Vera Wang Spring 2016 NYFW Collection

Vera Wang 2016 Spring Collection
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Vera Wang Spring 2016 Collection
Vera Wang Spring Collection
Vera Wang 2016 Collection
Vera Wang 2016 Spring Collection
Vera Wang Spring Collection
Vera Wang Spring 2016 Collection
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Vera Wang 2016 Spring Collection
Vera Wang Spring Collection
Vera Wang 2016 RTW Spring Collection
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Vera Wang Latest spring Collection
Spring Vera Wang 2016 Collection
Spring Vera Wang Collection
Spring Vera Wang 2016 Collection
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Spring Vera Wang Collection
Spring 2016 Vera Wang Collection
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Spring Latest Vera Wang Collection
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Spring Latest 2016 Vera Wang Collection
Spring Latest Vera Wang Collection
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Vera Wang Spring 2016 Collection
Vera Wang Spring Collection
Vera Wang 2016 Spring Collection
2016 Spring Vera Wang Collection
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Vera Wang 2016 Latest Spring Collection
Latest Collection by Vera Wang Spring 2016

Vera Wang Collection for New York Fashion Week Spring 2016

Vera Wang does something extraordinary: She dares to do the things she loves even when they’re decidedly in a vein other than commercial. Backstage before her show she explained the film reference as the sense of “a girl who’s extremely controlling and buttoned-up, but in another life or fantasy life she becomes something else.”

That something else made for the collection’s boldest duality as Wang, never a purveyor of sexy dressing – at least not in any traditional sense – here delivered a collection that was sexually charged and even a bit twisted.

Her buttoned-up girl worked trappings of titillation – a black scrim of a shirt all the more provocative over a white sports bra and schoolgirl pleats; a bright red trapeze dress cut for torso exposure; a trouser skirt reimagined in see-through organza and feathers. Amply cut, high-function bras and briefs bore major Swarovski encrustations; a tuxedo coat looked classic in front but had no back. As for the Vegas connection – gold and silver paillette dresses spangled up a storm.

Along the way, Wang’s lineup boasted beautiful tailored pieces, shirts, knitwear and skirts, many with likely hanger appeal. To invoke cliché, this was one of those “broken down (or in the case of a shirt with no skirt or pants, added to), it’s wearable,” collections. What’s not overtly commercial is Wang’s point of view. Hers is a genuinely arty vision, one not devoid of pragmatism – she was way ahead of the ath-leisure curve in contemplating how to design high-end merch for casual lifestyles – yet quietly uncompromising. Adherence to her creative vision is both her strength and her challenge.

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