Marc Jacobs Fall 2016 Ready-To-Wear Collection
With
the ending of New York Fashion Week, there’s always one show in
particular the entire Fashion World looks to: the ending show. Delegated
to Marc Jacobs, the ending show is one that pulls all the strings of
Fashion Week together, so the stakes become high as does the pressure.
Marc Jacobs executed it all with grace.
The
Fall 2016 collection boasted heavy cloaks, glammed-out gowns and coats
and sky-high platforms. Equally as intriguing as the clothes were the
hair and makeup, reminiscent of 1920’s finger-waves with heavy punk-goth
black eyeshadow and lips.

Fashion
stars like Lady Gaga made an appearance on the catwalk, appearing in a
pussy-bow blouse along with a green floor-hitting coat with fur sleeves
and platform boots.
The
entire collection circled around dark hues and Gothicism, with pops of
color occasionally found in accessories or one statement piece, like pea
greens, pale rose pinks and purples. The luxurious, macabre styling
featured oversized sweatshirts worn over oversized black pants,
spiderwebs, cats and rat motifs on fabric (which some of us may
remember, Jacobs has used before).
Previous
themes and design aesthetics shined through from Jacobs’ previous
collections, including spliced sweatshirts and band jackets from Spring
2016, leather floral designs of Resort 2016, and polka dots of Fall
2011. Victorian collars, traditionally-tailored embroidery, and high
full-out glam accompanied the looks as they sailed down the runway.

The collection was a standout collection that pushed dresses by
volume, coats by fur and glitter, heels that reached epic heights and
extreme layering of feathers, leather coats, and striped coats. Clothes
were expertly stacked on top of each other, with fabric falling at
different angles and lengths to present a jagged appearance while still
adding a hint of femininity through color choice.

With
over 60 looks to the collection, the variety was diverse and expanded
into the multifaceted mindset of fashion and style, according to Marc
Jacobs. Nothing was off the table as Jacobs explored dark dramatization,
gothic romanticism, and the art of revamp.
I’ve got the entire show below for all who missed it. So let me know, what did you think of the collection?
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