Paris Fashion Week: Suzy Bae and Jennifer Lawrence roll up in style for Dior, Kate Moss stuns at boo

Publish date: 2024-04-09

How Dior’s Victoire de Castellane’s gem of an idea began on a Post-it

Here are some of the key takeaways from day two of Paris Fashion Week’s ready-to-wear shows for spring/summer.

Christian Dior’s sister

Dior’s first female designer Maria Grazia Chiuri pulled off a clever twist for the season, when the House of Dior’s legendary founder wasn’t the usual inspiration for the designs.

In Christian Dior’s place was his colourful and rebellious sister Catherine Dior, known simply as Miss Dior.

Chiuri delved into the house archives and came back channelling a photo of Catherine, who was a gardener and born in 1917, surrounded by flowers.

The result was a decorative and quirky collection. It riffed on gardening and on the buttoned-up collar styles Miss Dior wore. Straw hats in natural hues or dyed black, some with contrasting trim, defined the tone of the 67-look show with a central eco-theme.

How Chanel, Fendi and Dior made our fantasies come true

The programme notes said the hats were fashioned in raffia, a natural fibre made from palm leaves, which made a striking statement against the natural forest backdrop.

A loose striped minidress in the style of a gardener’s apron opened the show alongside a beautiful A-line full skirt that teemed with intricate organic embroidery.

Later, the collection loosened up with an open coat-collar silhouette and a series of fluid silk gowns in pastel shades and floral prints.

But despite the fresh quirks, the collection had many designs that left a somewhat familiar impression.

Dior’s eco trees

Dior shows luxurious dark side with Ultra Black accessory collection

Chiuri’s shows are all about a “message”. During previous seasons, it was often was about feminism and the fight for women’s rights.

For Tuesday’s (September 24) display, the Italian designer made a timely turn of her attention to ecology.

Celebrity models including Natalia Vodianova and Karlie Kloss posed in a square, tawny brown annex with a forestscape of diverse and unusual trees.

The set was a collaboration with Coloco, a landscape design firm with an ecological focus that cultivates trees and plants and reuses them in projects.

Model and actress Laetitia Casta admired Dior’s push for environmental awareness.

“Fortunately, we’re being vigilant and we are conscious [of ecology] as it is the future and the next generation, even, or especially, in the world of the luxury industry,” Casta said. “With art, we can achieve great things. And we need to get the message across.”

Arizona Muse turns heads at Dior and V&A museum summer party

Kate Moss’ Chilean book launch

In a dazzling column dress in gold leopard print, Kate Moss sipped golden champagne and stole the limelight at the evening launch event for a new book she edited, Musings on Fashion and Style: Museo de la Moda.

The book of photographs centres on the eye-popping collections of Chile’s Museo de la Moda, one of the world’s biggest private fashion museums. Its archives include examples of 19th century dolman shawls, Marilyn Monroe’s black gowns, Jimi Hendrix’s Indian tunics and contemporary Balmain sequin dresses.

The museum in Santiago, which opened in 2007, does not have the international name recognition it deserves. The volume edited by fashion muse Moss features pieces she hand-picked.

Pieces selected for the book were displayed for guests at the Paris book launch, on the evening of September 23, such as 1920s opera coats and designs from swinging ’60s London.

Museum director Jorge Yarur Bascunan said the collaboration with came about by chance when Moss visited Chile.

“Out of the blue, I got a call one day saying Kate Moss is coming to Chile. It happened [that] she loved the vintage feel of the archive pieces,” Bascunan said. “The book happened organically.”

Rihanna skips pop-up store launch

Rihanna did not attend Paris Fashion Week on Monday (September 23), but the singer-designer was there in spirit when the latest pop-up store for her new style brand, Fenty, launched at the flagship of French department store Galeries Lafayette.

The see-now-buy-now collection included jewellery, eyewear, shoes and clothing. Rihanna upped the sophistication for many garments this season, such as an oversized pinstriped coat with sloping shoulders and a unisex feel, and a dazzling silken tuxedo jacket with jagged double lapels.

News of the singer’s groundbreaking deal with LVMH, the world’s largest luxury group, shook up the fashion industry in May. Rihanna is both the first woman and the first person of colour to create a major brand for LVMH from scratch.

For the launch, Galeries Lafayette’s usual light-coloured mannequins were traded for dark ones, recognising black consumers of luxury goods. Attending fashionistas praised the effort to show diversity.

Best-dressed celebrities at Rihanna’s 5th Annual Diamond Ball

Marine Serre covered up

The new darling wunderkind of Paris Fashion Week, Marine Serre, sent her models outside to brave the elements on a rainy autumn day.

Guests at the show clung tightly to umbrellas as they viewed designs that channelled a covered-up aesthetic – thankfully for the weather-beaten models.

Skintight undergarments paired with long black gloves, knee-high cowboy boots and crinkled black PVC raincoats began the show of accomplished styles.

What went down at Rihanna’s sexy Savage X Fenty lingerie show?

Serre then moved in a more sophisticated direction with vintage-style patterned undergarments and tailored jackets in vivid red.

It’s been a meteoric rise since the French designer from Corrèze won the coveted LVMH fashion award in 2017, aged just 25.

The designer has said she sees her style as “combining and absorbing codes from radically different worlds” while ignoring traditional “boundaries between ready-to-wear, couture, tailoring and sportswear”.

Saint Laurent’s boho disco

Can Saint Laurent owner Kering make fashion greener?

Disco beams, graphic ’70s silhouettes and boho styles mixed at Anthony Vaccarello’s spring offering for Saint Laurent – that served up more of the same from the Belgian designer.

The Eiffel Tower glimmered in the backdrop, admired by the equally starry front row, including Cindy Crawford, Andie MacDowell, Catherine Deneuve and Charlotte Gainsbourg.

Tuxedo styles with plunging V-neck were one key silhouette.

When did Keanu Reeves stop being ‘Sad Keanu’?

But the best looks strayed from the famed house signatures in styles that captured a sort of bohemian-disco style.

A one-shoulder gown in glimmering gold and blue cut a highly creative shape, sporting a cinched waist, peaked shoulder and a loose ’70s-style arm, nipped at the cuff.

STYLE Edit: Why the new Saint Laurent bags are must-haves

It was accessorised by the ruffled, leather, knee-high vintage-style boots that have become synonymous with Vaccarello.

There were few great artistic leaps from Saint Laurent for the coming spring/summer – but perhaps Vaccarello doesn’t want to change course from the saleable aesthetic he’s continued with the house since taking over the reins from Hedi Slimane in 2016?

Want more stories like this? Sign up here. Follow STYLE on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tK%2FMqWWcp51kuqKzwLOgp52jZMC1xcueZqWtqKq%2FunvAq6uim5yafHR8kmlqbG9fpa6ztdJmnZqrmJ68r3nWnpykZaOqx7p5wZqcZpmemXqiusaeo5qakZfGbr7OpaNmq6SuuaZ5w6Kmqw%3D%3D