• Mary Katrantzou: Shoe Dresses and Kaleidoscope Prints

Mary Katrantzou was one of the most hotly anticipated shows at London Fashion Week a few days ago. For Spring/Summer 2014 she showed a collection of structured dresses, dense with florals and shoe-inspired motifs. There was a brogue dress, with screen-printed laces running up one thigh and a perforated halter top, and a whirlwind of shifts in purple, electric blue and yellow.

Her signature silhouette, with its cinched waist and dramatically exaggerated hips, has been phased out and replaced with something less contoured.  My favourite look was a long-length biker jacket in an almost tropical print, worn over a matching dress and finished with purple geometric sleeves.
It was a thoughtful collection from the Greek designer, who first started showing her Technicolor, kaleidoscopic and almost 3D prints back in 2009 as a NewGen recipient. The explosion of digital print a few years ago was a real driving force behind her initial success – she was definitely in the right place at the right time. A collaboration with Topshop in 2012 sold out, bringing her lantern skirts and microscopic prints to the masses.

But now her work stands on its own right: dark, watercolour landscapes spread across midi dresses and skirts for her Autumn/Winter 2013 collection, showing a move away from the vibrancy of her earlier work. A slightly quieter sophistication has come through (although the voluminous babydolls for next season prove that Mary Katrantzou still knows how to throw us a curveball).
Her Spring/Summer 2014 collection was still mostly dresses, but there was a glimpse of what the future could hold if she moved more into separates. A stiff, high-necked top with short sleeves was at the more wearable end of Katrantzou’s work, but still bedecked in multi-coloured print. For now her jackets (sleeveless, biker, short and long) are the pieces I covet most.

She might be sticking to what she knows best but Katrantzou, alongside Christopher Kane and J.W. Anderson, represents the future of British fashion. There have been questions about what she’ll do to keep people interested beyond the novelty of her designs, but who’s to say that her artistic prints won’t someday become the cornerstone of a more varied design house – like the Missoni zigzag? We can’t wait to see whether she’ll keep everyone captivated. 

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