In depths of pandemic, one fashion designer turns hand to being a movie director
>> Reuters
Published: 29 Jan 2021 03:15 PM BdST Updated: 29 Jan 2021 03:15 PM BdST
-
Fashion designer Julien Fournie gives instructions to Czech model Michaela Tomanova during the shooting of a film to present his Spring/Summer 2021 Haute Couture collection in Paris, France, January 8, 2021. REUTERS
French fashion designer Julien Fournie first learned to wield a pair of scissors, then to design a dress on an iPad. Now, the global pandemic has forced him to pick up a new skill - as movie director.
Paris Haute Couture Week is normally a riot of runway shows where the fashion crowd congregate in sumptuous locations. This year, COVID-19 means most live events are off.
Instead, many designers have turned to video to showcase their collections for the week, which officially began on Monday and runs until Jan 28.
Fournie, a 45-year-old who runs his own couture label, spent three days shooting a 9 minute and 30 second film in his Paris workshop, starring himself, some of his staff, and three models.
“We designers have to reinvent ourselves endlessly,” he said in a break from filming. “We have to know how to sew, to design, to manage social networks.”
That meant moving into a new medium to present his collection was not a big leap, he said.
“It’s an incredible opportunity in our times to be able to reinvent yourself during COVID, to be the director of your own destiny, to stage your own universe.”
The film features women dressed in goose feather outfits and multicoloured organza fabric, moving through a fantasy world with a Middle Eastern flavour. The majority of Fournie’s clients are from the Middle East.
Because of the global pandemic, customers want less extravagant designs, because the gatherings where the outfits will be worn these days are more modest and intimate, said the designer.
His staff too have had to adapt. After a client has visited to try out an outfit, employees iron the dresses. “The heat eliminates bacteria and viruses,” said Lea Gelenan, one of Fournie’s senior staff.
-
The art of giving back
-
Offices plan return, but virus uncertainty remains
-
New technique reveals secrets in locked letters
-
How 2020 cookbooks tell the stories of our pandemic kitchens
-
Extreme DIY for home decor
-
The TikTok feta effect
-
Archaeologists uncover ancient carriage near Pompeii
-
‘Like a warm hug from an angel’
-
The art of giving back: New York painter buys unknown artists' works
-
Return-to-office plans are set in motion, but virus uncertainty remains
-
New technique reveals centuries of secrets in locked letters
-
How the cookbooks of 2020 tell the stories of our pandemic kitchens
-
Extreme DIY for home decor
-
The TikTok feta effect
Most Read
- Kawasaki ships first Dhaka Metrorail cars to Bangladesh
- Shishir set to become first transgender to present news on TV in Bangladesh
- Hasina named among top three 'inspirational' women leaders in Commonwealth
- How to register for coronavirus vaccine in Bangladesh
- Pakistani PM wins vote of confidence amidst opposition protest, boycott
- Government not considering amendment to Digital Security Act: law minister
- Bangladesh reports 10 new virus deaths, cases near 550,000
- Bangladesh releases e-posters to mark Bangabandhu’s 7th March speech
- Penalised for plagiarism, DU teacher Samia says she has been framed
- Bangladesh charges nine with attacking former US ambassador Bernicat’s car