Arab Times

Hermes ‘plays’ with depth in Paris show

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PARIS, Oct 4, (AP): Hermes headlined Saturday’s installmen­t of Paris Fashion Week with a cinematic, surrealist runway staging, but the lack of celebritie­s attending and the patchy drizzle put a slight dampener on the usually high-octane events.

Like Milan before it, Paris is undertakin­g an unusual fashion season for Spring-Summer 2021 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The nine-day calendar is flitting between 16 ready-to-wear runway collection­s with masked guests in seated rows, 20 in-person presentati­ons and several dozen completely digital shows streamed online with promotiona­l videos.

Some of Saturday’s highlights:

Hermes

Prints of Greco-Roman goddess sculptures adorned columns marking out Hermes’ labyrinthi­ne show, while mirrors around the set reflected parts of their marble limbs. The creative presentati­on referenced surrealist­s Salvador Dali and Jean Cocteau, evoking a sense of magic, mystery and depth.

Depth was indeed the key theme for minimalist designer Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski, but the magic and mystery were sometimes missing in the clothes. Shimmering metallic mesh came as an outer layer on pared-down undergarme­nts in

dark and muted hues.

In one LWD (Little White Dress), the gold meshing resembled kinky chainmail and felt very 1990s. Elsewhere, the play on depth continued as the sides were scooped out of an ethnic-looking brown dress to expose the model’s skin.

It was, on the whole, a low-energy collection. Still, individual garments were high in sophistica­tion, especially those with layered paneling. One coat in old rose had a chic rolled-up collar that riffed on aviation attire.

Altuzarra

Tailoring, ruching, draping and layering were the winning formula for Paris-born designer Joseph Altuzarra in his refined-looking Spring-Summer fare. A Chinese white tunic-gown that was loose and open-necked had an angelic quality. Delicacy was in evidence in the minimalist black cord that tied the garment’s waist. A gathered gown in camouflage green had sweeping panels of gathered fabric at the skirt that evoked a goddess in the wind. It was, the house said following the show, inspired by the windswept sci-fi movie “Dune.”

The best looks were also ones in which the designer, who has a Chinese, American and French background, mixed up cultural references. A silver Western trench coat was fashioned in voluminous proportion­s and layers, and its lower part had the feel of a Samurai hakama (skirt-like pants) with an Obi belt.

Altuzarra has shown versatilit­y in his over 10 years of collection­s that have switched from the bright and joyful, to more refined and couture-infused, designs. On Saturday, it was a mixture of both.

Ester Manas

Ester Manas is a brand that has been making ripples at Paris Fashion Week in recent seaasons with a body positive approach that is, sadly, all too rare. The design duo at the helm -- French-born Ester Manas and Belgian-born Balthazar Delepierre -- said that their Saturday presentati­on “has been inspired by real women, regardless of their sizes, colors or shapes.”

The show, entitled “Superhuman,” featured relaxed looks with loose proportion­s and flashes of design fun. A plus-sized model rocked a vermilion red knit dress with cleavage, split leg and peekaboo holes at a midriff adorned with a large heart. Plus-size is sexy and we love it: The loud and clear message was delivered.

There was also some design flair, such as a loose marigold yellow pantsuit with a fun gargantuan peplum. Wearable was the season’s priority.

Vivienne Westwood

Andreas Kronthaler got saucy dressing up his partner, fashion icon Vivienne Westwood, in bright red fishnet stockings and champagne pink satin stilettos as she did a turn as a model. Hair sprayed back in a bouffant and wearing a loose red check dress and a large black-gold chain, the 79-year-old Westwood looked free, glamorous and empowered.

The rest of the collection continued with the themes from this first look: loose silhouette­s, red check and lashings of chain. As ever with Kronthaler, the references in the style mix were dizzying. One androgynou­s model held a giant retro boombox.

Westwood modeled again in a rather wacky but regal-looking thick trapeze-shaped gown in pale yellow. It looked as if the wardrobes of Marie Antoinette and the late Queen Mother of Britain had cross-pollinated.

Also:

NEW YORK: With help from Lizzo, Travis Scott, Rosalia and some of the biggest names in modeling, Rihanna said she decided to forge ahead with a new digital-only Savage X Fenty lingerie show to bring something good into a troubled world.

Insofar as well-priced intimates in a broad range of sizes can achieve that goal.

“There’s a lot going on in the world right now and I relate to all of it,” the superstar and fashion icon told The Associated Press during a recent round of interviews. “People need a little bit of hope, they need a little bit of happiness, and if we can bring a smile to their face and a little bit of fun while they’re stuck at home, it’s a desire and an honor to be a part of that.”

The Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 2, with musical performanc­es and dancers along with models, was filmed in September in Los Angeles and will drop Friday exclusivel­y on Amazon Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territorie­s. It’s the line’s second turn on the streaming platform.

Rihanna has quickly made a name for the company, launching Savage X Fenty in 2018 with splashy, performanc­e-based shows before large (very excited) live crowds. For the first time, there’s something for men, thanks to Christian Combs’ appearance in last year’s show with chunky bling around his neck, a bare chest and some ultra-tight skivvies as a disembodie­d voice purred: “Dirty. Nasty. Dirty. Nasty.”

Combs designed some boxers worthy of all gender expression­s to debut with pajamas and trunks in knits and satin for the Fall 2020 collection, all of which will be available for purchase Friday on Amazon Fashion and SavageX.com. “I didn’t want this to be a boxersare-for-men type situation and then we have to make a female version,” said Rihanna, dressed in plunging black leather and fishnet stockings with large crosses around her neck. “I love wearing boxer briefs and when I saw him wear them in the show last year, a lot of people were really excited, our customers were excited.”

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Rihanna

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