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Russian Fashion Week: Romina's New Futurism Godfrey Deeny
October 22nd, 2006 @ 00:55 AM - Moscow Futurism, which popped up all over the latest fashion season in the West in everywhere from Balenciaga to Hussein Chalayan, is alive and well in its historic home – Russia.
Inspired by the great Constructivist artist Alexander Rodchenko, Olga Romina presented a cool collection of hip sportswear, tough girl chic for cut no slack gals, Saturday, October 21st in Moscow’s Gorky Park at Russian Fashion Week.
The season is staged in a well-designed center of high-tech tents containing press offices, several bars and restaurants, the inevitable Russian VIP space and booths for sponsors, including one for Evian which featured a leggy blonde babe in a rose-filled 19th century cast-iron bath.
Using combinations of Lycra, stretch cotton and silk, a neutral palette of silver, soft grays, white and faded yellow, Romina created a great collection that seemed right on the cutting edge of international fashion.
"Futurism seems cool to me," Romina told FWD after her show, showing off a taut top featuring a swirling abstract design from Rodchenko.
Like the artist, Romina understands volume using it skillfully in bat-winged jackets, body conscious hooded tops with crafty cutouts, voluminous buttoned-up dresses and ping-pong ball-finished halter necks and curvy blousons. All paired with homemade silver visors and platforms, and backed up by a great soundtrack from the cult Russian sci-fi film "Ceres Ternii," To The Stars, it made for a cool moment.
There was one unfortunate passage when a model strolled out with an As Four hole for the shoulder bag, but we'll put that down to the excess of youth.
It remains one of the great mysteries of Moscow shows that even though one quarter of the models in most shows in Milan or Paris feature Russian gals, local designers here often employ weird looking "real" people. Not Romina, who send out glamorous new Russia beauties, in easily the best cast show we've even seen in Moscow.
Olga, who hails from Kirov, an industrial city 1,000 kilometers north of Moscow, is a graduate of the fashion school of Slava Zaitsev, the grandfather of Russian designers oft referred to as the Kremlin couturier. Expect to hear more about her in future. This girl has gets it.

October 22nd, 2006 @ 00:55 AM - Moscow
Futurism, which popped up all over the latest fashion season in the West in everywhere from Balenciaga to Hussein Chalayan, is alive and well in its historic home – Russia.
Inspired by the great Constructivist artist Alexander Rodchenko, Olga Romina presented a cool collection of hip sportswear, tough girl chic for cut no slack gals, Saturday, October 21st in Moscow’s Gorky Park at Russian Fashion Week.
The season is staged in a well-designed center of high-tech tents containing press offices, several bars and restaurants, the inevitable Russian VIP space and booths for sponsors, including one for Evian which featured a leggy blonde babe in a rose-filled 19th century cast-iron bath.
Using combinations of Lycra, stretch cotton and silk, a neutral palette of silver, soft grays, white and faded yellow, Romina created a great collection that seemed right on the cutting edge of international fashion.
"Futurism seems cool to me," Romina told FWD after her show, showing off a taut top featuring a swirling abstract design from Rodchenko.
Like the artist, Romina understands volume using it skillfully in bat-winged jackets, body conscious hooded tops with crafty cutouts, voluminous buttoned-up dresses and ping-pong ball-finished halter necks and curvy blousons. All paired with homemade silver visors and platforms, and backed up by a great soundtrack from the cult Russian sci-fi film "Ceres Ternii," To The Stars, it made for a cool moment.
There was one unfortunate passage when a model strolled out with an As Four hole for the shoulder bag, but we'll put that down to the excess of youth.
It remains one of the great mysteries of Moscow shows that even though one quarter of the models in most shows in Milan or Paris feature Russian gals, local designers here often employ weird looking "real" people. Not Romina, who send out glamorous new Russia beauties, in easily the best cast show we've even seen in Moscow.
Olga, who hails from Kirov, an industrial city 1,000 kilometers north of Moscow, is a graduate of the fashion school of Slava Zaitsev, the grandfather of Russian designers oft referred to as the Kremlin couturier. Expect to hear more about her in future. This girl has gets it.

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