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Vogue Noiva - Anuário 2013
09 May 2013
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Revista Você S/A - Dezembro/2012
08 May 2013
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Assista ao vídeo do desfile FH por Fause Haten no Fashion Casar dia 12/4 no Iguatemi JK
17 April 2013
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Fause Haten abre agora o ciclo de pestras sobre moda na FAAP - 05/04/2013
17 April 2013

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Irenebrination: Notes on Architecture, Art, Fashion and Style - 27/03/2013
17 April 2013
Glamorous Fashion Puppets: FH Por Fause Haten Summer 2014
Puppets, marionettes and dolls have strong connections with fashion. Historians will tell you for example that in 1700s, fashion from France was exported to Venice via "la poupee de France", known in Venice as "la piavola de Franza", a doll officially dressed in the latest Parisian creations.
In March 1945, the Théâtre de la Mode event was showcased at the Louvre Museum. Organised by the Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne and Entraide Française, this event was aimed at raising funds for charity, while showcasing the work of Parisian couturiers on wire mannequins posed on sets designed by famous artists.
The idea came from an old practice: sending dolls dressed in miniature versions of outfits to faraway buyers while saving money since organising a proper fashion show was too expensive.
An event similar to the Théâtre de la Mode took place in 1963 in Paris, organised this time by Gisèle d’Assailly, a descendant of Lafayette, and a journalist, who asked the most famous Parisian couturiers, jewellery designers, fur makers and hairdressers to come up with unique creations for a series of dolls later to be auctioned for charity.
In more recent years we have seen fashionable puppets and dolls becoming the protagonists of fashion events, such as "The House of Viktor & Rolf" exhibition, or more recently being employed by Academy of Art University student Maria Romero for her graduate collection. Yet marionettes disappeared from proper fashion runways for quite a while, at least until last week when Brazilian designer Fause Haten decided to bring them back.
One of Brazil's most internationally renowned fashion designers (but also a singer and costume designer), famous for working with unusual mixes of materials including plastic, lace, leather, mohair, and denim and for adopting a style infused with architectural references, Fause Haten is at the top of his game in his country when it comes to fashion presentations.
During Sao Paulo Fashion Week he introduced his Summer 2014 collection with a marionette catwalk: his glamorous 30 inches high puppets wore miniature versions of his designs, that were actually more haute couture than ready-to-wear. Bright summerish colours prevailed, and in some cases the dresses were covered with appliqued floral motifs or satin ribbons.
Each doll represented a glamorous model (Gisele Bündchen, Thana Kuhnen, Paola Ludtke, Stella Tennant, Aline Weber, Alicia Kuczman, Shalom Harlow, Kate Moss, Carol Trentini, Raquel Zimmermann, Kristen McMenamy, Karen Elson, Alek Wek, Natalia Vodianova, Amber Valletta, Linda Evangelista, Mariacarla Boscono, Naomi Campbell and actress Julianne Moore) and, at the end of the catwalk (very aptly closed by a marionette of Fause Haten himself), each puppet posed next to the real size dresses. The unique catwalk show received coverage by the media a bit all over the world and proved very emotional with the people who attended it.
Robert Ricci’s (son of Nina and head of the Chambre Syndicale) originally launched the Théâtre de la Mode event to inject new life into the moribund French fashion industry; Haten's act of dressing up puppets in his glamorous gowns suggested designers that it's maybe time to shake fashion a bit and bring back into catwalk shows the dreamy magic of childhood dreams or of grand marionette shows à la Carlo Colla.
Was your show somehow inspired by the 1945 exhibit Théâtre de la Mode?
Fause Haten: Not exactly, but I know about that exibition as I have this wonderful book that features it. My idea came from my desire to try new ways of showing a fashion collection. After doing shows for more than 20 years, you feel that the time has come to change this formula. When the fashion shows first started they were about women going to an atelier to choose dresses. Today it's not just about that and this is why at my atelier we always try to think about new ways to present the designsCan you remind us of another unusual fashion presentation you did in the past?
Fause Haten: For the S/S 2011-2012 I did a show where all the models wore a mask over their eyes as if they were sleeping and we had a completly different way to walk, and a dreamy and emotional atmosphere immersed in silence. I used to work with stylists, show directors, lighting and soundtrack designers on my shows, but I created my latest show all by myself, working day by day, finding new ways to direct it, working on the soundtrack and designing the lights as well.Who made the puppets, an artisan?
Fause Haten: Yes, it was a combination of two disciplines, puppetry and sculpture and of two artists, Guilherme Pires and Virgilio Zago, specialised in marionettes and animation.Can you introduce us the new collection - what inspired it and what's the main theme behind it?
Fause Haten: The collection is entitled "O Maravilhoso Mundo do Dr. F" - The Wonderful World of Dr. F. But I'm leaving it at that as I want everyone to see in it a different theme or inspiration. My collection now belongs to the audience who will have to decode it.In a way, in our world going through constant financial crises it seemed a very clever solution to have puppets rather than models at your show. Could your presentation be considered also as a commentary about the costs of fashion?
Fause Haten: SPFW had a calendar change last year and because of that we did 3 shows in 2012. We spent a lot of money on these presentations and I didn't have too much to invest this season. But that was not the idea. For me the idea of the show was to have an innovative presentation for my collection. You see, in the past the designer used to be more present on the runway, but then, little by little designers disappeared for one reason or the other in favour of the brand - think about houses such as Yves Saint Laurent, Valentino, and then more recently Jil Sander, McQueen, Galliano or Tom Ford. The time has finally come to rethink catwalk show presentations.What kind of feedback did you get after this show?
Fause Haten: I did regular catwalk shows in New York in 2000 and 2001 and then in Milan in 2002 and 2003, but I never got the international coverage I got with this show. It was very special to get people coming to me after the presentation and see how many of them were emotional and some were even crying. I think that even in an industry that became very corporative like fashion, we still need emotion.How do you reconcile your role as fashion designer with your other careers? And have you been working on any new cotumes recently?
Fause Haten: Fashion is part of my work as an artist. I'm also an actor, singer and costume designer for the theatre. I just did the costumes for shows and musicals in Brazil including The Wizard of Oz and Hello, Dolly! and I'm now working on Romeo and Juliet and The Drowsy Chaperone.The 1945 Théâtre de la Mode travelled all over the world, would you like to see your puppets embarking on a very fashionable journey as well?
Fause Haten: Yes, I'd love to. I would like to contact fashion museums and send them further information about this collection. It would be great to see the puppets travelling all around the world!
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donna.fanpage.it - 21/03/2013
17 April 2013
Marionette con il volto di storiche top model sfilano a San Paolo (FOTO)
Lo stilista Fause Haten presenta a San Paolo la sua collezione con un particolare fashion show. Sulla passerella non sfilano modelle reali ma marionette con le fattezze di celebri top model come Naomi Campbell.

Oltre alla celebri fashion week di Londra, New York, Milano e Parigi, negli ultimi anni stanno nascendo una miriade di manifestazioni parallele dedicate alla moda. Ormai ogni paese ha una propria Settimana della Moda, dalla Spagna alla Cina, passando per Polonia e Germania. Non poteva essere da meno il paese del Carnevale. Anche in Brasile, a San Paolo, hanno sfilato le visionarie creazioni degli stilisti sudamericani. Più che abiti da indossare quelli visti in passerella sembrano “costumi” carnevaleschi, ogni defilè più che una semplice sfilata sembra uno spettacolo teatrale con tanto di performance musicali e attori in passerella. Tra i tanti show il più originale è stato senza dubbio quello del designer Fause Haten che ha sostituito le modelle con marionette raffiguranti alcune super top degli anni ’90.
Naomi Campbell in versione marionetta sfila in Brasile – Per presentare la collezione P/E 2013, Fause Haten ha messo in scena uno spettacolo di marionette. Nello show ogni fantoccio era abbigliato con le riproduzioni in miniatura degli abiti primaverili. Non è tutto! Per non farsi mancare proprio nulla lo stilista ha utilizzato delle marionette che riproducevano alla perfezione le sembianze di alcune celebri modelle. All’interno di un museo nel pieno centro di San Paolo hanno dunque sfilato grandi top come Naomi Campbell, Mariacarla Boscono, Shalom Harlow e Alek Wek, tutte in “versione marionetta”. L’atmosfera teatrale è stata pensata per proporre una collezione estremamente “scenica”, composta da abiti vistosi, “dipinti” con colori accesi, impreziositi con gonne vaporose, strascichi e lucenti applicazioni. Alla fine dello spettacolo con le marionette, hanno fatto la loro comparsa in passerella gli abiti a dimensione naturale, posizionati dietro le miniature, come fossero ingrandimenti delle eccentriche creazioni firmate dal “burattinaio” Fause Haten.
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Site FFW - Fashion Foward
17 April 2013
Shooting especial com os melhores looks do SPFW Verão/2014


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Vogue Itália
17 April 2013
Impressions from São Paulo 3 - Fause Haten




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Grazia.it - 25/03/2013
17 April 2013
SPFW: Le Marionette di Fause Haten

Una collezione che raccoglie favolosi abiti da red carpet presentata su delle marionette. Questa la brillante idea di Fause Haten per mostrare in modo esclusivo la sua nuova linea di lunghi abiti da sera. E le marionette assomigliano proprio a vere modelle! Guardate bene quella dai capelli rossi, non sembra proprio Karen Elson? Geniale.BY TAMU MCPHERSON
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caras online - 20/03/2013
17 April 2013
Fause Haten troca modelos por marionetes e surpreende plateia
Fause Haten pegou de surpresa as pessoas que assistiram ao seu desfile no Teatro FAAP. É que as modelos foram substituídas por marionetes

Fause Haten apresentou sua nova coleção, batizada de O Maravilhoso Mundo do Dr. F, nesta quarta-feira, 20, no SPFW. O desfile aconteceu no Teatro FAAP e encantou todo mundo por uma grande mudança - ao invés das modelos, o estilista utilizou marionetes para apresentar seus vestidos.
Em conversa com a CARAS Online, Fause explicou que a ideia das marionetes surgiram depois que ele ganhou um duende no começo do ano. "Veio dessa vontade de sempre buscar formas novas de mostrar meu trabalho", disse.
Depois de fazer os vestidos para as bonecas, Fause decidiu que cada uma iria homenagear uma top famosa, desde Linda Evangelista até Carol Trentini, que já desfilou pela marca em outras temporadas.
No final do espetáculo, uma boneca da cantora Maria Rita (35) encerrou o espetáculo dublando Brincadeira de Roda. "Escolhi a Maria porque ela é minha amiga e eu fiz essa roupa que ela aparece no DVD cantando essa música. Decidi ficar no meu universo", contou.
Os vestidos da coleção trazem babados, volume nas saias, transparência e aplicações de laços. As cores predominantes foram o laranja, o verde claro e rosa.
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