Goth designer has the last laugh over Australian Fashion Week
Designer Gail Sorronda’s bright smile is not characteristic for a Goth. Sorronda may have muscle memory from the modeling history, but in this case, it is only the label survive for 20 years in the fashion business.
On Saturday night, he celebrated his durability and creativity by Dolce & Gabbana and Chanel Impressario Karl Lagerfeld, who died in 2019.
“I want a swimmer energy and to feel like a celebration,” he said before the music starts in Sorron. “I want it to have a new memory.”
Gail Sortonda and daughter Juniper, Brisbane’s 20th anniversary show ‘Chromophobia’ in ‘Chromophobia’.Credit: Dane Beesley
In a slippery show in the industrial field of Urban Art Projects, models appeared in a disco Victoriana mixture, where the green Gables, buttoned white dresses with swollen enough to satisfy the green Gables Anne, Paper Bag Pleeled Pleated Green and Ultraviolet explosions competed to attract attention with black dresses.
They were a school painting of the rebellious little sister, your grandmother would wear a ceramic exhibition and a nightclub from your brother to a nightclub where the doors did not open up to 2 o’clock.
The collection was bright enough to wipe the darker emotions than February, when Sortralya Fashion Week was rejected, and Barbie smile on Wednesday. The owners of the Sydney event rejected the Australian Fashion Council Sorta because it was not open to wholesale orders.
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The dream of celebrating the anniversary of the Sorta’s anniversary was born and the Gary Bigeni in Sydney in AFW, where his career began in 2005, was torn apart.
“I’m not a Mega brand, but I have a voice that people are interested in, Sor says Sorronda. “The journey is not always what we expect, but as a flexible creator who has done it for 20 years, you realize that you can return and do not mean the end of this road.”