Teromasa Nakajima worked in Drews Van Netmen and Esc Maik, so it shows that the designer knows how to work with color and fabric. In this season, he started his second tailma show on a decisive dark note than the last time, showing a sleek of black coats that played pride on the spikes as well as spirits under spattitis under Spotlights.
The most beautiful parts of this collection were metallic details and embroidery-chronic thread, sometimes sewing in highly-shaped dots that grabbed the light so that they could look like sequestors from afar. Somewhere else, the outline of the Tigers was embroidered in a sheer white lace, which was really an article. The designer explained that it was made by a leverless manufacturer, which is a great form of available materials. He explained after the show, “My levers was an unfortunate encounter with the company that I once worked with when I was a student in Antorp, and I was able to reuse them,” he explained.
However, around the Midway Point, the same problems Nakajima had re -surgery last season and the show began to lose speed. Apparently irrelevant colors, clothes, and silhoutes were rotating for attention, and some less successful ideas crowded this mixture. The wrong cute bag, though the trend with a wider throat on the European runway, looked cheap, while the star apple was hung heavy around the bottom of the Christmas decoration. Others, such as cherry bloom print silk pajamas, strong tweed trousers, and unconditional clothes were quite interesting. These pieces itself may see good looks on the hangar in the store, but Nakajima has not yet mastered ways to collect everything for the runway statement.
Nevertheless, Nakajima deserves its flowers. Although he will benefit from amending and focusing on his ideas, he is charming and anxious created by electoralism. For example, the Japanese company uses its prints water -free printing and coloring process, developed by Kiosira. In addition, you can tell that he understands its customers. “I always think of a cillet that makes the wear beautiful,” he said.