givenchy dress Resort 2019 Givenchy by Clare Waight Keller Metallic Pleated Lame Dres –  Shrimpton Couture
SKU: 36919609797
givenchy dress

givenchy dress Resort 2019 Givenchy by Clare Waight Keller Metallic Pleated Lame Dres – Shrimpton Couture

Sale price$19.65 Regular price$21.83
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Description

givenchy dress Resort 2019 Givenchy by Clare Waight Keller Metallic Pleated Lame Dres – Shrimpton CoutureThis was the closing look of the resort collection and one of the most visible of the pieces from Clare Waight Keller's time as Creative Director for the house. It was featured in the ad campaign that year and Emma Stone chose it for her red carpet premiere. And just this year Nicole Kidman was spotted wearing one on her Instagram in a behind the scenes look from her new show. It also appears in the trailer for her show. It is a very well documented

This was the closing look of the resort collection and one of the most visible of the pieces from Clare Waight Keller's time as Creative Director for the house. It was featured in the ad campaign that year and Emma Stone chose it for her red carpet premiere. And just this year Nicole Kidman was spotted wearing one on her Instagram in a behind the scenes look from her new show. It also appears in the trailer for her show. It is a very well documented dress that will only gain in importance as time goes by.

Clare said of the collection that year “There’s a powerful woman in there that I really love; she’s a very strong character who loves a strong shape—something that gives a real sense of fashion.”, and in the Vogue review of the resort collection, fashion journalist Amy Verner mentions this gown in particular along with another comment from Clare; "This marks the first season since the passing of Monsieur de Givenchy in March and Waight Keller hinted that a more intentioned homage might be forthcoming. In the meantime, the collection’s evening looks—specifically the long-sleeved black dress showered with silver embroidery, and the gradient celadon and rust plissé lamé gown—further the couture spirit we’ve seen most recently at the Met Gala and at Cannes. “It’s a real joy to be able to work at both ends of the spectrum,” she said. “It’s what I believe in: everything from the really simple everyday to the absolutely fantastic and fabulous.” You can believe she means it.

The dress is amazing. It is made out of a light weight silk mixed with a metallic thread. The fabric was then pleated into permanent, sharp edged knife pleats. The color of it is gorgeous and it ranges from a deep metallic green to a burnt rust and copper and these are done in a gradient ombre that runs the length of the dress. The front is cut into a dramatic cut out that leaves a wide swath of skin exposed down the front. The width is kept perfectly in place by how it is set into the waist and closed at the top of the neck. The dress is so well made that I think you could spin it around and wear the cut out at the back if you wished. Each shoulder has a caped effect with the pleating allowed to splay out dramatically over them. I love how the colors are set to follow each pleat and the cut of the dress. This extra detailing shows the high quality in making this. The waist is banded with the only bit of fabric not pleated on the dress and then the skirt falls to the floor from there in an extra long supermodel length. There is a ton of fabric in the skirt so it moves and flows around you when you move. It is absolutely amazing  and the dress originally retailed at just about the 10k mark. This one appears to have never been worn or worn very little. Excellent condition

The skirt is lined in a black silk chiffon and the bodice has a built in halter under the exterior fabric made out of a fine  black silk netting. It closes with a hidden set side zipper and there is a hook & eye at the top neck. Tagged a 38. It appears to have never been worn or worn very little. Note that the owner took the main tag out but it has its correct inner fabric and size tag present

Bust: the inner net halter is open does the sides to the waist so there are no true side seams
Waist: to 14" flat across from side seam to side seam
Hips: open
Bodice: 15" from top of shoulder to top waist seam
Skirt: 50" from the top waist seam to hem including the 1.5" band at the waist

Modern Sizing Equivalent: SML-MED

Item# DD3543

Reference Photos: (1) Resort 2019 Givenchy Collection, Look 57.  /  (2-3) Emma Stone in Givenchy for Netflix’s Maniac premiere, September 20th, 2018.  /  (4-5) Nicole Kidman in Givenchy for HBO's "The Undoing". 
Reference Video: (1) Givenchy Pre-Spring/Resort 2019 Campaign.  /  (2) Nicole Kidman in Givenchy for HBO's "The Undoing".

This garment has been professionally cleaned, pressed and is odor free. Thoroughly checked over before shipping, it will be ready to wear upon arrival.

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SKU: 36919609797

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Verified Purchase
N. Franke
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Great when on sale
Style: Receiver
Update: I got a new Sony X90L TV and this receiver just doesn't like that TV or something. I've had at least 4 instances where the TV said there was no signal. The receiver was on and the proper input was selected. If I hit the menu button on the receiver, I could see that. No inputs on the receiver would work. Unplugging the power from the receiver and plugging it back in fixes the problem in every case. Based on my googling, many others have similar problems. Yamaha receivers are generally over priced I've noticed. And they seem to skimp on features, e.g. a receiver with an MSRP of $1000 doesn't have a single analog video input. I got this on sale for $650 and for that I'm quite happy. I had a Denon that I got pretty inexpensively, but I hated the Denon. Things didn't work, it was confusing, didn't sound all that good and didn't do HDMI input switching well. The Yamaha is a far better reliever in every way. It does cost quite a bit more but it's just so much nicer.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2024
X
Verified Purchase
Xterra rocks!
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Modern interfaces, clean sound of Yamaha, tons of features and intelligence.
Style: Receiver
Modern interfaces, clean sound of Yamaha, tons of features and intelligence. Purchased this to replace my amazing RX3300 (it started turning off on its own), and wasn't sure these newer generations of AV receivers would have the same clean and powerful sound, but the RX-A2A did not disappoint. Plus I am loving all of the new features and more relevant interfaces. It provides great value for the price. It is one of the few brands that kept the original sound as natural as possible (of course, there are plenty of modes to choose from for specific characteristics, but only if you choose). Perfect fit for my large family room.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2026
J
Verified Purchase
JM
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 1
Hours of my life I won’t get back.
Style: Receiver
I tried to make this system work. I REALLY did. Probably blew 10 hours trying to somehow make it work. Had to return it. Customer Support - What customer support? Yamaha cut hours from weak 9 to only 5 hrs a day. Email/chat got no call back. It’s so bad I’m not sure Yamaha is gonna make it. Lip sync - Impossible to fix video to sound lag. Musiccast wireless - See lag. Also sound is tinny as hell. Also won’t stay linked. Could not get speakers to respond to giant volume knob. Would respond to app. App was mediocre. Tried to use with YSP-5600 sound bar which is allegedly Mussiccast. Nope. In short, it has been a HORRIBLE experience and I really tried.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2022
A
Verified Purchase
AB
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 3
Replacing a RXA770/780/880? You May be Disappointed.
Style: Receiver
I will start with the issues. (1.) HDMI audio drop outs. This can be fix by going into your tv and changing your audio settings from auto to pass through. However I remember this causing an inconvenience of some sort. I did not have to make this change with Marantz M1, Sony AZ1000, Or Integra DRX3.4. (2.) when unit goes into auto-standby while using the digital optical input, it will freeze after turning it on again. I had to unplug it to get it to work correctly. this happened every time. (3.) The plastic front panel can scratch easily. You may want to use a can of air to clean it. Yamaha should have flipped the design-the metal/aluminum where the glass/plastic is and the plastic where the metal is. (4) If using the coaxial for tv audio, It will take 9 full seconds before audio is heard. I had to buy a new TV(this was before the other issues were discovered). Finally (5) if you are replacing a RXA770/780/880, you may be disappointed. You'll have to step up to the RXA4A to get the features like PEQ and menus you had with them. Sound and Power: The 2 channel specs between the Yamaha RXA2A and The Yamaha RN1000A stereo receiver are similar. Don't let that fool you. The RN1000A is way more powerful and sound much better with music, however the A2A was way better than the RN1000A for movies and tv. In full range, sub off, the RXA2A could not drive the Polk RTIa5's well with music. In fact, to me the Marantz M1class D and the Sony AZ1000 70/70w class AB sounded more powerful and musical, making them easier to listen to than the A2A. The Integra best all 3 AVR's for music in full range mode without a sub to my ears. But with the 3.4, the sub output volume was way too low, I hated the click noise(sounds like it powered on again) when turning up master volume, and I couldn't use the presets without changing the source. The Yamaha RN1000a is the best for music only, especially at a sale price. My Positives: It come with a 5 year warranty when registered. It's well built, especially better than the Sony. You get 8 presets that you can set to the same source or different sources almost any kind of way. The dialogue mode works very well even for music. Yamaha Support is very helpful. If yours don't come with the above issues/defects that I listed, I think it can be easy to just set it, forget about it and enjoy it.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2026
D
Verified Purchase
DougMac
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent AVR!
Style: Receiver
Our projector in our home theater died and I updated to a 4K projector. I was using a 10 year old Onkyo receiver. It was still working fine, but being that old it did not have the latest audio codecs or 4K HDMI, so I decided to go ahead and upgrade my AVR. I had bought a relatively inexpensive Yamaha for our living room TV a few years ago and have been pleased with its performance. I looked at the RX-A2A and RX-A4A. After reading numerous reviews and tests, I decided to go with the A2A, since it was on sale and much less expensive. The difference in features were not important to me. I only need one HDMI output and only have three inputs. While the A4A has a more powerful amp and better power supply, I thought the A2A would be sufficient since our home theater is "cozy" about the same size as a living room. My speakers in my 7.1 setup are very efficient and we play music and videos at a reasonable loudness. Still, I was concerned that the A2A would match the performance of the Onkyo with its beefier power supply and more power. My fears were soon put to rest. After swapping out the units, I set up the A2A. It only took 10 minutes, including running YPAO to calibrate the system. I designed the room carefully and it has acoustic treatments, including bass traps. Therefore, the adjustments made by YPAO were minimal. We watched "No Time to Die", which has a well-regarded soundtrack full of dialog, music and special effects, including some beefy LFE. The A2A handled it all with aplomb, even at a higher-than-normal volume setting. I felt there was a noticeable improvement in audio quality. My adult son, who didn't know I upgraded to the Yamaha, remarked how the audio sounded more balanced and refined, which he attributed my sound treatments (he'd already heard the Onkyo after I had installed them). Video quality is also excellent, seamlessly passing the HDR 4K signal to the projector. Although I'm frugal and didn't want to upgrade my AVR, I'm glad I did. I'm also glad I went with the A2A.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2024

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