Valentino: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Valentino’s Pierpaolo Piccioli is fashion’s most accomplished colourist. The Pantone master mixes shades with such intuitive confidence, and creates such virtuoso colour combinations that it frequently brings tears to the eyes of his audience. So when he turns to black,
Comme Des Garçons: Ready-To-Wear AW24
“Anger”, read a stark statement from Rei Kawakubo at Comme des Garçons. “This collection is about my present state of mind. I have anger against everything in the world, especially against myself.“ For Rei Kawakubo, it’s always personal
Alexander McQueen: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Alexander McQueen is not a quiet house and Séan McGirr gave us plenty to talk about with his debut show for the brand – the most anticipated on the Paris schedule.
Junya Watanabe: Ready-To-Wear AW24
“I want to express the beauty of the contrast between clothes and sculptures,” said Junya Watanabe of his AW24 collection. The result was akin to wearable art.
Andreas Kronthaler For Vivienne Westwood: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Vivienne Westwood models stepped out wearing a wardrobe inspired by the Renaissance. Andreas Kronthaler cited laws introduced in Florence to curb salacious dress. You could get arrested if you showed too much flesh… so, that’s what he did.
Loewe: Ready-To-Wear AW24
It was a stellar Loewe show, full of inventive but covetable pieces. It was packed with ideas – every look a winner – from the long, flowing bias-cut dresses at the beginning to the pointy hemmed tail coats and ballooning
Schiaparelli: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Schiaparelli’s Daniel Roseberry has such a powerful point of view that he’s taken the brand from zero to red carpet hero in his five year tenure.
Chloé: Ready-To-Wear AW24
The gorgeous Chloé girl is back! She’s proudly stalking the catwalks once again in an updated version of her beautiful boho wardrobe.
Rick Owens: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Rick Owens has the blueprint for how to survive and thrive in a world that’s stacked against you. Total commitment is the only way and total authenticity is the net result.
Balmain: Ready-To-Wear AW24
With his combination of architectural silhouettes and inclusive casting, Olivier Rousteing always brings drama to the catwalk. AW24 was no different as he sent out a collection full of sculptural shapes and angular tailoring on a diverse cast of models,
Saint Laurent: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Fragility and strength: Saint Laurent’s Anthony Vaccarello explored both, in a provocative collection, filled with barely-there transparent clothes.
Dior: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Say hello to Miss Dior. Maria Grazia Chiuri was inspired by the ready-to-wear line designed by Marc Bohan, which launched in 1967 and was aimed at young, modern women.
Giorgio Armani: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Giorgio Armani wanted to send a message of hope and grace with his AW24 show which focused on the healing power of nature.
Dolce And Gabbana: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Dolce and Gabbana is a brand that never suffers from an identity crisis. The AW24 collection was dedicated to tuxedo dressing.
Ferragamo: Ready-To-Wear AW24
Elegance, power, playfulness: Maximilian Davis has brought them all to Ferragamo.