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July 2, 2017

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Bare legs a hot fashion statement

AS Paris men’s fashion week comes to a close today, one trend for spring summer 2018 and could not be clearer — bare legs.

Fashion clearly feels that the time is right for men to get their legs out for the girls — or for other men who admire a well sculpted calf.

In a week in which a heatwave across Europe saw British schoolchildren and French bus drivers don skirts in protest at not being allowed to wear shorts, the momentum behind taking the trouser above the knee — or further still — seems unstoppable.

While many women and some in the fashion police have long looked down their noses at men in shorts, bare legs may soon be the least of their worries.

For as well as shorts, socks and sandals, which many thought had been safely confined to the style wilderness, are also back.

Here are the three top trends for the Paris men’s catwalks:

Legs, including hairy ones, dominated the men’s catwalks from Thom Browne’s business suits with shorts to Dior where Kris Van Assche matched micro shorts with tailored black or white suit jackets to show the maximum of thigh.

Browne, clearly enjoying himself, cheekily slipped a few of his businessmen into skirts for good measure. “Why can’t this be for men?” he asked. “They almost look more masculine (in skirts) than if they were wearing just normal clothes.

“Why not put men in what is traditionally considered women’s attire?” he added. “We’re all dressed alike as infants. The rest is an elaboration.”

Rick Owens lead out his collection with a model wearing only short shorts and boots, a leather saddlebag strapped to one thigh for extra he-man effect.

So high was Paris on thigh that it is almost easier to list the labels who didn’t include shorts, as such style references as Louis Vuitton (leather scuba shorts and jersey surf pants), Dries Van Noten (formal and boxy) and even Yohji Yamamoto (three-quarter length) all succumbed to the trend.

Lengths varied widely with Loewe going daringly high with micro shorts and Speedo-like pouches while the Taiwanese Angus Chiang and the Japanese label Facetasm swung between kilts, tube shorts and culottes.

Designer Yusuke Takahashi imagined a journey into the inhumanly hot desert for the Issey Miyake’s spring-summer collection. Loose double-face cotton jackets, sometimes in a cross-over style, were presented in earth colors. Below, baggy cotton North African-style pants with pleats and a floppy waist fastening followed pants cut above the ankle with a rippled texture that evoked the roughness of sand.

Style crime no more, socks with sandals are no longer the abomination they once were, if this week’s shows are anything to go by.

Louis Vuitton, which with Paul Smith and Vetements also tried to smuggle Hawaiian shirts back from the wardrobe that taste forgot, sent out nearly 20 models in sandals and socks, while 22/4 went still further matching every one of its 30 looks with socks and slipper sandals.

Uber-cool Vetements had socks and sauna sandals and Haider Ackermann (who also designs for Berluti) dared socks and flip flops, which looked classier than its sounds.




 

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