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Powered by flowers, electric brights, sparkle, and shine, Dries Van Noten’s collection moved to the music of European men’s trends. As designers make a return to tailoring, they’re piling on the print, embellishment, and color and channeling a new sensuality into their collections.
Van Noten’s men were 21st-century dandies with their bougainvillea pink or leopard-print suits, ruffle-front, sparkly tuxedo shirts, and sheer floral-printed short-sleeved tops. His man was fearless in flaunting his inner peacock.
The designer said the collection was a play with “archetypes of garments and archetypes of men, a mash-up of man tropes, attitudes, and predilection.” Boy was he right, as he sent out shiny silk cargo pants and bright sequined flowers spilling over the shoulders of a white denim jacket.
Even the tailoring had a feminine air, with jackets nipped subtly at the waist and with broader shoulders. Some were done in a tapestry-style fabric, leopard print or a graphic green and white camo. Long coats came with a smudgy flower print and long shirtdresses were adorned with more botanical patterns. These were clothes that could bring out the dandy in any man.