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updated 29 Mar 2012, 20:36
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Thu, Mar 29, 2012
AFP
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Vuitton's blue fashion train pulls into Paris

 

PARIS - With a whistle and a cloud of steam, a blue train chugged Orient Express-style into the courtyard of the Paris Louvre, turned into the setting for Louis Vuitton's spectacular Fashion Week show Wednesday.

With film stars and fashion elite seated in a make-believe station, complete with LV-monogrammed clock, a gate slid back to the sound of echoing footsteps, as the train steamed in with the models silhouetted in the windows.

One by one the girls stepped down onto the platform-cum-runway in dizzying heels and 1900-style high hats, looking all the taller for being followed by white-gloved porters - deliberately cast short - carrying a bag in each hand.

New York designer Marc Jacobs pulled out the stops for Vuitton's latest autumn-winter collection on the final day of Paris' ready-to-wear shows.

The look was all about the romance of a journey, but without the nostalgia, explained the tattooed 48-year-old, dressed for the occasion in long black dress and laced boots, jet black hair and green eyes, looking exhausted but happy.

"We just imagined this romantic notion. It's the idea of the trip," he said of the train motif.

"They made it from scratch," he marvelled. "The design started four, five months ago, right after the merry-go-round," explained the designer, who for last season's show had a giant candy-coloured carousel built in the same spot.

Jacobs' collection played heavily on contrasts between glitter and mat fabrics, with models stepping out in long skirts over cropped pants, and dresses with demure necklines and wide straps cupping the shoulder.

Cheers rang out at the end of the show.

"It was cinema, it was beautiful," swooned Sarah Jessica Parker, the fashionista star of "Sex and the City". "The whole thing is a massive triumph."

"He's a genius," was the verdict from the US film producer Harvey Weinstein.

"It was a great show, a true spectacle and very luxurious," added Catherine Deneuve, the grande dame of French cinema who said she loved the ostrich skin coats.

Jacobs' set design was canny from a business point of view, too, with the girls free to twirl gracefully around the train, while porters lugged around the brand's bestselling baggage, showing off a staple of the Louis Vuitton brand.

Which recalls an anecdote beloved in fashion circles: when Jacobs showed his very first collection for Vuitton, 15 years ago, the young New Yorker had - quite simply - forgotten the bags.

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