“COLOR BLOCKING”

……………….The inspiration of Mondrian and other Modern Artists played a big part of this Spring 1991 collection………The pieces above were made in a fine wool crepe that was made for me by an Italian Mill called Fila [not to be confused with the sportswear company]. I worked very closely with a woman name Magda Ferrare, who I am still in touch with all these years later. She even bought LINEA!!!  The sleeveless dress and coat to the left were engineered so the stripes of the dress lined up with the stripes of the open front coat……Even the lining of the coat had a pieced together stripe lining that lined up with the outside of the coat. These special attentions to detail is what makes designer clothes…..The Checker Board Sleeveless dress “seams” so simple……….but………each seam of each box was shaped to give the dress a gentle silhouette, or it would have been a boxy chemise……..These clothes were all about precision and expert workmanship.

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“ANNE KLEIN RETROSPECTIVE, SPRING 1991”

………………………..I decided after posting the Linea 2012 collection it was time for another Anne Klein retrospective…..This is the SPRING 1991 collection. REMEMBER these clothes were done THIRTY YEARS AGO, and my portrait was also THIRTY YEARS AGO!!!!!! LOL!!!!!……..Spring and Fall were the two major shows of the year. They were huge and costly undertakings. The venue had to be booked, the models had to be booked, the lighting crew and the music crew all had to be hired. The hair and make up people had to be booked, and dressers had to be hired to dress the 30 to 35 models depending on the size of the show. My shows were all day affairs with two rehearsals. One for staging so the models knew what they were to do, and the second was a full dress rehearsal. After the dress rehearsal it was break time for lunch, and the hair and make up began. They were usually booked from 8am to 5pm. They loved doing my shows because they didn’t have to run all over the city. Of course the other designers who had shows the same day didn’t love me too much for keeping the models all day! Work had begun at 5 or 6 am setting up the stage, lighting and backdrop, so when the models arrived, which sometimes was like herding sheep, we could start the first rehearsal….. The light crews and music crews were still at work during the rehearsals…The chairs were being set up and names and gift bags put on each chair….The clothes were being unpacked and steamed if necessary. They were all brought over to the venue by truck on rolling racks. There were usually two models assigned to each rack so there were a lot of racks to be set up….. The hair and make up people were setting up back stage….it was madness! With all this going on I had to direct the models on what to do, where to stand and when to walk the runway with music cues for each of their 4  or 5 changes. I never used a choreographer to stage my shows. I always did it myself. Who knew better than me how I wanted it to look, and which models  should walk together down the runway or who should be solo. In those days the shows were much longer with 100 to 120 outfits. I usually used a megaphone and had assistants also guiding the girls…..who never listened!!!! Some how when the show started they all knew exactly what to do. They were the “Super Models”, and super they were……When all was over with the show the new project began…..organizing the new “Look Book”……Meetings began with Connie, the art director and Torkel the photographer took place…….How should the book look?….It had to reflect the mood of the collection. Then the studio, the models….the make up and hair people had to be booked, and we started all over again……….Spring 1991 was on it’s way.

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“THE SPRING 1991 LOOK BOOK”

………………………The opening pages of the Look Book was always a synopsis of what the following pages were to unfold. I would sit with the writer and talk and talk about the collection. The writer in turn would take what I said and pare it down to a few short paragraphs….These opening pages had some brief commentary and a few photos about what was to come, and had to entice the reader to turn the page.

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“THE OPENING PAGES”

…………………………The opening pages of the Look Book had to “grab” the viewer…….The story had to be told in one photograph……….Here, Giselle is wearing my COLOR BLOCK wool crepe blazer in RED, WHITE and BLACK……a striped tank sweater in BLACK and WHITE, and a WHITE crepe pencil skirt with a very wide BLACK tuxedo stripe down the sides. The shoes, the black door knocker earrings and the black disc belt were all designed by me to complete the look, and all Anne Klein products………COLOR BLOCKING….and…STRIPES…..all in RED, BLACK and WHITE……the story was told with one photo.

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