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Buttons Doing All the Work

Guy Laroche had been dead two years when this collection went down the runway. He died in Paris in February 1989, and the couture kept going the way couture usually does, which is to say somebody else took the pencil and the workrooms carried on. That somebody was Angelo Tarlazzi, and he goes uncredited on essentially every copy of this photograph in circulation, all of which caption it Guy Laroche, spring/summer 1991, couture, as though the man had risen for the season.

Tarlazzi's problem was specific. Paris in 1991 belonged to spectacle, to Lacroix's volume and Mugler's sculpted shoulders, while the Laroche name had been built on cutting and tailoring instead. Getting louder would have meant competing on somebody else's terms with a house that had no history of winning that way.

You can see the alternative in one suit. The jacket is cream, collarless, closing off-centre, shoulders squared but not exaggerated, sleeves turned back at the cuff. It could be 1963. Then look at what has been bolted onto it: paste buttons in three sizes, a pair at the throat, a pair at the waist, one on each cuff, none of them matching, all of them enormous. The necklace continues the same jeweller's vocabulary upward in gold sprays and pale crystal, sitting close enough to the collarbone that it reads as part of the garment rather than as something added over it. Yasmeen Ghauri wears the whole thing with a green straw bow pinned into her hair and a pair of lilac gloves held, not worn, and the gloves are the only soft thing in the frame.

The logic holds. A cream jacket with no collar and no lapel gives you an uninterrupted field, so every piece of paste on it stays legible from the back of a salon. Make the jacket busy and the buttons disappear. The expensive part of a couture suit is mostly the part nobody is meant to see, the seaming and the fittings and the interior, and here all of that invisible labour exists to hold up the visible noise.

Ghauri was nineteen that January, two years into the work that made her and walking Paris and Milan in the same months. She gives the clothes almost nothing, which is the correct decision: chin level, hands low, no performance at all. Set that against her greatcoat at Ferretti a year later, which needs the swagger and gets it. Yasmin Le Bon walked this same collection.

Tarlazzi kept the couture until 1993. That September the house announced that Michel Klein, then thirty-five and running his own ready-to-wear line, would take it over from January 1994, with Tarlazzi staying on for the ready-to-wear. Klein went in 1997, Alber Elbaz replaced him and left for Saint Laurent the following year, and the job has turned over steadily ever since. None of them inherited anything loud enough to carry a handover, which is the risk a house runs when it puts its money in the cut. Nobody remembers a seam. They remember the buttons.

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179 Francs and a First Name

Bottom right of page six, set smaller than the product codes: "Merci à KAREN MULDER, Agence Elite Model New York." A mail-order house in Roubaix, thanking a Dutch model through her New York agency, in a book that sells ribbed cotton vests by reference number. The whole 1994 strategy sits in that one line of eight-point type.

Mulder was near her peak. Elite had signed her at fifteen, after a contest she'd seen advertised in a newspaper, and by 1994 she'd walked Chanel couture and was two years into Victoria's Secret. She wasn't one of the five women on the January 1990 British Vogue cover, though, and I think that's exactly why she's here rather than in the advertising. La Redoute had put Linda Evangelista in its television spot the year before, and a spot is a thirty-second prestige purchase. A catalogue is eight million copies of working sales material, and it needs someone who can stand next to a 179-franc shirt without making the shirt look like a joke, which is a narrower and far more useful skill than fame. She did the same thing on a Ralph Lauren runway, where the plainest look in the show turned out to be the one that sold.

By then the company had stopped pretending its customer lived in a village. L'Express reported in 1993 that the days when only "la mémé de la Creuse" ordered her blouses by post were finished, and that the target had become working women with money and no time. Guy Latourrette, who ran the catalogue, explained it through the recession: in a downturn people stay at home, so the catalogue goes to them and moves at their pace. Which is how a Roubaix knitwear range ends up shot on a Californian beach, with Mulder eyes shut against the pilings as though nobody in the frame were selling anything.

Borrowing prestige wasn't new there. The house had been inviting guest designers since 1969 and would later run Azzedine Alaïa in its pages, and the logic never really changed: the clothes are cheap, so the names standing beside them have to be expensive.

Turn over and the machinery is right on the surface. Page seven sets her first name in white display type running a third of the sheet, stamps STAR DE LA MODE across her shin in blue, then hands you crépon souple, 100% viscose, 125 cm, blanc 958.3076 and noir 958.3084, sizes 36 to 40 at 179F and 42 to 44 at 199F. The single first name was the supermodels' own convention, and here a mail-order house in the Nord just takes it.

The takeover came the same year. Pinault-Printemps already held control and moved to absorb the company outright, which is where the group got the name Pinault-Printemps-Redoute. Jean-Claude Sarrazin, who ran the business for years, put the cost of that plainly: afterwards La Redoute no longer had the means to try things. That matters more than the ownership relay that followed, because trying things had been the entire method, from the first distance-selling catalogue in 1928 to the Minitel service in 1982. Kiabi, Zara, Camaïeu and Promod were soon changing collections faster than eight million copies could be printed and posted, the website didn't arrive until 1996, by which point a URL in a fashion advert still had to be spelled out in full, and La Redoute shed two thousand posts in under five years.

Kering sold it for a symbolic euro in 2014. This spring the catalogue itself went into a vitrine at La Piscine, the museum built into a converted swimming baths a few streets from where Joseph Pollet started spinning wool in 1837, where the exhibition ran until the fifth of July. The 179-franc shirt is an exhibit now, and so, in a smaller way, is Karen.

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Four Ninety-Nine at Kom Ombo

The credit block on page 168 does the arithmetic for you, if you let it. Straw hat by Philippe Model, to order, £325, at Whistles. Tobacco linen shirt, £57.50, at Jigsaw. Slim ivory linen trousers by Workers for Freedom, £150, at Harrods. Canvas espadrilles, £4.99, at Office Shoes. The hat costs more than the shirt, the trousers and the shoes put together, and the headline sitting above that list reads "Cool simplicity…". The simplicity is real. It just isn't cheap, and the page is built so you read the picture well before you read the prices. British Vogue, April 1992.

Patrick Demarchelier took the story to Egypt with Tatjana Patitz, and this frame sits at the temple of Kom Ombo, on the Nile north of Aswan. The caption names the place without ceremony, the way the magazine always did, as though a Ptolemaic sanctuary were a postcode. Everything in the picture has been tuned to the same sand: the straw, the tobacco shirt, the carved limestone, the blown-out ground behind her. Only the trousers and the espadrilles break it, and they break it white.

Demarchelier has also let the relief go slightly soft. The winged figure and the column of glyphs behind her head are legible but not sharp, so two thousand years of carving end up working as wallpaper with unusually good grain. I don't think that's careless. A crisp temple would have started an argument the clothes couldn't win.

So she gets the only hard edges in the frame. One hand in a pocket, a knee raised, the shirt knotted at the hip, and the whole pose built to suggest she stopped here rather than was placed here. Patitz was unusually good at that, and the picture depends on it entirely: take her out and you have a nice photograph of a wall. She's leaning back into the stone as though it were a garden chair.

Anna Wintour later described her as far less visible than her peers, more mysterious, more grown-up, more unattainable. Demarchelier's version was the working one: it was hard to get a bad picture of her, and she looked different in every light. Both are circling the same useful property, which is that she holds a frame without needing anything to happen inside it. When the same magazine wanted to announce a decade in January 1990 it put five women on the cover at once. Two years on, one will do, the same way an entire Escada campaign had run the previous year on her face and very little else.

The story ranged well past the temples. Demarchelier shot street scenes too, men sitting outside a place called Casino Palestine, an ordinary afternoon running alongside the fashion frames. Those pages are the weaker half, and not because they're exploitative so much as because they're decorative. They give the clothes a country to have come from and ask nothing else of it.

The espadrilles are the one thing in this picture a reader could have gone out and bought the same Saturday. Office Shoes was a high-street chain, not a boutique, and £4.99 on a spread whose facing page starts a Jil Sander jacket at £595 is a decision somebody made deliberately. Whether that was honesty or staging I genuinely can't tell.

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Ghauri at Ferretti, Milan 1992

A grey greatcoat lined in scarlet, chinchilla running down every edge, black gloves, and Yasmeen Ghauri carrying the whole weight of it down a Milan runway for autumn/winter 1992. She has a fistful of hem in one hand and the coat swings open on that red lining at every step. Behind her the runway is stacked with more red, other models waiting in scarlet wool with the same grey fur at their cuffs.

Underneath is the piece the coat exists to frame, a gold-on-red brocade jacket with a mandarin collar and knotted frog fastenings, urns and scrolls worked across it in metallic thread. Ferretti pairs it with plain grey worsted trousers and red leather cuffs turned back over the coat sleeves, which is a strange and very good decision. The brocade is doing chinoiserie at full volume; the trousers are doing nothing at all. Put a matching skirt under that jacket and the look tips into costume. The dull grey flannel is what keeps it wearable.

The quietest thing in the show is a pale ice-blue suede column, sleeveless, mandarin-collared again, slit to mid-thigh, hung with dozens of strands of iridescent crystal that fall from one shoulder and swag across the body like a bandolier. The same beading is wrapped in wide cuffs at both wrists. Suede is heavy and matte and slightly chalky, and the beads are pure refracted light.

Then the collection changes its mind completely. Ghauri comes out in a fringed white leather coat over white trousers, a gold sequinned belt and cuff, white gloves, and a printed silk shirt covered in stars and stripes, eagles, gilt cartouches, the words E PLURIBUS UNUM, and the year 1992 printed on the turned-back cuff. That year was the five hundredth anniversary of Columbus sailing, and Columbus was Genoese, which makes an Italian house putting American state iconography on silk for that season legible as a nod to the anniversary. It's a reading, not a source. The coat at full length throws a foot of fringe off the shoulder line and is the best-made thing in the five pictures.

Ghauri was 21 and having the year of her career, the face of Valentino couture and of Versace, whose bondage show she had walked in Milan that February. The New York Times described her walk as a "ball-bearing swivel of her hips." You can see it in a still. She's mid-stride in every one of these frames, hem swinging, and the clothes are being moved rather than displayed.

I went looking for a review of this collection and found essentially nothing. The Fashion Model Directory's page for the show answers with a 403. Bloomsbury Fashion Central holds a catalogue entry for it behind a subscription wall. Vogue Runway does reach back to 1992, but its entire fall season that year comes to three houses, Alaïa, Comme des Garçons and Versace, and Ferretti isn't one of them. What's left in public is a scatter of Pinterest reposts and photographs like these, while the Ferretti show from February this year is documented frame by frame in perpetuity. Erreuno went the same way, a label that produced clothes for years and left me almost nothing to follow.

The gap does Ferretti no favours. WWD, reviewing her in 2018, referred to the ethereal dresses she's known for, and almost none of that is in these frames. Chinchilla, silk brocade, fringed leather, crystal by the yard: whoever was cutting this winter had not yet become the house her name now signifies.

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A Touch of Lycra

A wind machine, a grey studio gradient, and one arm thrown up into her own hair: the Mary Jane Marcasiano page in American Vogue for October 1989 spends everything it has on a knit in motion. The top is taupe jersey with dolman sleeves cut so deep they read as a cape until you find the wrist, gathered into a wrapped band at the waist, and below that a dark column skirt splits to the thigh. Nothing is pinned, boned or structured. The garment does its shaping by stretching, and the picture exists to prove it.

Marcasiano ran a sweater-knit business out of SoHo on a single idea: blend Lycra into traditional knits and let the fabric take over the structural work from the pattern cutting. Her own pitch for it was clothes a woman could wear morning to evening, cold to warm, sexy to serious, which is showroom language, though this page does make the case. Liza Bruce would build entire daywear collections on the same principle a few years later, swimwear engineering moved into the city. What separates the two is material rather than method. Bruce worked in swim jersey; Marcasiano worked in rayon, cotton, silk and linen.

She had come out of Parsons and set up alone while barely into her twenties, in SoHo rather than on Seventh Avenue, showing her first collection in an art gallery. (The founding year is a mess. Her own site says 1977, the reference books say 1979 or 1980, and a 1986 interview has her starting at 23.) Awards came fast, four of them inside four years, and one matters more than the rest here: in 1984 DuPont named her its most promising designer.

Lycra was DuPont's. Five years on, the line under her logo reads "Great Feelings* with a touch of Lycra®", asterisk and registered mark intact, and neither of those marks belongs to her. A fibre producer that backs a young knitwear designer in 1984 and then appears inside her advertising in 1989 isn't a coincidence, it's a relationship, and the ® is the receipt. Who paid for what, I can't tell from the page. Co-op arrangements like this normally split the cost, the fibre brand buying visibility it has no other route to, because nobody photographs a yarn.

The page number is telling in its own right. 471 puts her deep in the back of the fat October issue, well past the editorial well, in the territory where an independent house could still put itself in front of a national readership without a conglomerate behind it. The trade press had sized her company at a million dollars in volume three years earlier, which makes it a real business and a small one at the same time.

What happened after, I only know in outline. Hampshire Designs bought the business in 1995, Marisa Christina took the label in 1998, and Marcasiano moved into costume work for dance companies, which is where she has been since. Whether those sales were a rescue or a cash-out, the sources don't say.

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Fable Goes Upstairs

On July 20, Anthropic drew a line straight through its own paying customers. Claude Fable 5, the company's most capable model, becomes a permanent part of the Max and Team Premium plans. Pro and Team Standard subscribers lose it. They get a one-time $100 usage credit, and once that runs out they pay API rates: $10 per million input tokens, $50 per million output, the steepest pricing on any Claude model you can buy today.

Call this what it is for someone on Pro. You pay $20 a month, you had the frontier model for a few promotional weeks, and now you don't. Fable 5 is the one that pushed Opus off the frontier, so this isn't a minor feature being pulled; it's the good one.

Start with the reading that gives Anthropic the benefit of the doubt, because the numbers under it are real. Fable 5 is savage on compute, chewing through tokens at roughly twice the rate of Opus 4.8 in ordinary use. One tester watched a Workflow session drain a $100 Max plan's daily allowance in under nine minutes. A model that can burn a heavy plan's whole day before lunch is not something you drop into every $20 subscription and still keep the servers upright. Rationing your scarcest good to the accounts paying most for capacity is defensible, and I'd defend it.

Capacity alone doesn't explain the swerve, though. Anthropic first meant to pull Fable 5 out of subscriptions altogether and sell it purely by the token. Then OpenAI shipped GPT-5.6 Sol at close to Fable's quality for about a third of the price, and cheaper Chinese models kept gnawing at everything below the frontier. Keeping Fable inside Max reads less like generosity than like the smallest concession that stops premium subscribers from defecting to a cheaper rival.

The least flattering reading is also the simplest. Putting your best product behind the $100 and $200 tiers is textbook price discrimination, and "capacity" is a convenient word for it, because scarcity and willingness to pay happen to sort the same customers into the same bucket. Look at what Pro gets as a parting gift. The credit is $100; Fable's output runs $50 per million tokens; so it buys two million output tokens, and one long agentic job, the exact work Fable was sold for, can spend that in a single sitting before the meter starts. That isn't access, it's a free sample. Someone on the launch thread already reached for the obvious comparison, the pharmaceutical trick of getting a customer hooked before the price shows up.

So yes, a Pro subscriber is worse off than in June, when the frontier was briefly theirs for twenty dollars a month. They're also getting more than Anthropic first intended, which was nothing at all. Hold both of those and the strategy shows through: keep the best model as the reason to trade up, and set the fallback just costly enough that trading up looks sensible. The frontier is still on the menu. It just moved upstairs, and the climb now costs five times what it did last week.

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Portfolio, After Perry Ellis

Yasmeen Ghauri folds into an orange chair the same rust as her dress, one gold hoop catching the light, and lets a single black bag hang over one bare shoulder. Everything in the frame is heat: the chair, the dress, the warm brown ground behind her. The bag is the one cool thing, black leather with a gold plate reading PORTFOLIO PERRY ELLIS, and the whole picture is built to make you look at it.

This is a hero-product shot, the opposite of selling a wardrobe. There's one bag, lit like a jewel, and a face turned back over the shoulder to point at it. Ferragamo would hand Claudia Schiffer an armful and sell the whole line at once; Portfolio gives you a single object and trusts the restraint to read as taste. I find that the harder sell.

The name carries more than it lets on. Portfolio was the first line Perry Ellis ever put his own instincts into, a women's sportswear collection for the Vera Companies, first shown in 1976, two years before he opened his own house. He later brought it back as the cheaper line, machine knits instead of hand, wool instead of cashmere, priced well below the main collection. So the label on this bag is doing something quietly strange by 1991: it's Ellis's first word, his entry-level name, sold now as a leather good, and Ellis himself had been dead five years, the company running in trust while Marc Jacobs designed the clothes.

Ghauri was the right face for that year. She was fronting Perry Ellis in 1991, one of the striking, faintly aloof models the early nineties trusted to carry a brand on a look alone. She doesn't smile at the bag. She just makes sure you saw where it was.

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Opening Spring 1990

Down the left edge of the page, before you reach the clothes, Escada prints a gazetteer. Boston, Great Neck, Palm Beach, Seattle, Bellevue, then a line promising San Francisco and Chestnut Hill for the spring, then four Canadian provinces set underneath: Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta. It is a strange thing to hand a reader in a fashion advertisement, a retail directory, and it sits beside Gail Elliott in a teal blazer over an acid-green skirt like a caption to a whole country.

Read the list as geography and it stops being a directory. These are not mass-market addresses. Great Neck is old Long Island money; Palm Beach is where that money spends the winter; Bellevue and Chestnut Hill are the comfortable edges of Seattle and Boston, the suburbs with the good schools and the better parking. Notice, too, that the United States gets named towns while Canada gets whole provinces. That asymmetry tells you how fresh the northern push was: south of the border Escada could point at a shopfront, north of it the presence was still thin enough to describe by region. The company was not trying to be everywhere in January 1990. It was placing itself, precisely, in the enclaves where a woman might pay for a jacket the colour of a swimming pool and consider it sober.

In January 1990 the house was at full volume and selling. Escada had grown through the eighties into one of the largest fashion firms in the world, and gone public in 1986 while Margaretha and Wolfgang Ley kept fifty-one percent of the voting stock, so it was a listed company still run by the couple who built it. She designed and he ran the money. She had modelled for Jacques Fath and Christian Dior before deciding she would rather make the clothes than wear them, and the house ran on colour loaded until every surface had a job. The first Escada fragrance, named after her, reached American counters that same year. This is a business with every reason to think the new decade would keep rewarding exactly what it already did well.

I look at Gail Elliott and almost nothing about her reads as dated. The bone structure, the level gaze, the wind machine lifting her hair off one shoulder: put that face in a campaign shot from last week and it would pass without comment. Human beauty of this kind is close to time-invariant, or at least it drifts slowly enough that thirty-six years barely register. We recognise it the way we recognise a face across a room, instantly, without having to place the year.

The clothes are another matter, and this is where the page turns uncanny. Everything Elliott is wearing has picked up a date stamp you cannot unsee. The teal is not a colour anyone would reach for now; the shoulders are too wide, the green too loud, the whole outfit tuned to a faith in brightness that the next decade quietly abolished. Within a couple of years Prada would make understatement the only serious position, and Escada's gilded maximalism, the orange and gold it would hang on Tatjana Patitz a year later, would start to look like a costume from a party that had already ended. The garments have not changed a thread. Everything around them has, which is close to what hauntology describes: the presence of something without its substance, an object insisting on a world that has been switched off behind it.

The clothes acquire an agency they never had when new, and it isn't a comfortable one. When the ad was current they pointed outward, at a season, at a shop you could drive to on Saturday. Now they point backward, and they do it whether you want them to or not. The boutique list makes the reversal literal. Margaretha Ley died in 1992, and the house never fully shed her signature; as the money moved toward quiet luxury, Escada held onto its gold buttons and saturated prints a beat too long, and its ownership passed through a long run of hands and troubles. Most of those printed addresses are not Escada boutiques anymore. The directory built to tell you where to go now tells you where things used to be. It also names a way of shopping that has itself largely gone: the place-based, drive-there boutique, an idea the web would have hollowed out regardless of what happened to any single label.

Then there is the physical fact of the image. The photograph fixes an arrangement of light that left that studio once, in 1989 or early 1990, and never again. The teal is a dye lot, a decision made by people in a room; the acid green is another; the white ground is a sheet of paper that was pulped, printed, and posted to Palm Beach and Great Neck. The jacket's atoms are still somewhere, in a landfill or on a vintage rail, but the arrangement, the woman and the colour and the boutiques and the belief that all of it was the future, survives nowhere except on the page. The matter scattered; the configuration stayed put.

Look again at the promise itself: opening spring 1990, San Francisco and Chestnut Hill, printed in the confident present tense of a company sure of its next move. That spring came. The shops opened, and at some point they closed, and the tense the sentence was written in has nothing left to point at. Elliott still holds the page as easily as she did then. Everything behind her has quietly changed address.

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Call, Visit, or Type

Run your eye up the right edge of this Kenar page and a strip of small type is doing a lot of work: 755 Madison Avenue, a toll-free number, the date OCT '96, and then, spelled out in full with the http:// still attached, www.kenar.com. It's a supermodel portrait with a mail-order spine, three ways to reach the company stacked in a column beside Linda Evangelista's face.

The web address is the strange one. In October 1996 most fashion houses had no site worth printing, and few trusted a reader to type a URL at all. Kenar, a New Jersey sportswear label, put its domain on a Linda Evangelista ad and assumed you'd know what to do with it. The full http:// dates the page as precisely as a haircut. Nobody writes the protocol out now; in 1996 you had to.

Set that margin against the company's earlier pitch and you can watch the business turn over. Six years before, Kenar sold through other people's stores and printed the department-store names along the bottom of the page, Bloomingdale's and I. Magnin doing the selling. This page carries its own Madison Avenue address instead. The label had gone from renting space on good department-store floors to holding a door on the Upper East Side, with a domain to match.

The picture is quieter than the campaigns that made the name. No seven Sicilian women, no Times Square billboard, no concept to fight about. That same year, Kenar's advertising also gave us the image of Evangelista kissing a male double of herself, a shot the Guggenheim later singled out; this is its plain sister. Laspata DeCaro shot her close and against a dark ground, hair cropped and shoved out of shape, a striped turtleneck pulled to the chin. Everything that isn't her face falls away into grey. After a decade of building her into something close to a logo, Kenar spent part of its 1996 budget on plain beauty and a phone number.

The ad reads now like a company hedging its bets on how the next decade would reach a customer, two years before it ran out of decade. Above the phone number and the web address, Evangelista in that striped turtleneck looks straight out and sells nothing but her own face.

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Tatjana Patitz, Escada, 1991

Tatjana Patitz turns back towards the camera as if somebody has called her name. The pose twists the orange jacket into a broad sweep across the page, its quilted back catching light in small shifting planes. White trousers, black piping, gold buttons, rope earrings, an embroidered anchor: Escada has put half a marina into one outfit. Her look over the shoulder registers as appraisal rather than invitation.

This was the house Margaretha Ley built. Escada's own history describes colour, print and elaborate detail as its founding language, established after Margaretha and Wolfgang Ley started the company in 1978. By 1991 that language had become instantly legible. You didn't need the vertical name running down the left edge to identify the designer; the saturated orange, gilded hardware and decorated denim had already done it. Compared with Escada's dense 1989 knitwear, however, this looks almost edited.

Almost. The jacket still carries a quilted panel, striped cord, black velvet tabs and enough gold to furnish a small hotel lobby. The trousers add stars, rope and an anchor to the pockets, then finish with another gold buckle at the waist. I like the refusal to choose between nautical sportswear and evening jewellery. Escada gives Patitz orange, gold, anchors and rope, then relies on her face to keep the whole page from becoming costume.

Even the sky participates, a blue-violet dusk that makes the orange appear hotter and the white denim cleaner. There is no yacht, beach or harbour, despite all the maritime insignia. The clothes carry their own scenery. This was Escada's confidence: a garment didn't enter a world created by the photograph; it arrived with the world already stitched onto it.

That face was especially valuable in 1991. Patitz had entered the decade on Peter Lindbergh's January 1990 British Vogue cover and in George Michael's “Freedom! '90” video, part of the group that made the supermodel a form of mass recognition. Yet celebrity alone does not explain the picture. Vogue remembered her as more mysterious and less available than her peers. This backward glance turns that distance into a sales tool: she shows the clothes without offering herself along with them.

“Bergdorf Goodman” sits across the top in sober black capitals, a strip of retail typography placed above Escada's colour. The plain lettering gives the page a useful visual brake. It does not make the clothes quieter; it makes their noise look deliberate. Patitz occupies the space between those two registers, the formal store name and the jacket's riot of orange and gold.

Earlier photographs could strip her down to weather, fur and a stare, as in the 1986 Le Touquet portrait. This advertisement tests the opposite proposition: how much design can one person absorb without disappearing? The answer is visible in the turn of her head. The jacket fills most of the frame, but the page still belongs to her, even beneath all that colour and hardware.

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