Tatler Singapore

Homme Couture

Couture for men? It’s the new frontier!

- By Pakkee Tan

It used to be that haute couture, the highest echelon of fashion, was the exclusive domain of ultra‑wealthy women but, of late, couturiers have increasing­ly turned their attention to the sterner sex.

As early as spring‑summer 2019, fashion’s pre‑eminent masions (Dior, Valentino and Maison Margiela among them) have taken to showing men’s looks alongside their women’s couture collection­s. Meanwhile, in July 2021, Balenciaga made it a point to introduce men’s looks in the line‑up for its first couture show in more than 50 years, underscori­ng the new shift.

“I think men came to the point that they want to wear couture as well, and I know that we have some customers [who] will love that,” Balenciaga creative director Demna Gvasalia told WWD in 2020.

“I want to kind of erase the gender identifica­tion of couture being only for women, or only for older women who have money to afford it.”

This approach, while more prominent in recent times, is nothing new in high fashion. Dolce & Gabbana has long had its Alta Sartoria collection­s with healthy offerings for men, while fashion’s one‑time enfant terrible Jean Paul Gaultier kicked it off in the 1990s with his extravagan­t shows.

“Fantasy for men is important,” Stefano Gabbana proclaimed at Dolce & Gabbana’s most recent Alta Sartoria show in Sicily, highlighti­ng the importance of men’s couture. “In the past, kings, princes, sultans dressed up a lot—jewels, hats, coats. Under the skin of every man is a vanity.” Our only question: why has it taken so long?

 ?? ?? Extravagan­t looks from Dolce & Gabbana’s most recent Alta Sartoria show
Extravagan­t looks from Dolce & Gabbana’s most recent Alta Sartoria show

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