Paris Fashion Week: printed silks and striped pyjama pants
Woodland
carpet: the finale of Belgian designer Dries Van Noten’s spring-summer
show at Paris Fashion Week yesterday. Photograph:
“Get me more birds, more birds! No, no, the chirping sort,” was the cry
of Etienne Russo, producer of Dries Van Noten’s spring-summer show at
the Grand Palais yesterday, the first of the major collections at Paris
Fashion Week.
He was demanding more of the opening soundtrack of birdsong for the
finale, when – to thunderous applause – willowy models, instead of
withdrawing in the usual manner, sat down and posed in a series of
painterly tableaux on a woodland carpet. It was a fitting end to a light
and fluid line-up of dresses and layered combinations of printed silks,
notably dark horizontal stripes, used extensively throughout the
collection.
Tunics and sleeveless jackets worn over diaphanous dresses had the
elegance and ease of traditional Indian dress, but were cool and modern
in spirit.
Van Noten’s artful mix of colour, pattern and texture let individual
shapes speak for themselves. A palette of rich brocades, dense
embroideries and natural cottons created languid summer looks, from
denims with glitter turn-ups to colourful striped vests, and embellished
T-shirts topping flyaway skirts and striped pyjama pants.
Flourishes
Earlier in the day, the sole Chinese designer on the official schedule, Yang Li, mixed tailoring with tulle, using the light fabric for flourishes, sometimes erratically tacked on to the back of a jacket, peeping out from under a skirt or in a swoosh down the side of a dress. He was at his best when unnecessary detail was absent, like a simple black silk trenchcoat or a strapless dress with shapely front pleating.
With more than 90 shows on the official calendar, sure signs that
fashion week has begun are the crowds loitering inside and outside cult
boutique Colette, on the Rue St Honore, where T-shirts cost €290, Dr Dre
headphones €600 and faux fur gilets (a key winter trend) €1,560.
The week will be marked by Jean Paul Gaultier’s last ready-to-wear show
after 38 years and JW Anderson’s debut as creative director of the
Spanish leather goods house Loewe.
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