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Chitose Abe’s Sacai turns seasons upside down with collection in Paris

A model presents a Sacai creation during the men’s spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris on Saturday. Photo: AFP
A model presents a Sacai creation during the men’s spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris on Saturday. Photo: AFP

Japanese designer ignores preconceived ideas about men’s and women’s garments, and the established seasons to create her own ‘spring/winter’ collection

It has been a long road for the Japanese designer Chitose Abe and her Tokyo-based brand, Sacai. She began her career working as a patternmaker for Rei Kawakubo at Comme des Garçons, then for Junya Watanabe. After leaving the cult label Comme des Garçons and about a year after giving birth to a daughter, Chitose Abe founded her label Sacai, a play on her maiden name, Sakai. She has became one of the most loved fashion designers in the menswear industry.

Huge stacks of vintage speakers are held together by fluorescent straps during Sacai’s men’s spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris. Photo: AFP
Huge stacks of vintage speakers are held together by fluorescent straps during Sacai’s men’s spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris. Photo: AFP

She showcased the Sacai womenswear and menswear spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris on Saturday with a show on the fifth floor of the old offices of the French newspaper Libération, in a car park. The guests sat in front of huge stacks of vintage speakers held together by fluorescent straps.

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A model presents a Sacai creation during the men’s spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris. Photo: AFP
A model presents a Sacai creation during the men’s spring/summer 2019 collection in Paris. Photo: AFP

Chitose Abe is continuing her story of focusing on fabrics and patterns associated with one season and transposing them to another. This season, Sacai ignored pre-conceived ideas about garments for men and women and the established seasons to create her own “spring/winter” collection.

The warm Native American inspired blankets from the Oregon mills of Pendleton are re-contextualised into spring fabrics. The pattern is lost in free-flowing asymmetric dresses, oversized hoodies, on trousers with the cuff rolled-up, and pleated dresses. The idea can be a fashion faux pas, or even worse, a hint of cultural appropriation. Chitose Abe makes it look good, which is not an easy task, and even twists it to feel super cool.

Chitose Abe plays with mixed media, hybrid styles for the collection. Photo: AFP
Chitose Abe plays with mixed media, hybrid styles for the collection. Photo: AFP

Between a few Type II denim and MA1 jacket military hybrid styles, the polka dot silk scarves in powder pink and hunter green inserted into blouses transform into chic dresses, pyjamas and jumpsuits.