Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2024
Shushu/Tong sure knows how to draw a crowd. On Sunday night at 10:30pm, there was a line for the second showing of Liushu Lei (ShuShu) and Yutong Jiang (TongTong)âs fall 2024 collection that wrapped around the block. The label has become one of Shanghai Fashion Weekâs top-billing names as its closing show, and itâs easy to see why.
The fashion incubator Labelhood, which hosts Shushu/Tongâs shows, puts on a presentation for industry guests and another for the public. The label consistently draws the largest amount of requests from the public, and its show tickets are the most expensive in the resale black market. âSomeone once broke into the office to take the tickets to sell them,â reported a publicist. When it comes to Shushu/Tong, itâs really that serious.
Except that it really isnât.
âWe wanted to make something more formal, more elegantâ said ShuShu of his prissy â50s and â60s dĂ©colletages, found both in Vincent Minnelliâs 1958 Gigi and in Cecil Beatonâs photographs of those same years, many of them for Vogue. (Beaton also won an Oscar for his costume work in the film). The musical was the designersâ inspiration for this season. And while the film stars Leslie Caron in the title role, the sophistication and touch of humor in this collection was more akin to Audrey Hepburnâs own era-defining style. (Hepburn played the role on Broadway in 1941.) The way in which ShuShu and TongTong elegantly extended black turtlenecks with matching knitted balaclavas or fabulously styled classic gray buttoned cardigans and shirting under their most fantastically prim ballgowns felt like something Hepburn herself might doâand probably go viral on TikTokâwere she a contemporary actor.
A modern reappraisal of Gigi would find it problematic for romanticizing what is essentially a story of underage solicitation; but ShuShu and TongTong were smart to eschew the plot and focus instead on the grandeur of its production and its ironic and humorous perspective on the elegance and well mannered-ness of the time. What made Gigi so compelling first as Colletteâs novella and then as a film was its combination of spice and charm, something this collection has to spare.
The growing popularity of Shushu/Tong is in part due to the way in which it so singularly captures a particular pocket of style today; itâs dressy and sophisticated in the way 20-somethings see sartorial maturity, but itâs also playful, demure, sexy, and considered. The designers donât simply throw on little bows on dresses and sit in their ribbon laurels as the partial propellants of todayâs ever-present coquette trend. They expand on their world each season, elevating their fabrications and ingeniously updating their classics. See this collectionâs bodysuits decorated with scattered feathers, their molded A-line gowns embroidered with both cutesy ribbon and fancy sequins, or how theyâve inserted bouquets of folded handkerchiefs or clusters of beads within their signature open breast cup fabrications with a just-right touch of frisson.
âWe wanted to do something glamorous to clash with something simple, maybe even naive,â said TongTong after the show. Glamorous it was. âBut it doesnât look naiveâ interjected a mutual friend. âExactly! She grew up,â answered the designer. ShuShu and TongTong are now in their 30s, she said, and next year marks the brandâs 10th anniversary. âThe girl grew up too!,â ShuShu added. What makes Shushu/Tong such a bright star on Shanghaiâs fashion firmament is the way in which it takes even the most passĂ©âthink a musical like Gigi or a floral A-line gownâand makes it cool and desirable. Romantic, mischievous; a little frivolous, but always charming. Thatâs Gigi and, still after almost ten years, Shushu/Tong.