Stella McCartney Resort 2025
âWhen I walk into a room, I donât want my clothes to scream, but at the same time, I donât want to wear anything that comprises who I am.â Stella McCartney was describing the âdelicateâ balancing act of designing as a woman, for women. Itâs a subject which is rightly coming under renewed scrutiny, mainly because so many women creative directors have been replaced by men lately.
The fact that McCartney has been designing for her peer group basically since she was made creative director at ChloĂ© in 1997âwhen she was 26âgives her no little authority on these matters. (Plus the trust sheâs built with like-minded customers through her pioneering of transparency and accountability in fashion production, and campaigning for animal rights, of course.) âWell,â she shrugged, with a small laugh, âI have been doing this a while.â
McCartneyâs staying-power is surely attributable to remaining true to her identity and all its facetsâtraces of which are imprinted as much on her pre-collections as her runways. âThereâs a relationship with the show, but itâs done with as much work and love.â Thereâs her tailoringâbig-shouldered pantsuits, and coats this timeâher sensuously-wrapped dresses, her love of nature, and then, of course, âHorses! Because I canât help myself.â
The horsey American McCartney shows up in a shadowy green print of a stampede ârunning across a dustbowl – across your dress or pajamas.â Also in the faux-leather chaps implanted in a pair of jeans. âWeâve been doing well with them. And Iâm proud of the denim.â (According to her scrupulous PR notes: Her denim production is âmainly of
GOTS standard cotton (Global Organic Textile Standard), which follows strict environmental criteria and uses lower water and chemicals and natural measures to control pests and diseases.â Whatâs more: the seeds to plant the cotton arenât genetically modified, like usual cotton. âWe also use Regenerative Agriculture Cotton which restores bio diversity and improves soil health, whilst also improving the welfare of the farmers and local communities through additional revenue streams.â
Botanical embroideries celebrate wild flowers and plants that thrive when humans get out of the way. âIâm a country-girl at heart. And you know, I love being there in the springâthatâs what these flowers mean to me. Poppies, buttercups, and daisies. Flowers that arenât cultivated.â
Amongst the extensive range of wardrobe solutions (a nonchalantly elegant scarf-necked, slightly caped top stands out) McCartney also contrived a definite branding exercise. The chunky metal chains knitted into the scoop of a gray knit tank and running down the outside leg of jeans clearly echo and celebrate the famous silver-like chains that edge her Falabella non-leather signature bags. There were leather industry scoffers that sheâd never be able to make a faux leather luxury handbag when McCartney launched the Falabella in 2010. Itâs now a universally recognized classic, toted everywhere. Is Stella celebrating her 15th anniversary of being right about it? She didnât say so, but sheâd certainly deserve to, upcycled and recyclable aluminum chains, and all.