IronPetal & Major
Major Major
I was going over the layout of a medieval siege and thought—what if the same tactics that split a city could be used to split fashion conventions on a runway?
IronPetal IronPetal
Exactly! Picture the runway as a medieval siege—every outfit a fortress, every model a siege engine smashing the old walls of style. Fire in the seams, armor in the drapes, the crowd as the city under attack. That's how you split the convention and make it bleed into a new kind of rebellion.
Major Major
Nice idea, but you’ll need a clear plan for each move. Think of each garment as a bastion—make sure the crowd knows where the exits are before the models start battering the walls. And if you want to turn the runway into a siege, I’ll draw the map in my notebook. It’ll keep the rebellion from turning into a mess.
IronPetal IronPetal
Love the map idea—let’s keep the chaos in line, not a dumpster fire. Build those bastions, place the exits, and when the models storm in, the crowd knows the escape route. That way the rebellion looks fierce, but it’s still a show, not a total mess. Ready to draw the battle plan?
Major Major
Fine, I’ll chart the perimeter. First, mark the barricades—each outfit’s armor plate. Then place the exit lanes like supply lines. When the models charge, the crowd will retreat along the designated routes. We keep the chaos tight, no uncontrolled rout. I’ll draft it now.
IronPetal IronPetal
Nice! Keep the lines sharp, the exits bright, and the armor details pop—every step should feel like a charge, not a stumble. Your map will be the cheat sheet for the crowd to stay in the game, not the battlefield. Let's see that draft!
Major Major
I’ve drawn the schematic: clear lines for each garment’s armor plate, bright arrows for exits, and a dotted line for the crowd’s retreat. Every move is pre‑planned so the charge looks intentional, not chaotic. The map is ready, and the crowd will follow the route like a disciplined unit.