Why We Love Chitose Abe's Sacai (SS25 Review)

Описание к видео Why We Love Chitose Abe's Sacai (SS25 Review)

In today's review we talk about the Sacai Spring Summer 2025 (SS 2025) Menswear runway show / collection by Chitose Abe.

James Dean giving his best rebel stare appeared on a T-shirt early in this Sacai collection. It wasn’t just his brooding beauty that turned on Chitose Abe this season. Backstage she said she fell for a quote attributed to the famous actor: “I think the prime reason for existence, for living in this world, is discovery.” Dean’s own path of discovery was cut brutally short when he died in a car accident, on his way to a racing competition, at just 24. Abe’s journey is ongoing. “She’s been doing this job for 25 years now,” her interpreter said backstage, “but she still feels she can do more, she wants to discover more.”

Her zest for remixing was not diminished on the runway, but because the building blocks of the collection were classics of 1950s American style—Dean’s era—it felt more essential and less experimental than her collections sometimes do. Preppy, in its way, but with a Sacai twist. The red Harrington jacket Dean wore so well, in Rebel Without a Cause, for example, was oversized, as were the chinos worn with it, which also featured an inner waistband with the brand logo peeking out above a nylon webbed belt. Other pants were cut with deep slant hip pockets that produced a strong silhouette, pleasingly familiar but refreshed.

Denim came in for a good deal of reinvention. Levi’s jean jackets were nipped, tucked, and pleated into eye-catching shapes for guys, and on the girls’ side they were spliced with jeans to make a denim shirtdress and a denim jumpsuit of extreme proportions. Abe also hooked up with WTAPS, a cult Japanese streetwear brand known for military garb, and had some fun with army uniforms. Architectural shoulders added extra swag to a woman’s field jacket, a motif carried over to leather perfectos and double-breasted checked blazers. Fun was also the name of the game with a racing car print that was spied on Pharrell Williams, a front-row guest.

A few of the models carried a pile of books secured with a strap, the way teenagers of the 1950s did, back when they walked to school uphill. Back when teens actually read books. Abe seemed to be tapping into something universal with this collection. Ivy style, which is another strain of this look, has been trending all season. When the future feels scary, we tend to look to the past, though Abe, who is an optimist by nature, doesn’t necessarily see things that way. When asked why the 1950s now, she said, “I just like James Dean’s freedom.” - VIA VOGUE RUNWAY

Chitose Abe is the creative director of Sacai, a label she founded in 1999. The brand is renowned for its prodigious technical ability, splicing two items of clothing together to create a sum that is greater than its parts, counting the likes of Karl Lagerfeld , Anna Wintour and Suzy Menkes as fans.

Abe owns 100 percent of her business, which allows her complete creative control and freedom to select any commercial considerations she chooses. “My collections are based purely on my creative instincts,” she told BoF. “Maybe I’m an idealist, but I am a firm believer that if you’re producing well-designed products at the right price that your business is destined to flourish.”

Prior to founding Sacai, Abe worked at Comme des Garçons as a pattern cutter under Rei Kawakubo and later as a member of Junya Watanbe’s design team. Although trained at one of Japan’s most famous and storied design labels, Abe’s aesthetic elevates and simplifies that of her homeland to finely wrought classics. “Japanese-ness may be important for some when selling to Europe, for me it’s not important. I think it says something that I’m the only Japanese brand that many of my stockists carry.”

The Japan-based brand started showing at Paris Fashion Week in 2009; by its second season overseas, Sacai had won over 15 international clients, including Biffi in Milan, Colette in Paris and Joyce in Hong Kong. Today, the label has over 90 stockists worldwide. Abe has also expanded into other fashion categories through her more streamlined Sacai Luck and Sacai Men’s lines. In 2019, Sacai released collaborations with Nike and earphone label Beats by Dre.

Abe is married to Junichi Abe, the founder and designer of Kolor.
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0:00 Intro
2:51 Chitose Abe / Sacai Background
6:58 Show Notes
12:00 Runway Analysis
25:33 Closer Look At Collection

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