Cage-corset
How far can designers push an appearance if it can be worn instantly with simply a digital filter, abandoning the manufacturing restrictions and mindset of commercial and easy-to-produce fashion products? Or, can people be as bold as designers while rocking "technologic" designs?
The ambiguous epaulets on the shoulders and the grid balance of the "cage" part are seemingly contradictory designs that, like the lower metal surface that begins a little lower than the waist (despite the last "cage" line that defines that boundaries), can be worn with esteem at any robotic bagnio or at the virtual colosseum, even while simultaneously flaneuring in elegance over any ball.
This long dress, made in DFW, is cut from metallic anarchy of sleek lines, and it can be worn in any attitude, thanks to the wizardry of AR.