Philipp Plein's fashion extravaganza during New York Fashion Week is a bust - Los Angeles Times
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Philipp Plein’s fashion extravaganza during New York Fashion Week is a bust

Philipp Plein, left, and Future hit the runway at the finale of the designer's spring and summer 2018 runway show at the Hammerstein Ballroom on Sept. 9, 2017, during New York Fashion Week.
(Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / AFP / Getty Images)
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Switzerland-based designer Philipp Plein followed up last season’s New York Fashion Week debut at the New York Public Library by giving the Hammerstein Ballroom a cabaret-style makeover where on Saturday night he presented his spring and summer 2018 men’s and women’s collections in a runway extravaganza that was long on spectacle and short on substance.

The show unspooled at the same time as Alexander Wang’s #wangfest 5 miles away and across the East River in Bushwick, Brooklyn, a scheduling conflict that the conspiracy theorist wing of the fashion flock pointed to in an ongoing beef between the two designers. That fallout began early last year when Wang took to social media to accuse Plein of copying one of his 2014 runway shows.

Plein’s show began with burlesque star Dita Von Teese performing her signature martini-glass striptease routine at the top of the runway. (Though Von Teese’s performances are always a delight to watch, there seemed to be no discernible connection to the collection that followed.)

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Looks from the spring and summer 2018 Philipp Plein runway collection presented on Sept. 9, 2017, during New York Fashion Week.
(JP Yim / Getty Images, left and second from left; Andres Kudacki / Associated Press, far right and second from right)

After that, rapper Future took to the stage, where he served as a sort of musical accompaniment/master of ceremonies to the runway show proper — though “improper†is a more accurate word as the collection seemed to consist primarily of strappy leather dress-shaped bondage harnesses and sparkle-studded screen-printed T-shirts depicting a bound and ball-gagged Cinderella-like cartoon character. (Some shirts included the slogan “Prince Charming made me do it.â€)

The collection was also heavy on distressed denim, leather jackets and diamond-quilted metallic bombers, most of the pieces larded up with studding, cartoon-animal embroidered patches or both. There were a few — very few — more elevated pieces, specifically tiered ruffled dresses, but even they suffered from the abundance of bondage strap details.

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Far more memorable than the clothes, though, were some of the celebrity and quasi-celebrities Plein enlisted to model them. Among those we noticed sharing the catwalk with modeling elite Stella Maxwell, Adriana Lima and Irina Shayk were Vernell Varnado and Cordell Broadus (father and son, respectively, of Snoop Dogg), and actress-recording artist Teyana Taylor, whose trip down the runway in a black lace lingerie-like bodysuit included bumps, grinds and crawling on all fours.

The theme of the collection, at least according to the slogan emblazoned on the T-shirts and hashtagged into the show notes, was “Good Gone Bad,†which is actually a pretty succinct way of summing up the whole experience.

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For more musings on all things fashion and style, follow me at @ARTschorn.

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