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Helmut Lang Size Chart

 

How to Measure

Neck

Measure around your neck (keep a finger between your neck and the tape measure to ensure a comfortable fit.

Chest

Measure around the broadest part of your chest.

Sleeve

Measure from the center of the back of your neck to your wrist, following along the top of your shoulder and arm.

Waist

Measure around your natural waistline.

 

Clothing & Apparel

Alpha Size Chart

Measurement Unit: US (inch) | World (cm) | Both

SizeChestSleeveWaist
XS34 inch
86 cm
321/2 - 33 inch
83 - 84 cm
29 - 30 inch
74 - 76 cm
S36 inch
91 cm
33 - 331/2 inch
84 - 85 cm
31 - 32 inch
79 - 81 cm
M38 inch
97 cm
331/2 - 34 inch
85 - 86 cm
33 - 34 inch
84 - 86 cm
L40 inch
102 cm
34 - 341/2 inch
86 - 88 cm
35 - 37 inch
89 - 94 cm
XL43 inch
109 cm
341/2 - 35 inch
88 - 89 cm
39 - 41 inch
99 - 104 cm
XXL46 inch
117 cm
35 - 351/2 inch
89 - 90 cm
43 inch
109 cm
   
 

 

 

 

Numeric Size Chart

Measurement Unit: US (inch) | World (cm) | Both

SizeChestSleeve
3636 inch
91 cm
33 inch
84 cm
3838 inch
97 cm
331/2 inch
85 cm
4040 inch
102 cm
36 inch
91 cm
4242 inch
107 cm
34 inch
86 cm
4444 inch
112 cm
35 inch
89 cm
4646 inch
117 cm
351/2 inch
90 cm
4848 inch
122 cm
36 inch
91 cm
   
 

 

 

Denim Jeans Size Chart

Measurement Unit: US (inch) | World (cm) | Both

SizeWaistHipInseam
2829 inch
74 cm
34 inch
86 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
2930 inch
76 cm
35 inch
89 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3031 inch
79 cm
36 inch
91 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3132 inch
81 cm
37 inch
94 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3233 inch
84 cm
38 inch
97 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3334 inch
86 cm
39 inch
99 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3435 inch
89 cm
40 inch
102 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3637 inch
94 cm
42 inch
107 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
3839 inch
99 cm
43 inch
109 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
4041 inch
104 cm
45 inch
114 cm
311/2 inch
80 cm
   
 

 

 

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Helmut Lang

Visit official website: https://www.helmutlang.com/

The Helmut Lang fashion brand was created by Austrian fashion designer Helmut Lang in 1986. The Helmut Lang brand still exists today, but has been carried on without Lang's involvement since 2005.

 

The label

Helmut Lang, a fashion autodidact, set up a made-to-measure fashion studio in Vienna in 1977 and opened a boutique there in 1979 at the age of 23. His clothes were fairly successful in his native Austria, and, after presenting his work as part of an exhibition titled "l'Apocalypse Joyeuse" at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, initiated by the Austrian government, he branched out successfully to Paris in 1986 and created the label "Helmut Lang".

At this time in the late 1980s and early 1990s, minimalist fashion was at its height. His clothes were made with very sharp lines and careful cuts, creating basic but extremely elegant silhouettes in high quality and often high-tech fabrics.  His work has been compared to Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto for his sometimes austere, intellectual designs.

Lang is known for his minimalist, deconstructivist, and often severe designs. His fashion house became famous in the late 1980s for its simple but refined designs, its slim suits in black or white, its denim collection, and the use of high-tech fabrics. Helmut Lang fashions were sold in upscale department stores and through select retailers, as well as in signature Helmut Lang stores around the world. In 1999, Lang entered into a partnership with Prada Group which resulted in the acquisition of the Helmut Lang brand by Prada in 2004, and Mr. Lang's departure from the label in 2005. Prada consequently sold it to Link Theory of Japan in 2006. Link Theory re-launched the Helmut Lang label with new designers in 2007. Since then, Helmut Lang fashions have been available again at upscale department stores and signature Helmut Lang boutiques worldwide.

New York City

Lang moved to New York in 1997 and subsequently set up his company's headquarters in 80 Greene St. in SoHo in 1998. In New York, he decided in April 1998, three days before his designs were to be presented to a New York audience, to show his collection through a live internet broadcast to the world, via the newly created company's web site. As a first in the fashion industry, ads for the brand could be seen on New York taxi tops from 1998 to 2004.  The following season he announced to show his collections not only before New York Fashion Week, but also before the Milan and Paris runway shows. As a result, with many American designers following suit, New York Fashion Week was permanently moved up six weeks to herald the established runway shows.  From 2000 on, unconventional print ads for the brand were placed with National Geographic magazine.

Helmut Lang fashion

Throughout the years, both a women's and men's line existed, kept under a single name and always presented in one fashion show. Underwear (1995) and jeans (1996) lines as well as accessories, such as footwear (1990) and fragrances (1999) were launched, but otherwise the brand was kept unified to solidify its identity and strength.

The runway show venues for the Helmut Lang label were switched from Paris (until 1998) to New York by Mr. Lang and back again to Paris by Prada (from 2002 to 2005). The collections/presentations used to be called séances de travail ("working sessions") by Mr. Lang.

Prada partnership

In 1999, Milan-based fashion house Prada acquired 51% of the Helmut Lang company in the course of a multi-brand strategy, which also included the acquisition of German fashion label Jil Sander.

After alleged disputes with Prada Group's CEO Patrizio Bertelli on how the brand should be continued, and after Mr. Lang had sold his remaining shares to Prada in October 2004, he left his own label in January 2005.  Lang joined the growing number of designer departures, including Jil Sander from her own label at Prada and Tom Ford from Gucci. However, Mr. Lang has publicly maintained that he had "no problem" with Mr. Bertelli.

Acquisition by Link Theory

On March 17, 2006, Prada Group announced that, after six loss-making years, Link Theory Holdings (LTH) of Tokyo would be acquiring the Helmut Lang brand for an estimated €20 million. This came about three weeks after Prada had sold the Jil Sander label to British equity firm Change Capital Partners (CCP). Already in spring 2005, it had been rumored that Prada was trying to sell the label. Prada Group was said to want to concentrate on its core labels, Prada and Miu Miu, again. The Japanese holding company LTH, developer of the theory fashion label in Japan and the US, re-launched the Helmut Lang collections under the direction of a "suitable" designer for the spring/summer 2007 season (presented in fall 2006), in select boutiques worldwide as a "contemporary brand".  The new label is based out of New York City.

It was never expected that Lang himself would return to the label that bears his name, although Chikara Sasake, president and chief executive of LTH, gave to understand that if Lang "wants to come back, the door is always open".

 

Helmut Lang brand re-launch

In May 2006, it was announced that Michael and Nicole Colovos, an American-New Zealand designer couple, who formerly had their own Los Angeles-based denim label Habitual, had been installed by Link Theory as creative directors for the new Helmut Lang brand. From February 2007, select upscale retailers such as Barneys or Bergdorf Goodman started to carry the spring/summer 2007 Helmut Lang contemporary sportswear collection. The design office has been set up in West Chelsea in New York. The collection, described as "a commercial reduction of [Mr. Lang's] fashion identity", has received quite favorable reviews even though it is clearly not seen as a continuation of the original line. The item prices in the collection are about 20% above those for comparable theory items and, hence, below the original Helmut Lang prices.  Link Theory expects to generate US$ 8 million in revenues in 2008, and make a profit in 2009 with the label.  The company also announced that "over the long term" they intend "to also establish exclusive Helmut Lang shops" in the US, Europe and Japan.

The Helmut Lang web site was re-activated at the end of 2006 and was fully launched in spring 2007. Mr. Lang, who now resides on Long Island of independent means, is said not to be involved in the label's re-launch in any way.

In February 2014, Michael and Nicole Colovos, after eight years of being creative directors, left the company.  The Colovos designed the 2014 Fall collection called Rough Terrain.

In March 2017, it was announced that in lieu of a creative designer, Helmut Lang would re-launch with Isabella Burley, editor of the British youth culture magazine Dazed & Confused, as “editor in residence.”

In January 2018, it was announced that Alix Browne would be appointed as "editor-in-residence," replacing Isabella Burley.

In August 2018, the brand engaged in a series of layoffs after several years of profitability, with the aim to restructure the organization.

 

Helmut Lang stores
Original stores (until 2005)

All of the original, art-inspired signature Helmut Lang stores that existed in Vienna, Munich, Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Milan, Paris, New York, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Tokyo, as well as several stores-in-store in the Asian market, that existed between 1995 and 2005 have been closed. The last one to close was the Paris location in 2005.

New stores (after 2007). 

In March 2007, Link Theory opened the first post-Prada signature Helmut Lang store in Tokyo's fashionable Aoyama district.  In Japan, the company has since then installed several Helmut Lang stores-in-store at local department stores. In August 2007, a new freestanding Helmut Lang store was opened on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles.  It is, after the Tokyo store, the second signature Helmut Lang store since the closing of the last original store in Paris. The store is adjacent to an existing theory store at 8424 Melrose Avenue. Another Helmut Lang store opened on September 28, 2007, on Maiden Lane in San Francisco, in the building previously occupied by Jil Sander.  However, in April 2008, this store was converted into a theory store. In New York City, a temporary 'pop-up shop' opened in mid-December 2007, while the company is apparently looking for a larger location in the Meatpacking District.  May 8, 2008, saw the opening of a Helmut Lang outlet store at Woodbury Common Premium Outlets in New York, however, this store has since closed.

In May 2019, the Melrose Avenue store in Los Angeles closed. 


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Length Conversion

cm
inch
feet
' ''
Note: 1 inch = 2.54 cm, 1 cm = 0.394 inch, 1 foot = 30.48 cm, 1 cm = 0.033 foot, 1 foot = 12 inch, 1 inch = 0.083 foot

 

 

Essential Tools

If you do a lot of online apparel shopping, accurate body measurement using a tape measure is a must. The actual tape you choose doesn’t matter that much. This measuring tape set has two double-sided, 60 inch (150 cm), durable tape measure in pink and black. They are small and light pocket-size measuring tapes, and they have accurate, large and clear markings in both inches and centimeters, which are very easy and convenient to read. They are also great for body measurement, sewing, tailoring, weight loss tracking, or measuring any curved surface.

 

 

How to measure without a ruler or tape measure?

If you don't have a ruler or tape measure handy, you can try to measure with a standard credit card, which has a width of 3 ⅜ inch or 8.56 cm and a height of 2 ⅛ inch or 5.4 cm.