Why Archival Fashion Is More Important and In Demand Than Ever

In recent years, the biggest styling flex you could make on the red carpet was to wear a dress days, if not hours, after it debuted on the runway. In the world of celebrities—which trades in newness, connections and exclusivity—it was considered the ultimate power move to show that you were the first to be selected to wear a designer’s collection six months before anyone else could buy it. It is also an organisational feat, as stylists and publicists broker deals and exclusive previews so that their client would quite literally be wearing the newest designer dress in the world. Although this remains an integral part of the red carpet machine and within the remit of every brand ambassador—especially at fashion month, where the front row now functions as an extension of the runway—the blockbusters on the red carpet this year were all rare archive looks. Instead of new-season Chanel boots, the line in The Devil Wears Prada would now go something like, “Is that autumn/winter 1997 Dior by John Galliano?”

“The opposite psychology was the thing that was in fashion for so long,” said freelance fashion editor Bay Garnett, a longtime pioneer of incorporating vintage pieces in luxury shoots. “It was all about newness and wearing something that had never been seen before, much like the movie itself. That was what was required of the red carpet. The fact that it’s commented on and is such a new thing is so crazy when it’s just an obvious and sensible thing to do.”

The theme of this year’s Met Gala exhibition, Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion, celebrates rare, historical pieces, as it is a collection of garments so fragile that they can no longer be worn. The theme naturally filtered onto the red carpet, where guests were keen to demonstrate their comprehensive fashion history knowledge, from Zendaya’s Givenchy S/S 96 couture dress from Galliano’s first collection for the house (which she accessorised with an “if you know, you know” bouquet headpiece that Philip Treacy designed for Alexander McQueen’s S/S 07 collection) to Kendall Jenner’s winged party dress from Givenchy’s S/S 97 collection by Alexander McQueen. Although the red carpet saw a decline in true vintage looks compared to the previous Met Gala, which was dedicated to the life and works of Karl Lagerfeld, there were many referential outfits, replicas and gowns in reworked antique fabrics that still all celebrated the old rather than the new.

Why Archival Fashion Is More Important and In Demand Than Ever

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The Met Gala might have seen a dip in true vintage, but Zendaya and image architect and stylist Law Roach have ensured that the most viral looks of the year are all archive pulls. For the Challengers press tour, her wardrobe included the feather bustle skirt from Vivienne Westwood’s S/S 94 collection that Carrie Bradshaw famously wore in Sex and the City and a citron-and-white checked coat from the Louis Vuitton S/S 13 collection designed by Marc Jacobs—two looks to delight fashion purists.