If you haven’t seen the ‘T’ collection by Alexander Wang, there’s an easy way to conjure up an image: Travel back to a time in your youth when you used to fidget with your tee shirt by stretching the material over your knees and elbows. If you weren’t caught by your parents in time to save it, the poor tee shirt just dangled there--that is what many clothes in the ‘T’ collection look like.
Lacking in Alexander Wang's ‘T’ collection is a range of this year's most popular colors; instead, he chose to go with black, white and gray. The overstretched tee shirt dresses aren’t the only choices in the ‘T’ line; Wang has some normal tee-frocks and tee shirts as well.
You might think a designer label would mean you’d have to pay an outrageous price, but you don’t. Alexander Wang's ‘T’ apparel is affordable; prices range from $28-$40. If that’s still too much, you can achieve this same look by referring back to the introduction and recalling your childhood.
Chic Overstretched Apparel
'T' by Alexander Wang for That Pulled on Tee-Shirt Look
Trend Themes
1. Overstretched Apparel - Disruptive innovation opportunity: Explore new manufacturing techniques and materials to create clothing with intentional stretched and deformed designs.
2. Minimalist Color Palette - Disruptive innovation opportunity: Develop new ways to incorporate limited color options in clothing lines while still maintaining aesthetic appeal.
3. Affordable Designer Label - Disruptive innovation opportunity: Create a business model that offers designer-quality clothing at affordable prices to attract a broader customer base.
Industry Implications
1. Fashion - Disruptive innovation opportunity: Utilize technology like 3D printing or smart textiles to push the boundaries in fashion design and manufacturing.
2. Textiles - Disruptive innovation opportunity: Research and develop fabrics and materials that can withstand intentional stretching and deforming while maintaining durability and comfort.
3. Retail - Disruptive innovation opportunity: Explore innovative retail strategies such as direct-to-consumer models or rental services to make designer apparel more accessible to the masses.