Capucci (Q4019)

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Capucci is a fashion house from FMD.
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Capucci
Capucci is a fashion house from FMD.

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    Has quirkiness and nonconformity disappeared entirely from the fashion system? Not when you’re looking at Italy’s multinational Capucci project, for which Bernhard Willhelm (German-born, Antwerp-trained, Paris-dwelling) oversees ready-to-wear, Sybilla (Spanish) designs the once-a-year evening collection, and Franca Maria Carraro (Italian) does the shoes. For spring, Willhelm had fun with the Roman founder’s extraordinary way with volumes. “I was playing with the idea of boxes last season,” he said. “This is sort of a continuation of that, but now I’ve added circles.” Lines of thick, wavy cord stitched onto the hems of short dresses were another, less conceptual borrowing from the archive.The cutely eccentric flat shoes and a bright emerald plissé dress, whose ballooning sleeves were suspended from shoulder straps, made for the presentation’s best moments. Willhelm’s personal skew toward the eighties still comes through in an insistence on stripes and leaf-green shades. For curiosity value alone, the Capucci project is a line worth knowing about, but in actual fashion practice, these are strictly clothes for girls who will make their artsy way through the season, avoiding anything so obvious as a trend.
    The idea of a grand, retired, old-world Roman couturier collaborating with a wayward young tyke of the Belgian school may sound like a scheme from the far realms of fashion improbability. But as of this season it’s a reality. The Capucci collection, launched for Fall in Milan, is a start-up project that has brought in Bernhard Willhelm to reinterpret the work of the label’s revered founder, Roberto Capucci.The difference between this and many another revival of a defunct fashion house is that Capucci is alive, spry and actively involved in the enterprise at the age of 74. Another twist is that Willhelm is only the first of the young designers who will be involved; next season his contributions will be shown alongside those of Tara Subkoff, of Imitation of Christ, and the Spanish designer Sybilla.Never a conformist to the fashion system, Capucci had a reputation as a genius sculptor of fabric who showed his collections not according to the season but when the inspiration moved him. Backed by the heavyweight Italian fashion industrialists Franco Bruccoleri, Franco Pene and Aldo Palmeri, he’s now aiming to introduce a new generation to his name and legacy. “The world changes. There are no more balls or women who can come for five fittings for a dress,” he says. “This is a new adventure. I want to see how young designers could carry on the spirit of what I do with a new attitude.”After being invited by Capucci to immerse himself in the house’s archive of 30,000 designs, Willhelm emerged with the core of a small collection that merges street fashion and couture construction. Head-turning items included a gargantuan down parka with vast, puffy leg-of-mutton sleeves and a gray bat-winged sweatshirt cardigan that falls into tails at the back. It looked like the intriguing start of a project that will get into full swing next season. Watch this space.
    28 February 2003