Click Here: Cheap France Rugby Jersey
In a sign of what might be the apocalypse, Michael Kors has announced he
won’t be showing his spring/summer 2021 collections at New York Fashion
Week in September, assuming there even is a New York Fashion Week in
September. Kors is the latest major designer to announce his departure from
the fashion calendar, following Gucci and Saint Laurent saying they would
be moving away from the traditional fashion calendar.
Currently, New York Fashion Week is still scheduled to take place, despite
COVID-19 concerns. Kors still plans to hold a presentation sometime between
mid-October to mid-November, and the format of the presentation is still
under consideration.
Michael Kors Collection will now present and produce two collections per
year, one for spring/summer and one for fall/winter, thus putting an end to
pre-season collections. According to the designer, the move is an effort to
create a more streamlined approach on the sales floor.
“I have for a long time thought that the fashion calendar needs to change,”
said Kors in a statement. “It’s exciting for me to see the open dialogue
within the fashion community about the calendar—from Giorgio Armani to
Dries Van Noten to Gucci to YSL to major retailers around the globe—about
ways in which we can slow down the process and improve the way we work.
We’ve all had time to reflect and analyze things, and I think many agree
that it’s time for a new approach for a new era.”
Deliveries of Michael Kors Collection product will be scheduled to arrive
in store incrementally over the spring/summer and fall/winter seasons, more
closely reflecting how customers in today’s world actually live and shop.
“It is imperative that we give the consumer time to absorb the fall
deliveries, which will just be arriving in September, and not confuse them
with an overabundance of additional ideas, new seasons, products and
images,” said Kors in a statement.
“Prior to the late 1990s, the New York Spring collections were shown from
late October to the beginning of November, after the Paris collections,”
Kors added. “That calendar was in place for many decades and worked quite
smoothly, and particularly in this age with the speed of social media,
showing the collection closer to when it will be delivered makes logical
sense to me.”
“I think it is also important to return to the idea that September and
March are key months in launching the beginning of seasonal selling for the
consumer,” Kors said in a statement. “This is when key editorial and media
content hit, when the weather is starting to change, and when people are
ready to absorb new collections and product—that they can wear and shop
immediately. Keeping all of this in mind, we will also be reassessing when
the Fall/Winter collection is released to the press and the public—most
likely sometime between mid-March and mid-April.”
Additionally, the company will sell the collection to retailers prior to
when they reveal it publicly and to the press, allowing for the supply
chains and factories to have the appropriate time to produce and ship new
clothing and accessories. The goal is to create a healthier pace, Kors
explained, adding, “I feel that these changes are long overdue and will be
a huge win-win, most importantly for the consumer.”
photo: courtesy of Michael Kors