On Wednesday July 9, during Couture Week in Paris, Dany Atrache presented her Fall-Winter 2014/15 collection in a legendary venue steeped in history.
Once Robespierre’s private apartment, this typical setting at 207 rue saint-Honoré, with its wall fabrics signed by the more recently-tenanted Lesage company, was the ideal setting for the expression of a romantically-tinged collection.
What Romanticism and the 60s have in common: Liberty
The 60s marked a revolutionary phase in the history of fashion design, with the liberation of all strict codes. As for the romantic trend, it refers to a marvellous genre, close to the fable that the designer dreams of for this woman who loves herself in skin-deep materials.
Dany Atrache’s highly personal collection reveals a poetic sensibility, the embodiment of the modern woman with assumed allure and insolent beauty.
While respecting the atelier know-how acquired over the years, the women in this collection dare to wear pants mixed with lace and embellished with embroidery, with or without a jacket, but always feminine to the extreme with the use of delicately patterned guipure.
His imagination and need for expression drive all his work, and he dares to play with shades of gray, ranging from blue to turquoise to midnight blue, and his expressive palette veers towards pink with a touch of fuchsia to bring out a blood-red glow.
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