How nice Soshi Otsuki’s lookbooks have been for his previous three collections (and the way viral they’ve gone in consequence) is testomony to the designer’s deftness for realizing his imaginative and prescient. That imaginative and prescient in latest seasons has been a recent crystallization of Japan’s Bubble Period, when financial institution balances have been large and the fits have been greater (and made in Italy). This season’s was his finest iteration of it but—the women and men of their superbly draped, louchely outsized tailoring seem like work portraits from the swaggiest Zaibatsu you’ve ever seen—and his imaginative and prescient of Japanese masculinity feels contemporary, punchy, and funky. His activity over the subsequent few seasons is to search out new methods to maintain the momentum going.
Otsuki’s expertise with the LVMH Prize was an enormous affect on the smaller particulars of this season. A part of this 12 months’s cohort of eight finalists, he couldn’t assist however really feel acutely aware of how his garments appeared hanging within the presentation house compared to everybody else’s (ah, that outdated thief of pleasure). “The judges take a look at the garments as they’re on the racks, so this time I needed to create one thing that wasn’t simply primarily based on how the garments look within the pictures,” he mentioned throughout a showroom walkthrough in Tokyo. “This time I centered extra on product.” Otsuki was being unfair on himself—his materials and draping sometimes look glorious on and off the physique, however his effort to spice up hanger attraction is smart.
For instance: further cloth was constructed into the within placket of a shirt (see look 16) to present the suggestion of a tucked-in necktie, that might be hidden or uncovered relying on the way it was buttoned up. “It’s technically a styling suggestion, however there’s additionally a pocket for the tie. It’s about enhancing the affinity between the styling and the product,” Otsuki mentioned. Deadstock kimono silk had been repurposed into the button-up shirts, and Nineteen Eighties cotton-washi cloth had been used for a lot of the tailoring, which recalled the glamour and prosperity of the period that the designer enjoys riffing on. He aimed for what he known as a “quiet depth” in each bit, and achieved it.
The announcement of the prize looms in September, and with a 300,000-euro endowment at stake, the stress is on. When requested if he was happy to get this far, to the finals, he frowned as if the query was insane. “No, in no way,” he deadpanned, earlier than grinning. “I need to win.”

















































