In reply to Karl Fuler:
YSL was the first designer to make black models major on fashion runways and fashion campaigns. He was a true master in terms of refinement and style. I don't see any designers of now with YSL masterful presence, and understanding of style, not trying to come up with new looks just for the sake of the fashion cycle, but would insist on refining the existing styles to perfection. Since the 1980's, YSL had stopped participating in the fashion system in terms of coming up with distinctively new ideas every season, but he just stuck to his beliefs of what beauty and style is, and in the end, his designs evolved into the most unforced kind of high fashion that's timeless and provocative, but never vulgar. To stick with one's style and not coming up with drastic new looks, it's not something new designers do, many feel they have to play to the system, and perhaps they think it's rebellious and controversial to come up with crazy things every season, perhaps it takes a true rebel to not play along with the system, but only to do what feels right in the heart.