Balenciaga - Bottega Veneta - Rochas
The July issue of Vogue contains an article about demi-couture--a recent development in fashion which, it seems, began to pick up speed in Fall 2005. Demi-couture is essentially an intermediate level of luxury between pret-a-porter and couture, and a number of designers are sending it down the runway.
What can we attribute this trend to? I think there are a few possible arguments we can make. First, plain old pret-a-porter has become somewhat democratized and no longer boasts the cachet it used to. Additionally, the movement toward demi-couture could be related to increases in the number of millionaires and billionaires in the world. Finally, it's highly likely that demi-couture is part of a sound business plan for designers and design houses.
Let's call the consumers who have the wherewithal to purchase demi-couture "high-end consumers." In general, a fashion consumer can tolerate a product's spreading through the population to a certain degree--let's call this the consumers democratization threshold--before he or she no longer demands the product. I would argue that a number of processes--globalization, the trend of designers launching diffusion lines, the phenomenon of "trading up" that seems to be occurring economy-wide as well as in the fashion marketplace, massclusivity-type ventures (Lagerfield et al. for H&M, Target's GO! International, et cetera) have resulted in democratization of regular ready-to-wear and designs characteristic of ready-to-wear beyond the democratization threshold of high-end consumers. Hence the move towards demi-couture.
Additionally, we could propose that this development might be related to the increase in the number of the world's millionaires and billionaires of late. I don't know the exact figures, but I do know that, even adjusted for inflation, there are more people today with the means to purchase demi-couture than there were one and two decades ago.
And of course, this could also be a shrewd business move on the part of designers and houses. When it comes to the clothes (we all know that luxury brands make a considerable amount of revenue selling perfumes and such), ready-to-wear has long been the profit-generating product offered by fashion houses, whereas couture has largely been a way for houses to develop and maintain their cachet. As run of the mill ready-to-wear has become more democratized, the gap between RTW and couture has widened--so much so that there is room for an intermediate level of luxury: demi-couture.
Jing, a fashion blogger, bout a demi-couture jacket from the Balenciaga Spring 2006 collection. Check out her take on the experience (and pictures!) here.