
Vetements' oversized looks prove that memes are no longer enough Guram Gvasalia collaborates with Elie Saab on a line combining haute couture and streetwear
Founded from the outset on a fundamentally unruly and unconventional aesthetic, the Vetements fashion house was created by Demna Gvasalia and his brother Guram with the aim of challenging the industry by incorporating elements directly inspired by Soviet underground and street culture into refined tailoring collections. Now that the entire brand rests on Guram's back, however, it seems that the stylistic audacity of Vetements used has faded in favor of designs that have already been done before. Indeed, Vetements' new SS24 collection, designed by Guram Gvasalia in collaboration with his long-time friend, haute couture designer Elie Saab, seems more like a repetition of Demna's past shows for Balenciaga than a focused push towards sartorial innovation, although the basic idea of the lookbook is all in all original, and the provocative effect of the exaggeratedly oversized fit is nevertheless successful.
The collection
Vetements' SS24 uniformly echoed the fashion house's style codes, except that every look seemed to have come straight out of a past Balenciaga collection. The dystopian look of the models was vague - but not too much - reminiscent of the aliens in the FW22 Haute Couture, in that case with their faces completely covered by a black reflective screen; the giant windbreakers, the down jacket, and the long-sleeved bomber jacket could be part of Balenciaga's old FW18 and SS20 shows, while Guram's bodysuits and smooth velvet dresses in neutral colors bring to mind the totally black ones from FW20. They may share genes, but the ateliers, until proven otherwise, should be too far apart. This is certainly not the first time that Vetements in the post-Demna era has been heavily inspired by the Georgian designer's work, in many cases copying parts of the collection more or less blatantly.