Reread any of the illustrated storybooks of our youth, from Rudyard Kipling's How The Camel Got His Hump ("But uglier yet is the hump we get from having too little to do") to Aesop's fables like The Frog and the Ox (the amphibian bursts in an effort to inflate himself beyond his means) or almost any of Shakespeare's plays, and it's clear that authors have drawn parallels between human temperament and beastly behavior as a colorful literary device for centuries. With that in mind, peering at the exotic prints that stalked the spring runways-from 3.1 Phillip Lim's leopard-print blazer to Alexander Wang's shimmering alligator-like argent dress-the predatory pattern we're most attracted to this season might reveal a little more than anticipated about who we are.
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Alexander Wang Spring 2013
"Alligators are very vocal; they make this roar and bellow out for the females in the morning," says Herzog. "They're tenacious animals," adds Gosling.
Photo by: Fairchild Archive
Alexander Wang Spring 2013
"Alligators are very vocal; they make this roar and bellow out for the females in the morning," says Herzog. "They're tenacious animals," adds Gosling.