Cake Maker Designs Royal Range Crafts Council Discuss Survey Findings Stationery Hits the Headlines  ‘Fantastic’ Response to Mary Portas Scheme In the Studio Retail Clinic On the Shop Floor Insider’s View And the Winners Are… Rico on the Catwalk TV Bosses Search for Sewing Enthusiasts Knitted Serpent Roars into Life for Carnival Worcestershire Arts Trail Celebrates Queen’s Jubilee   Amy Butler’s New Release Craft Club Hits the Big Screen When Vicky Met Theo Retailers Report Steady March Traditional Skills Aims for Award Modern Mums Too Busy To Sew New Creative Crafts Show Comes to Leeds On The Shop Floor Retail Clinic Where There’s Wool, There’s a Way Home Sewn Stephanie Weightman Returns Home to QVC Consumers Applaud Creative Innovation New Craft Skills Awards Scheme Free Workshops for Show Visitors Putting on a Good Show Calling all Creatives Great British Baker Set For Cake International Time to Get Voting! Anthea Turner is Officially the Face of Create and Craft Woolfest Gets Bigger and Better British Library Creative Bonanza Talent Galore at the Quilt Fair It’s Showtime Trend Watch 2012 Cool Tools Last-minute high street boom? Fashionable Theme for Stationery Show 2012 Cbeebies Mister Maker Set for Hobbycraft Appearances Knitters Create Giant Woolly Christmas Tree New show for Dawn Bibby Crafts Council Celebrates 40 Years Investing in a Positive Future for Creative Industries Sknitch at The Clothes Show Live Proves a Hit Charity Shop With a Touch of Craft The Knitting and Stitching Show Proves a Success New Look for Creative Crafts Show Appeal Saves Knitting Club Craft Club Needs You Kirstie Allsopp Teams Up with B&Q Royal Beading 63% of Shoppers Plan to Spend More This Christmas Grannies For Hire! Britney Spears is Sewing’s Latest Fan 43% of Women are Getting Crafty this Christmas Knitting Sees a Surge of Male Customers ITV’s Daybreak Launches Art Stars Competition Prison Embroidery: On TV Tonight Hobbycraft Launches Kids’ Parties Seven New Hobbycraft Stores to Open Lace, Knitwear and Crochet Lead the Pack at London Fashion Week Top Five Home Décor Trends John Lewis Launches £23million Marketing Push Sweat Shop Sewing Cafe hits Selfridges Lily Allen Turns Homemaker What does Westfield mean for Indies? Craft Club Calls for Volunteers Retailers Take Craft to the Southbank! John Lewis Celebrates Wool Week QVC: Britain Gets Even More Crafty Another Opening in Sewing Cafe Boom Kanban Saved from Administration Hobbycraft 4th New-Look Store Opens Hobbycraft’s Doors Smashed by Rioters London Riots: Retailers React New Exhibition Celebrates Modern Wool Knitting Just Keeps Getting Cooler Hobbycraft Announces 18% Rise in Earnings BBC’s The Office Actress Launches Wheelchair-friendly Crafting Centre Knitting Project Prepares for Queens Diamond Jubilee The Internet is Helping the High Street Art & Craft Books saw the Biggest Growth in 2010 Julia Roberts - Knitting’s Latest Die-Hard Fan Key Home Decor Trends Identified Knitting Takes One Million Hits a Month Creative Stitches & Hobbycrafts Back and Better than Ever! Pottery Factory is Saved to Preserve Craft Skills Dressmaker Urges Younger Generation to Get Involved Shoppers Still After a Bargain Cross-Stitch Officially Cool STAEDTLER Launches Competition Worldwide Knit in Public Day: Stitch London Plans Crawl The Quilters’ Guild Needs your Votes Sizzix’s Top Five Trend Predictions Dawn Bibby Defects to Create & Craft TV Sewing Cafe Craze Continues HobbyCraft’s 52nd Store Opens Today
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London Fashion Week: An Insider’s View
by Golnaz Alibagi
Listed under: One Voice
Published: Thursday, March 11, 2010
As ever, this season's London Fashion Week was a vision to behold, with some of the industry's finest designers showcasing their latest collections. Fashion Blogger, Edward Thomas, gives us the lowdown on the biggest trends set to take the fashion world by storm this year
Embroidery and Jewelled Embelishments
When designers, who have made their names in the high tech world of digital prints, suddenly start picking up the needle and thread and adding embroidery and stitched or glued jewels onto their cocktail dresses, you know times are changing.

This London Fashion Week I lost count of how many of the highly influential young British designers, including Christoper Kane, Erdem and Mary Katranzou, added serious stitchwork to their womenswear. Elsewhere, the Swarovski-fication of recent collections seemed to give way to an influx of bigger jewels in both perspex and cut glass.

Even Basso and Brooke, famous for their ground breaking pleated digital print designs, tipped their hat to the craft aesthetic, with a range of patchwork-inspired patterns. Further proof, as reported in the last issue of Craft Business, that the patchwork look is set to be something to watch over the next 12 months.

Colour
Amidst the familiar sea of black, there were a few tone tendencies that shone out during the week. Metallics were big again, with copper and brass varieties particularly in favour. Linked to the wider trend for natural autumnal shades, which pretty much dominated anything outside the digital printing camp, these warmer tones featured heavily in designs at this season's show.

Any glimpses of bright colours in knitwear were pretty fleeting and mainly reserved to the most experimental youngsters. Perhaps inspired by the recent taste for vintage fabrics, I also detected the emergence of a trend in Aran knitwear too. Unsurpisingly, this featured highly in the showrooms at Esthetica, the space reserved for ethical designers, and when Julien Macdonald sent his models down the runway in oversized off-white cable knits, the trend seemed to solidify.

Finally, it looks like dark blue will be a big hit come next winter. Often combined with black for a Lanvin-esque feel, it ruled all the men's collections and was used extensively by Jonathan Saunders and Louise Goldin in womenswear.

Textures: Wood and Fur
One of the key looks I've been blogging about for a while, which originated from the cool streets and designers of East London and has influenced pretty much everyone over the past six months, is the post-apocalyptic trend.

At it' most raw, this has been born out by designers using unfinished fur, taxidermy and heavily draped knits in earthy colours. As the fur trend has continued to work its way up the mainstream fashion chain this season, it's been incorporated into luxury shawls and colourful fur pieces.

Feathers and human hair also continued to rise in popularity and, leading on from the trend for raw, salvaged materials – symbolic of the detritus that may be left after armageddon - I noted the rise of wood as another material of choice for accessories.

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