot come quickly enough for Donald Potard.

"We have to hope that fashion can become fashionable again," he added.

by Helen ROWE

Copyright © 2023 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.