PARIS (AP) — Kenzo understands color. For spring-summer 2013, the Japanese fashion house travelled to the South Asian jungle — to return with one of the strongest and subtly vivid menswear collections of the season. "We were inspired by a trip to Thailand last year," said one half of the design duo, Humberto Leon. Down the catwalk trekked bright camouflage prints, deer-stalker hats and even canteens with a harness to stay hydrated. "I wanted to give people a survival kit: everything they might need if they were stranded in the jungle," added Leon. But the flirtation with the tropics was just the far-flung concept. The true strength of the show lay with its grounded and subtle working of tonal color — a trick that few designers manage to grasp. Light short-sleeved shirts with rolled sleeves and wide Asian-style deep-pleated pants came in yellow, blue and orange. But the clothes' color was muted, not primary: a careful effect produced by carefully dying material to an exactly matching tonal strength. The rare result was comfortable harmony. It invoked founder Kenzo Takada's key philosophy: Clothes should be wearable. Flashes of vivid color occasionally punctuated the muted palette. Camouflage print in flashes of bright jewel tones made sure of that — print, another of Takada's codes given good mileage here. The intense, hazy patterns perfectly captured the rainforest's dappled light, while referencing busy Asian fabric patterning. One of the must-haves of the show was a pair of pleated baggy pants in florid vermilion. On their sophomore outing in menswear, Leon and his design partner Carol Lim passed with flying colors. ______ Thomas Adamson can be followed at http://Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP
Kenzo treks to the vivid Asian jungle
— Jun. 30 9:13 AM EDT
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