Well, mission accomplished. The show, part of Made Los Angeles, mixed those ’60s beats (the decade when, Scott noted, Los Angeles really came into its own) and the designer’s personal, piled-on “more is more” aesthetic, all made of froth and prints and belly chains worn below expanses of smooth skin. Giant floral pool floats sat as a centerpiece, and it was all plopped smack in the middle of downtown Los Angeles at L.A. Live.
An audience swollen with a specific breed of L.A. celebrity (typically pneumatic in their proportions, which sort of makes sense, considering Scott’s love of cartoon) watched big-ticket models like Miranda Kerr, Devon Aoki, Alessandra Ambrosio, and Chanel Iman strut out in bra tops and oversize mod pageboy caps, crocheted crop tops and flared Indian mirror-embroidered pants, patchwork and sequins and studded leathers, and swingy pantsuits printed with the same psychedelic daisies found on Scott’s tracksuit backstage.
A joint WME/IMG venture, the show was open to the public, and tickets had been priced between $55 and $400 (though there were rumors of scalper involvement, so who knows the final cost for some). These had quickly been snapped up by the brand’s fans—and boy, does the brand have fans: Multiple generations turned out in Moschino or Scott’s eponymous line.
Men’s sandals were futuristic, strappy, and possessing the requisite funk to rank their wearer among the best dressed at Burning Man—yellow pom-poms! woven iridescent straps!—while the embroidered brogues will find many happy buyers more suited to the concrete jungle.
There were plastic leis and papier-mâché bangles, embroidered versions of the Moschino moto jacket bag, mirror sequined go-go boots, little crocheted purses that looked charmingly homespun, and a recurring motif of cartoon tigers, cobras, teddy bears, monkeys, and at least one heavily bejeweled pink elephant, a sort of rave-ready Ganesh, present to watch over Scott’s growing flock.
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