Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo Fall/Winter 2024 Highlights ① Harunobu Murata, Yohei Ohno, Kanako Sakai, etc.
Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo Fall/Winter 2024 Highlights ① Harunobu Murata, Yohei Ohno, Kanako Sakai, etc.
Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo Fall/Winter 2024 collection was held over six days, from Monday, March 11th, to Saturday, March 16th. As in previous years, Shibuya Hikarie and Omotesando Hills were chosen as the main venues for the show, and 43 brands presented their latest collections in physical and digital formats.
The Japan Fashion Week Organization (JFWO) has strengthened its efforts to hold open-to-public events and communicate its message globally with its 2024 “OPEN, FASHION WEEK” annual slogan. Especially since last season, as Tokyo’s fashion scene showed signs of gradual recovery from the pandemic, it was reported that it is regaining its vitality with the participation of international brands and an increase in the number of guests from abroad.
This season, along with such diversity and appeal to the global market, it was impressive to see the “high level of perfection of the show” created by each brand. The designers explored the essence of dressmaking while developing innovative presentations that combined the clothes with entertainment value, and some brands showed their ability to compete in the global market.
This article will introduce the latest collections of designers selected by OSF from 43 brands participating in Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo Fall/Winter 2024.
MASU
On March 10, MASU held the “Rakuten Fashion Week TOKYO 2024 A/W SPECIALON-SCHEDULE RECEPTION PARTY,” a triumphant return event for its latest collection presented in Paris, ahead of the official schedule. The brand has been selected as the 6th award-winning brand in the “FASHION PRIZE OF TOKYO” organized by JFWO.
Upon entering the dimly lit event hall, visitors were shown “The Cinema,” a video of the Fall/Winter 2024 show during Paris Fashion Week in January. Mannequins that fully embodied the appeal of M.A.S.U.’s collections sat among the visitors in the audience seats.
This season’s theme of “rain” expresses the beauty and ephemeral mood of the collection through the skillful use of various materials and intricate details. The fleeting charm of raindrops was thoughtfully reflected in the deep color tones of the collection by utilizing the brilliance of materials such as studs, chains, and sequins and by cutting sweatshirts to look like water drops.
pays des fées
On March 11, pays des fées held a show at Shibuya Hikarie, presenting a quirky worldview different from that of other brands. The models on the runway walked like wooden marionettes or strutted around with balloons in their hands, creating a mysterious clown-like atmosphere.
Launched in 2014 by designer Lim Asafuji, pays des fées is a brand that continues to express deep themes each season based on the concept of “strange and cute.”
For the Fall-Winter 2024 collection, pays des fées embodies the confusion we all feel during physical change during puberty.
The show notes titled “Circle in Square” state, “We experience the urge to become inorganic matter like plastic during the uncomfortable growth period as we change physically during our adolescent puberty. I want to express this short transitory time that will remain in our memories forever (that feeling of never getting over that experience) into something tangible.” It was also accompanied by the message, “For this season of pays des fees, my clothing will act like a bandage to nurse that wound left from that experience.”
In addition to the above, another source of inspiration involved the “Concrete Poetry” of Kitazono Katsue, a well-known poet born of the Modernist movement. Asafuji found an affinity between the moods characteristic of unstable adolescence and the linear design of Japanese Dada of the Taisho era. She says she created this collection in homage to the inorganic, linear details of Kitazono Katsue’s poems and photographs.
These inspirations are projected onto the A-line coats with capes and dresses with large collars. The straight silhouette and the curving round prints, the contrasting shapes blended into one, and the delicate sentiment that Asafuji wanted to express were incorporated into the garments.
In addition, the “human hand” graphics in the circle and square patterns were created by collage artist Q-TA. This season was also characterized by a foundation of basic shades such as navy, gray, and white, compared to the vibrant color palette usually shown by the brand.