Paris Fashion Week Spring 2021’s Best Looks

Paris Fashion Week Spring 2021’s Best Looks

All the looks that are fit to print.

Paris is widely considered to be the capital of the fashion industry. Thus, our final stop on the Fashion Month circuit is home to some of the biggest luxury labels, from Christian Dior to Louis Vuitton, and bright young talents too. Follow our recap of the best that Paris Fashion Week spring 2021 has to offer.

Mugler

Mugler

Casey Cadwallader has mastered being fashionably late. Over the past few seasons, the designer of Mugler has presented his collections well past the official Paris Fashion Week calendar for each season. But what he lacks in punctuality, he more than makes up for in presentation. For fall 2021, he displayed a mini film with a star-studded cast: Hunter Schaefer, Dominique Jackson, Alek Wek, Bella Hadid, Irina Shayk, and more. They were outfitted in sultry bonded lycra bodysuits, bold-shouldered jackets with sleek cutouts, and form-hugging jersey dresses. Think: Comic book heroines, who, as any Marvel fan knows, always dazzle when they make an entrance.—Barry Samaha

Mugler

Mugler

Mugler

Mugler

Mugler

Mugler

Mugler

Mugler

Off-White

Off-White

Virgil Abloh is fostering a sense of community among creatives and celebrating inclusivity. Eschewing the traditional calendar, the founder and designer of Off-White released his spring 2021 collection via video on the brand’s website. The format has become standard in the COVID-19 era, but Abloh took it several steps further.

Today, Abloh debuted Imaginary TV, an interactive online portal showcasing 20 mini documentaries. From a martial artist and ballet dancer to graffiti artist and skateboarder, the series of videos aims to “connect and generate a global network, and bring together creativity while catalyzing a range of emotions,” said Abloh.

As for the collection, titled Adam and Eve, Abloh focused on style essentials, but with a twist. See: Sharply tailored suits in lime green under a streamlined coat in violet lamé; sleek, flesh-colored knit frocks with cutouts at the hips and shoulders; and halterneck pleated dresses in vivid hues over fitted jackets and trousers. Abloh also emphasized the importance of safety, having many models wear bandanas over their mouths in his video presentation.—Barry Samaha

Off-White

Off-White

Off-White

Off-White

Off-White

Off-White

Off-White

Off-White

Alexander McQueen

Courtesy

Sarah Burton distilled her spring 2021 offering into four words, “Back to London, coming home.” The brand has historically shown in Paris, but its founder and creative director are London-born and bred. “Shape, silhouette and volume, the beauty of the bare bones of clothing stripped back to its essence—a world charged with emotion and human connection,” Burton explains of the collection.

Alexander McQueen

Courtesy

Alexander McQueen

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Alexander McQueen

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Alexander McQueen

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Saint Laurent

Courtesy

Creative director Anthony Vaccarello began the season dreaming of the desert, wanting ease, a cool factor, and some fluffy marabout fringes, of course. “I wanted to focus on the essence of things,” he explains, “I think it’s a sign of the times. But I didn’t want anything bleak or heavy. The desert, to me, symbolizes that yearn for serenity, open space, a slower rhythm. The clothes are also softer, the spirit of the collection is more gentle, stripped back.” The results are mini dresses, languid sheer dresses, menswear-inspired separates, and overall the kind of chic, wearable pieces we can just picture hanging out at our Midcentury modern desert home in.—Kerry Pieri

Saint Laurent

Courtesy

Saint Laurent

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Saint Laurent

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Saint Laurent

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A selection of jewelry featured in the collection are designed by Claude Lalanne

Celine

Courtesy of Celine

Celine took a trip to Monaco’s Louis II stadium to create a lookbook and video for spring 2021, but the collection felt very in keeping with the classic American prep school look Hedi Slimane has been refining for seasons. From smart navy or tweed blazers paired with track shorts and denim cut-offs, toprinted maxi skirts with oversized track jackets and buttondowns with boyfriend jeans, it was all very The Official Preppy Handbook. Logos abound on oversized bags, hats, and cropped t-shirts. Slimane can tell a whole sartorial story on the runway and when you walk away from it you discover that he’s in fact given you a stellar rendition of any particular piece you can think of—from slouchy denim to a leather blazer and a pussy bow blouse. —Kerry Pieri

Celine

Courtesy of Celine

Celine

Courtesy of Celine

Celine

Courtesy of Celine

Celine

Courtesy of Celine

Raf Simons

Courtesy of Raf Simons

Raf Simons is a cinephile. Most fashion designers are, really (see Chanel). But his view on the film industry isn’t as sweet and innocent as the rest; it is dark, a dash sinister, and filled with angst. Case in point: His spring 2021 collection, titled Teenage Dreams, referenced a slew of movies that come from different eras, but that all center on youths in revolt. From the the PVC bustiers of Barbarella (1968) and the psychedelic prints of Hair (1979) to the graphic tees and hoodies of high school classics like The Breakfast Club (1985) and Scream (1996), Simons took all these disparate elements and funneled them into a refined collection that not only pays homage to the silver screen, but also reflects the tension and sense of uncertainty that Gen Zers (and everyone, quite frankly) are feeling. —Barry Samaha

Raf Simons

Courtesy of Raf Simons

Raf Simons

Courtesy of Raf Simons

Raf Simons

Courtesy of Raf Simons

Raf Simons

Courtesy of Raf Simons

Lacoste

Courtesy of Lacoste

With roots in tennis and having outfitted the French national team at the Olympic Games for over 50 years, Lacoste’s archive in sportswear is rich and vast. And creative director Louise Trotter took full advantage of it for the spring 2021 season. From chic tennis sweaters and skirts to nautical windbreakers with turtlenecks to sleek jogging trousers under anoraks, all the athletic pastimes were represented and refreshed. She toyed with deadstock, exaggerated the silhouettes and prints, and displayed the looks via images shot in locations around Paris that are off the beaten path. —Barry Samaha

Lacoste

Courtesy of Lacoste

Lacoste

Courtesy of Lacoste

Lacoste

Courtesy of Lacoste

Lacoste

Courtesy of Lacoste

Comme des Garçons

Courtesy of Comme des Garçons

When things don’t make sense, sometimes you just have to go with it. That was the driving idea behind Rei Kawakubo’s latest, a clashing of materials entitled Dissonance. Various textures were woven and layered, sitting side by side in combinations you never saw coming (“illogical” per the accompanying notes). Sheets of plastic curtained down, around, and over while twisted ropes hugged necks and shoulders. The latter could be crucial to the garment’s construction or simple ornamentation—who’s to tell? Pop culture added to the soupy confusion, with expressive Mickey Mouses and Japan’s Bearbrick dolls as the only prints (plus a polka dot, though any Disney fan worth their spots could tell you it was Minnie Mouse’s). The entire collection was shown in red lights at the label’s Tokyo HQ. While the eerie effect might have been intended to capture the doomed feeling of 2020, you can also view it as a calming lens. Darkroom lights always tend to make things look clearer. —Leah Melby Clinton

Comme des Garçons

Courtesy of Comme des Garçons

Comme des Garçons

Courtesy of Comme des Garçons

Comme des Garçons

Courtesy of Comme des Garçons

Comme des Garçons

Courtesy of Comme des Garçons

Junya Watanabe

Mikio Hasui

If you’ve ever dreamed of being part of an iconic music group, of shimmying or shaking or slithering to the mic stand, then your stage outfits have arrived. Junya Watanabe more or less crafted a world tour wardrobe for four fictional stars he sees in his memories, and even kindly gave us a name: The Spangles. The clothes are easy, fluid and light: jumpsuits, capes, billowing dresses. Even the things that should be heavier, like trenches and biker jackets, retain a feeling of lightness; in some cases they’re actually translucent. While it’s all the type of glamour fare that’s eternally versatile, working for black-tie events or with sandals somewhere simple, the idea of it being fit for The Spangles makes every single piece feel fun. The heavy dose of sequins certainly doesn’t hurt either.—Leah Melby Clinton

Junya Watanabe

Mikio Hasui

Junya Watanabe

Mikio Hasui

Junya Watanabe

Mikio Hasui

Junya Watanabe

Mikio Hasui

Lanvin

Courtesy of Lanvin

Escapism played a major role in Bruno Sialelli’s spring 2021 collection. Not only did the designer present at Shanghai’s Yu Garden, a picturesque national landmark built in the 16th century, he also highlighted the prevalent styles of the 1920s—the decade of razzle dazzle. This journey to the past, however, was just the starting point: he took the motifs from the venue (exuberant floral prints and interplay of bright and dark colors) and the time period (drop waists, flutter sleeves, and the decorative signatures of furniture designers Armand Albert Rateau and Jean Dunand) and made them new. Think tiered, hoop skirts and opera coats with shawl collars paired with flat leather or sequined boots. —Barry Samaha

Lanvin

Courtesy of Lanvin

Lanvin

Courtesy of Lanvin

Lanvin

Courtesy of Lanvin

Lanvin

Courtesy of Lanvin

Louis Vuitton

Estrop/Getty

You can always count on Louis Vuitton to close out Paris Fashion Week with a bang. Fall featured a 200-person choir clothed in historical garb dating from the 15th century to 1950, and for spring, the maison’s creative director, Nicolas Ghesquière, made a powerful statement about fashion’s genderless future. What kind of cut can dissolve masculine and feminine? What wardrobe might s/he look good in? These were the kinds of questions he asked himself. The answer looked a lot like the ’80s-meets-sci-fi shapes Ghesquière specializes in, but there was a new sense of DIY styling to the looks that walked down the runway in the futuristic LVMH La Samaritaine department store. Blazers came with expandable gussets, while pleated chino pants and wide-leg trousers were cut generously and sometimes cinched with a thick belt. Belts also proved handy when paired with graphic-printed dresses, helping “cheat” the A-line silhouette Ghesquière is famous for. It all read as very “You do you,” and the Vote message tee that opened the show was certainly something all Americans tuning in virtually could get behind. —Alison S. Cohn

Louis Vuitton

Dominique Charriau/Getty

Louis Vuitton

Estrop/Getty

Louis Vuitton

Dominique Charriau/Getty

Louis Vuitton

Dominique Charriau/Getty

Stella McCartney

Mert Alas & Marcus Piggot, courtesy of Stella McCartney

The world of Stella McCartney is one inhabited by working professionals with attitude—think smart oversized suits for the boardroom and sleek separates ideal for brunch dates. Her spring 2021 collection, however, was imbued with a greater sense of escapism. Fluid satin dresses in seashell and coral prints, clamshell shoulder bags, and flip-flops called to mind seaside destinations that, for most, are but a happy memory right now. Titled McCartney A to Z Manifesto—after an explainer she put together during lockdown about what her label is doing to reduce environmental impact, starting with accountability and ending with zero waste—the collection was made from 65 percent sustainable materials such as regenerated nylon and forest-friendly viscose. That focus on how fashion can address the climate crisis has alway been core to McCartney’s brand, and made her dreamy vision throughly grounded in reality. —Barry Samaha

Stella McCartney

Mert Alas & Marcus Piggot, courtesy of Stella McCartney

Stella McCartney

Mert Alas & Marcus Piggot, courtesy of Stella McCartney

Stella McCartney

Mert Alas & Marcus Piggot, courtesy of Stella McCartney

Stella McCartney

Mert Alas & Marcus Piggot, courtesy of Stella McCartney

Sacai

Courtesy of Sacai

It was a fest of volume on the Sacai runway. Stripes were large, dresses were boxy, and sleeves hung long. The genius, of course, was in keeping that sort of extra swoosh and drape from feeling messy or haphazard, and it’s a skill that Chitose Abe has in spades. The splicing, cutting, and combining that Sacai is known for is so artfully done that it’s almost impossible to tell what’s layered and what’s connected, what can be broken apart and what shan’t be torn asunder. Philosophically, the message of disparate parts becoming one hits you deeply, and the pure fashion motivating the pairings is something we’re all eager for a hit of. Standout looks included a white denim jacket merged with the bottom of a tailored overcoat; a tux jacket over a Canadian tuxedo; and the satin bodice from a proper evening gown fancifully attached to what appeared to be wide-leg trousers. Even if Abe is cast as the runway’s Dr. Frankenstein, there’s nothing monstrous about these creations. —Leah Melby Clinton

Sacai

Courtesy of Sacai

Sacai

Courtesy of Sacai

Sacai

Courtesy of Sacai

Sacai

Courtesy of Sacai

Maison Margiela

Courtesy of Maison Margiela

It takes two to tango: That seemed be the message of the second and final chapter of S.W.A.L.K., the Nick Knight–directed fashion film Maison Margiela creative director John Galliano premiered during the digital couture week in July. Or as the show notes put it, “The reliance of one person upon another … is a vital pas de deux activated by instinct and trust.” Galliano has been thinking a lot about human interdependence during the pandemic, and how our collective future is inextricably bound together. For spring 2021, he expanded his Recicla offerings, a new green line of lovingly restored vintage pieces that carry a special white label. There were more of fall’s excellent wicker bags, as well as lace tops, beaded evening bags from the 1960s, and red velvet tango pumps informed by the visual world of dance. —Alison S. Cohn

Maison Margiela

Courtesy of Maison Margiela

Maison Margiela

Courtesy of Maison Margiela

Maison Margiela

Courtesy of Maison Margiela

Maison Margiela

Courtesy of Maison Margiela

Miu Miu

Courtesy

Miu Miu showed its spring offering on an elliptical stadium set built by AMO, a nod to the idea that both fashion shows and sporting events are “an arena of observation.” Leave it to Miuccia Prada to make athletics such a cerebral experience. The entire audience, alas, was a digital one, but they existed as part of the experience: Three digital lounges of screens displayed women tuning in from around the world. That sporting motif continued to the runway, where evening met jersey-inspired pieces, short shorts and sneakers were topped with dress coats, rugby stripes played with miniskirts, and ultra-short shorts existed somewhere between swimsuits and running costumes. Is she the player or the observer? Perhaps a bit of both? —Kerry Pieri

Miu Miu

Courtesy

Miu Miu

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Miu Miu

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Miu Miu

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Chanel

Getty Images

While we’ve often looked to Chanel invitations for hints as to the way the Grand Palais would be transformed for the latest show, this season, the house released a teaser video by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin. The film highlighted French New Wave actresses Romy Schneider, Anna Karina, and Jeanne Moreau in classics like La Piscine by Jacques Deray; Breathless, A Woman Is Woman, Contempt, and Pierrot le Fou by Jean-Luc Godard; and Elevator to the Gallows by Louis Malle. The invite showed Chanel written out in lights like the Hollywood sign—making it crystal clear that Virginie Viard is inspired by cinema for spring 2021. “This collection is a tribute to the muses of the House … . Gabrielle Chanel and Karl Lagerfeld dressed so many actresses in films and in real life,” Viard said. “I was thinking about them who make us dream so much. But without wanting to replicate. Without falling into a vintage citation. I wanted it to be very joyful, colorful, and very vibrant too.” The collection was joyful and decidedly youthful, with T-shirts printed with the letters of Chanel like neon lights, Old Hollywood–worthy black-and-white gowns, languid denim, leather shorts and pink Capri pants, and easy tweed suiting. Perhaps what an actress might need for an entire press junket, or every part of a woman’s life—if we’re looking forward with the kind of optimism that only Hollywood can champion. —Kerry Pieri

Chanel

Getty Images

Chanel

Getty Images

Chanel

Getty Images

Chanel

Getty Images

Rokh

Imaxtree

Rokh raised an all-female army from the reaches of time, calling forth women outfitted in the collars, sleeves, and bodices of various centuries. These were Valkyries in leather body harnesses, fierce and proud in billowing skirts, puffed sleeves, and wide lace collars. It was the sort of spectacle that reminds you why fashion shows can be such magic. The clothes won’t look like this in real life—the backdrop appeared like a steamy battlefield after the fight, for one—but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t feel like this. Even if they become pretty dresses worn with sandals or blouses tucked into favorite denim, they’ll forever retain a bit of this magic, the idea that women have been and continue to be warriors. Wherever your fight is, and however you dress for it, wearing something that makes you feel powerful is key. —Leah Melby Clinton

Rokh

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Rokh

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Rokh

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Rokh

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Xuly Bët

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There was something for everyone at Xuly Bët. Slouchy, oversized suiting? You got it. Bold graphic prints? Why not. Denim on denim? Of course. The range was partly due to Lamine Badiane Kouyaté’s focus on upcycling, but don’t make the mistake of thinking that was accidental. The energetic hodgepodge revealed a brand that wants to appeal to every type of dresser. Take, for instance, the use of the white button-up throughout. It’s worn primly to the neck in one look, unbuttoned nearly to the navel in another, and layered under a holographic gold catsuit in a third. There are clothes for club kids, prepsters, artists, or fill-in-the-blanksters. To be a Xuly Bët person, you simply must be. And be part of the revolution: The show was presented over a soundtrack of activist-poet Michaela Angela Davis extolling listeners to lean in to the reimagining and rebuilding happening around us. —Leah Melby Clinton

Xuly Bët

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Xuly Bët

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Xuly Bët

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Xuly Bët

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Giambattista Valli

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An invitation to a Giambattista Valli show (even a virtual one) promises frothy confections, red-carpet must-haves, and romance with a bit of edge. The latter was delivered in droves for Valli’s spring 2021 virtual showing, but the frills, fuss, and grand gowns were nowhere in sight. Instead, petite skirt suits, gossamer dresses in a suite of pastels, and Valli’s version of streetwear (branded graphic tees, bucket hats, and oversized totes) were on the menu, designed to suit the woman who’s sitting at home, but still wants to shop. It appeared that fashion’s master of pomp and circumstance was reserving his riffs on volume for haute couture, transforming his ready-to-wear range into just that: clothes that are ready to wear—not to a gala, ball, or party, but in real life where travel and gatherings have been tapered down to the bare minimum. There may not be many places to wear over-the-top tulle ball gowns these days, but Valli is prepared to meet his clientele where they are in a mid-pandemic world. After all, while staying at home and hosting parties of much smaller scales, his woman still wants to look feminine, chic, and, apparently, a little sexy and edgy too. —Carrie Goldberg

Giambattista Valli

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Giambattista Valli

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Giambattista Valli

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Giambattista Valli

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Akris

Courtesy

An obsession with color attracted Albert Kriemler to the work of painter and sculptor Imi Knoebel, whom he tapped for a collaboration this season. “Color is everything to me, this season more than ever before,” wrote Kreimler in his show notes, and it seems that for the Akris woman, it’s color in all its vibrant (and even glow in the dark) forms that will bring her out of the darkness, and into the light. The house showed six looks in collaboration with Knoebel to kick off spring 2021, followed by a slew of pop-colored looks that peppered in motifs reminiscent of Kreimler’s Knoebel favorites. The goal? To bring a new sense of movement, brightness, and freedom to the Akris woman. Say goodbye to stiff, stoic gray shades; this season: the brighter, the better. —Carrie Goldberg

Akris

Courtesy

Akris

Courtesy

Akris

Courtesy

Akris

Courtesy

Beautiful People

Courtesy

Hidenori Kumakiri tapped his pedigree at Comme des Garçons for his label, Beautiful People, which studies “the beauty hidden between two opposing ideas” every season. Spring 2021 focused on our discombobulated world, where we’ve been secluded to our homes, “like pieces in a museum.” Kumakiri asked, “What if the clothes became our habitat?” The result? New Look–inspired bustles and shapes, artfully tailored jackets in upholstery fabrics, and a bed linen-inspired finale look, complete with a pillow chapeau. The pieces were intended to flow, reconfiguring themselves as the wearer sits, stands, and moves about. Beautiful People asked you to consider that when you sit, a skirt turns into a couch, a dress into an armchair—only to revert back to what it was once you stand up and bravely head out into the world. This collection felt equal parts couture and cozy, and allowed us to dream at a time when whimsy, fantasy, and drama feels fleeting. —Carrie Goldberg

Beautiful People

Courtesy

Beautiful People

Courtesy

Beautiful People

Courtesy

Beautiful People

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Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy

For his first collection as Givenchy’s creative director, Matthew Williams looked to the lost locks of Le Pont des Arts for inspiration. “You find the pieces of the puzzle for a collection, building it from symbols and signs,” the designer said, “but never forgetting the reality of the person who will wear it and bring it to life. The women and men should be powerful and effortless, equal and joyful, a reflection of who they really are—only more so. It’s about finding the humanity in luxury.” Williams explored unisex pieces like bold, tailored coats set against ultra-feminine yet powerful fitted silhouettes on formfitting dresses, staying true to the codes of the house. —Kerry Pieri

Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy

Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy

Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy

Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy

Paco Rabanne

Courtesy of Paco Rabanne

Julien Dossena’s spring 2021 collection began with a simple question, “What if an everyday wardrobe could be reimagined with an avant-garde attitude?” The designer tasked himself with taking Rabanne’s futuristic codes, its chain mail, and history of “unwearable materials,” and making them somehow more casual and, well, wearable. The question was answered in those chain-mail dresses being reworked in long shapes that seem to flow, in denim, floral motifs, leopard prints, trench coats, lingerie and baby-doll dresses—Rabanne’s version of lounge-chic. Asked and answered. —Kerry Pieri

Paco Rabanne

Courtesy of Paco Rabanne

Paco Rabanne

Courtesy of Paco Rabanne

Paco Rabanne

Courtesy of Paco Rabanne

Paco Rabanne

Courtesy of Paco Rabanne

Thom Browne

Courtesy of Thom Browne

Some designers were prepping for life at home, while others, like the always-imaginative Thom Browne, were dreaming of days spent 239,000 miles above the earth. The setting was “the first lunar games … in a coliseum on the moon,” of course. The all cream-and-white collection was made up of tailored, sporty looks in wool, seersucker, cotton, and cashmere. Long pleated skirts, vests, cropped trousers, and top coats felt as much like throwbacks as they did futuristic pieces. Hey, anytime except the present sounds like a plan to us. —Kerry Pieri

Thom Browne

Courtesy of Thom Browne

Thom Browne

Courtesy of Thom Browne

Thom Browne

Courtesy of Thom Browne

Thom Browne

Courtesy of Thom Browne

Gabriela Hearst

Courtesy of Gabriela Herst

The inspiration for Gabriela Hearst’s spring 2021 tour de force of handcraft came to her in a dream during the early days of New York’s lockdown. “My grandmother visited me in my dreams, and in it, I made a dress on her, by knotting cloth on her back,” she said. That simple act offered “the feeling of reassurance.” Hearst has long championed slow fashion as a way to confront the climate crisis, and the collection’s colorful crochet tank dresses, tie-dye shirtdresses, and macramé ponchos—all made from cashmere—looked like future heirlooms to be passed down from mother to daughter. And in fact, the hand-embroidered shell detailing along the edges of circular cutouts and on the straps of two upcycled schappe silk dresses was inspired by a shell bracelet from Easter Island given to Hearst by her mother. “The craft of the hands,” Hearst said, “is our Northern star.” —Alison S. Cohn

Gabriela Hearst

Courtesy of Gabriela Hearst

Gabriela Hearst

Courtesy of Gabriela Hearst

Gabriela Herast

Courtesy of Gabriela Hearst

Gabriela Hearst

Courtesy of Gabriela Hearst

Balenciaga

Courtesy of Balenciaga

Last season, Demna Gvasalia brought fire and flood to the runway at Balenciaga—an all too prescient vision of 2020’s cataclysmic reality. And for spring 2021, he proposed a way to reduce fashion’s environmental impact: using upcycled products to redesign. A number of pieces were made from patchworks of materials (one particularly intriguing leather skirt was, in fact, bits of old boots, purses, and motorcycle pants spliced together), while a “fur” coat was constructed of shoe laces. Leaning in to the power of classic, timeless garments, Gvasalia paid homage to founder Cristóbal Balenciaga’s iconic fisherman’s-net dress with a sheer gown made from basketball nets. He also offered plenty of polished yet cozy at-home essentials, such as a plissé soleil skirt tracksuit and a faux shearling bathrobe that doubles as a coat for the grocery run. —Alison S. Cohn

Balenciaga

Courtesy of Balenciaga

Balenciaga

Courtesy of Balenciaga

Balenciaga

Courtesy of Balenciaga

Balenciaga

Courtesy of Balenciaga

Schiaparelli

Daniel Roseberry, Courtesy of Schiaparelli

It’s been a pretty surreal year, to say the least. Surrealism is core to the Schiparelli DNA; it’s the house of the lobster dress and shoe hat after all. And so artistic director Daniel Roseberry took cues from some of founder Elsa Schiaparelli’s favorite motifs including, yes, the lobster, as well as the padlock and the elephant head, for the collection’s supersize earrings and face pieces. He also added some of his own playful elements, such as paint-spattered denim that buttons up the back. It wasn’t all wit and games, however. Take away the exaggerated styling, and you’ve got beautiful, timeless pieces like a trench coat in a tissue-thin suede and an easy evening dress in a high twist wool crepe. “This moment we’re all sharing will end,” Roseberry said in his show notes. “But these clothes will last. I hope the Schiaparelli woman who wears them finds as much delight in them as I did in their creation.” —Alison S. Cohn

Schiaparelli

Daniel Roseberry, Courtesy of Schiaparelli

Schiaparelli

Daniel Roseberry, Courtesy of Schiaparelli

Schiaparelli

Daniel Roseberry, Courtesy of Schiaparelli

Schiaparelli

Daniel Roseberry, Courtesy of Schiaparelli

Hermès

Imaxtree

For fashion houses focused on luxury, there’s always a premium placed on the tactile. Fine-grade knits, supple leathers, silken blends that feel like hand-spun gold—these are labels that know the value of something looking and feeling divine. Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski clearly spent part of lockdown thinking about the power of touch, using materials that beg to be stroked and crafting clothes that celebrate the body. There were beautiful smooth leather separates, suede whipstitch jackets, and rich cashmere aplenty. Sporty bodysuits used cutouts at the sides to enhance curves, and leather-edged cage dresses called attention to the body moving underneath. A sweater with a scarf rolled and buckled at the neck combined the best of both: It was an extra dose of rich knitwear always at the ready to cosset and comfort on demand. To touch and be touched: the ultimate luxury. —Leah Melby Clinton

Hermès

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Hermès

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Hermès

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Hermès

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Altuzarra

Timothy Nesmith / Courtesy of Altuzarra

Joseph Altuzarra was inspired by science fiction and real life when creating this collection, referencing Dune and the at-odds emotions he cycled through during the pandemic’s various stages. The combination of both resulted in beautiful pieces that are loose and easy, but also pleasurable (the opposite of utilitarian pieces you suffer through wearing, these are delicious knits, soft leathers, and liquid-like silks you’ll look forward to putting on). There was plenty of suiting, too, a staple for the brand, but the styles were softer than previous seasons, oversized and boxy with an ’80s bend. This Altuzarra is still sexy and cool, but altogether warmer, the work of a man who spent the preceding months realizing how much joy and comfort can be found from the simple things. —Leah Melby Clinton

Altuzarra

Timothy Nesmith / Courtesy of Altuzarra

Altuzarra

Timothy Nesmith / Courtesy of Altuzarra

Altuzarra

Timothy Nesmith / Courtesy of Altuzarra

Altuzarra

Timothy Nesmith / Courtesy of Altuzarra

Yohji Yamamoto

Monica Feudi

The undone nature of what Yohji Yamamoto does is so sublimely skilled that from far away, it appears to be haphazardly constructed. You need to get closer to see how beautifully the fabric is draped and arranged over a form. Spring opened with dresses of lightweight fabric that looked like wrinkled linen sheets torn from a bed and fashioned into on-the-fly couture. A spate of suiting in rich silk followed, including a few with white stitch marks that hinted at an unfinished piece plucked straight from the atelier. The end was the most perfectly undone of all, with exposed wire framing and sinister spikes of fabric jutting out like bewitched black flower petals. Peeling back the superficial is a handy way to showcase construction—a beautiful thing to study—but also creates an atmosphere of poetic destruction. In the battle of light versus dark, Yamamoto ended things on a high note: A quartet of models clothed in optic white closed out the show. —Leah Melby Clinton

Yohji Yamamoto

Monica Feudi

Yohji Yamamoto

Monica Feudi

Yohji Yamamoto

Monica Feudi

Yohji Yamamoto

Monica Feudi

Ralph & Russo

Courtesy of Ralph & Russo

Audemars Piguet’s latest styles hit the runway at Ralph & Russo, marking the beginning of a new creative partnership between the Swiss watchmaker and British fashion house that celebrates their mutual dedication to artisanal craft. “We actually realized that our watches had already been paired with [Ralph & Russo’s] exceptional designs many times by clients in real life who didn’t need to wait for this partnership to match our two brands,” said Audemars Piguet’s chief executive officer, François-Henry Bennahmias, of the collaboration’s origin. The Royal Oak Concept Flying Tourbillon model, with its frosted gold case made using an ancient Florentine jewelry technique, beautifully complemented the dreamy lineup of fils coupé sunray pleated lace blouses, midi skirts cut from featherweight Napa leather, and paillette-encrusted column gowns. —Alison S. Cohn

Ralph & Russo

Courtesy of Ralph & Russo

Ralph & Russo

Courtesy of Ralph & Russo

Ralph & Russo

Courtesy of Ralph & Russo

Ralph & Russo

Courtesy of Ralph & Russo

Issey Miyake

Courtesy of Issey Miyake

At its core, a new fashion collection is about ideas. Thoughts the designer has explored and toyed with, finally settling on a physical representation of something that’s ready to be shared with others. Satoshi Kondo conducted at least five different experiments for spring, the results of which were pleasantly simple on the surface (your brain only starts to crank when you know what you’re looking for). Everything was meant to be disassembled, folded, or rolled, essentially creating the most intellectual carry-on-only wardrobe ever offered. Zippers and ropes let the individual both modify the construction of a garment and take it apart for transportation. Those pieces not meant to be disassembled were made of a spongy knit that gently hugged the body before shrinking to perfect, roll-ready suitcase proportions for that future moment when we can travel again. —Leah Melby Clinton

Issey Miyake

Courtesy of Issey Miyake

Issey Miyake

Courtesy of Issey Miyake

Issey Miyake

Courtesy of Issey Miyake

Issey Miyake

Courtesy of Issey Miyake

Ami

Armando Grillo

If you’re in the market for a capsule wardrobe that brings together the many standards of Parisienne chic, Alexandre Mattiussi’s Ami—shown beside the Seine and broadcast on a jumbotron in New York’s Times Square—might be a good place to start. There were floaty peasant dresses, as well as sexy peekaboo gowns. There were macro gingham checks and polka dots. There was a very Belle de Jour patent trench (and also sharp tailoring that might suit Catherine Deneuve in a different decade).“Cinematographically, I wanted to capture this certain French nonchalance,” Mattiussi said. “In the way super-sophisticated people walk in the street—Paris is still the magic city.” —Alison S. Cohn

Ami

Armando Grillo

Ami

Armando Grillo

Ami

Armando Grillo

Ami

Armando Grillo

Germanier

Courtesy of Germanier

Kevin Germanier’s fluorescent extravaganza for spring 2021 looked like it belonged in an upscale Las Vegas theater (but the exclusive, hidden-door type that requires a password to enter). The use of neon colors, high-shine satin, and Swarovski crystals seemed to literally electrify, creating the type of daringly dramatic flair that can result in polarizing ready-to-wear. But for all the inherent decadence associated with renaissance sleeves and sheer fabric woven with crinkly metallic shards, Germanier was the opposite of wasteful, using upcycled materials exclusively. It wasn’t a matter of making do with pandemic limitations either. Rather, it’s a commitment that’s been in place since the label’s launch in 2018, making Germanier feel like couture for the future in multiple ways. —Leah Melby Clinton

Germanier

Courtesy of Germanier

Germanier

Courtesy of Germanier

Germanier

Courtesy of Germanier

Germanier

Courtesy of Germanier

Alexandre Vauthier

Courtesy of Alexandre Vauthier

Alexandre Vauthier has been having a love affair with bold, often bright, sometimes bedazzled ’80s-influenced collections for seasons. Going into spring, the designer took a trip even further back to the ’70s, with metallic tiered dresses, simple maxi silhouettes, a denim look paired with a simple white cotton blouse, and more Studio 54–worthy looks. It felt apropos for the time, when in-your-face Me-era shapes don’t fit with the moment, but no one is ready to abandon glamour altogether. —Kerry Pieri

Alexandre Vauthier

Courtesy of Alexandre Vauthier

Alexandre Vauthier

Courtesy of Alexandre Vauthier

Alexandre Vauthier

Courtesy of Alexandre Vauthier

Alexandre Vauthier

Courtesy of Alexandre Vauthier

Loewe

Courtesy of Loewe

Loewe’s Jonathan Anderson made showing remotely look like a creative endeavor with some true energy behind it. His resort 2021 collection came as a show-in-a-box containing paper dolls, and he evolved that concept for spring 2021 with what he termed a “Show-on-the-Wall.” It was, effectively, a poster presentation, made in collaboration with M/M (Paris) and artist Anthea Hamilton, and was full of movement and whimsy. An artist’s portfolio featuring giant fold-out posters of the looks was sent to editors, buyers, and friends of the brand. The special delivery also included a DIY set: a roll of wallpaper designed by the artist, wallpaper borders, wallpaper glue, a brush, and scissors. There was even a beetroot scent disc and a soundtrack by way of choral sheet music by Thomas Tallis to keep the experiential aspect of runway presentations alive and well via an entirely new approach. The clothes themselves spoke volumes, with an emphasis on the theatrical and sculptural. There were balloon sleeves, crinoline skirts, and other bold shapes sending the message that even though this is a moment where we’re hiding out, we can still be as big and as bold as we want to be. —Kerry Pieri

Loewe

Courtesy of Loewe

Loewe

Courtesy of Loewe

Loewe

Courtesy of Loewe

Loewe

Courtesy of Loewe

Rick Owens

Courtesy of Rick Owens

Rick Owens’s spring 2021 show reached mythic proportions in more ways than one. He titled the collection Phlegethon after one of the five rivers of the Underworld in Greek mythology (and the river of blood in Dante’s Divine Comedy). And his lineup of tops and capes with linebacker shoulders; rigid, cocoon-like ponchos; and thigh-high platform leather boots was a showcase of sartorial exaggeration. It conveyed a sense of hell on earth, the Twilight of the Gods—or in this case, of humanity. Indeed, Owens is no stranger to postapocalyptic ideas (darkness, in both the literal and figurative sense, is embedded in his brand), and in the era of COVID-19, this dystopian display felt reflective of our times. To wit: Every look featured a face mask. —Barry Samaha

Rick Owens

Courtesy of Rick Owens

Rick Owens

Courtesy of Rick Owens

Rick Owens

Courtesy of Rick Owens

Rick Owens

Courtesy of Rick Owens

Isabel Marant

Estrop/Getty

Isabel Marant understands her customer: how she wants styles that are practical, but have that certain je ne sais quoi. From oversized blazers and yoke-front denim to ribbed sweaters with pronounced shoulders and ruched minidresses, her stalwarts have come to define modern Parisienne chic. For spring 2021, however, Marant focused on fantasy (we’re still in the midst of global pandemic, folks!). She brought a Xanadu-esque quality—think ’80s roller discotheques with bright flashes of fuchsia, lavender, and candy red—to her signatures. Adding to this playful, escapist vibe were the heart scribbles and whimsical butterfly appliqués, and the lively cast of dancers from (LA)HORDE collective that bopped to Donna Summer’s “I Feel Love” throughout the show. —Barry Samaha

Isabel Marant

Estrop/Getty

Isabel Marant

Estrop/Getty

Isabel Marant

Estrop/Getty

Isabel Marant

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty

Chloé

Courtesy of Chloé

There’s a collaged, layered feeling to what Natacha Ramsay-Levi turned out this time that feels different, somehow heavier than previous seasons. Chloé has always been by women, for women, and the female gaze was examined here via silhouettes that play with the traditionally feminine and the not (thick belts worn at the natural waist and floaty dresses; wide-leg trousers and tailored blazers). Literal messages were also included via the work of American artist Corita Kent, whose ’60s-era silkscreens were focused on action and feel just as fitting more than 50 years later. While it’s no surprise for a Chloé collection to outfit you for work and weekend, the thing that felt different here is a middle ground: clothes for work that happen off the clock, for getting out, speaking up, and demanding change. Stonewashed gabardine shorts might be too casual for the office, but getting-down-to-business pieces nonetheless. Consider this the uniform of work circa 2021. —Leah Melby Clinton

Chloé

Courtesy of Chloé

Chloé

Courtesy of Chloé

Chloé

Courtesy of Chloé

Chloé

Courtesy of Chloé

Kenneth Ize

Julian Poropatich

Color—gorgeous, saturated, daydream-soaking color—was the first thing seen when looking at Kenneth Ize’s spring collection. Those fuchsias, turquoises, and rainbow stripes were already somewhat of a signature of his, seemingly surprising since he’s a relative newcomer (fall 2020 was his first time showing in Paris), yet not at all when you understand that his focus on sumptuous shades isn’t confined to his own vision. Rather, he’s committed to celebrating and supporting the heritage of weaving in Nigeria, using some of his first earnings to open a factory in the northern part of the country that created the fabrics he used. It’s special to hear a designer at the start of their journey lay out the blueprint they’ll follow, and in his case, it’s staying true to himself and his heritage. If anyone should doubt, just reference the Instagram caption he chose to accompany spring 2021: “A man’s as good as his words.” —Leah Melby Clinton

Kenneth Ize

Julian Poropatich

Kenneth Ize

Julian Poropatich

Kenneth Ize

Julian Poropatich

Kenneth Ize

Julian Poropatich

Patou

Kira Bunse

Fashion, simply, is fun—or ought to be, should we all succeed in getting out of our heads and away from the stressors that mark a modern life. The mission of reminding all of us busy people to embrace the pure pleasure of getting dressed was one Guillaume Henry accepted happily when he took the reins at the iconic French house and has achieved with a handy knack at turning out pretty, peppy pieces that seem to have joie de vivre in every stitch. There was a larger dose of fantasy here than what he doled out last spring, with the shiniest of satins, the fluffiest of feathers, and the puffiest of puffed sleeves all having moments. Whether it was a sign of Henry fully hitting his Patou stride or a response to what’s been a bit of a dreary year, we’ll take it. These are clothes for a “Why not?” situation indeed. —Leah Melby Clinton

Patou

Kira Bunse

Patou

Kira Bunse

Patou

Kira Bunse

Patou

Kira Bunse

Acne Studios

Courtesy of Acne Studios

The eternal uniform of the bohemian hippie is free-flowing, whimsical, and unencumbered; clothes ought to be loose enough to allow for total freedom of movement, open and ready for whichever direction one decides to head in. Here, Acne Creative Director Jonny Johansson outfits the 2021 hippie, one who might attend “gatherings for a spiritual moonrise,” in slouchy pieces that are iridescent, pearlized, or otherwise apt to change when a moonbeam strikes. The solo print comes courtesy of L.A. artist Ben Quinn who tapped into his experiences with the supernatural to create a star image that is used on linen and organza. Even if full-moon parties aren’t quite your thing, there are standouts: The silky, sheer layering pieces are divine, and an oversized blazer, made of suit jacket lining only, is the non-tailored tailoring you didn’t know you needed. —Leah Melby Clinton

Acne Studios

Courtesy of Acne Studios

Acne Studios

Courtesy of Acne Studios

Acne Studios

Courtesy of Acne Studios

Acne Studios

Courtesy of Acne Studios

Balmain

Courtesy of Balmain

Right out of the gate Olivier Rousteing’s latest felt like it was decidedly meant for a non-quarantining life. There was neon, cathedral shoulders, and so many sparkles, all high-octane elements that typically need an audience for maximum appreciation. Though it’s no surprise that Balmain’s sexy attitude wouldn’t put up with being housebound, there were other concessions that made you think the designer’s gotten used to a slightly more casual life as of late (like bike shorts and sneakers). And in a really rather elegant styling moment, the entire set of sparkly evening pieces presented at the end were shown with bare feet, a choice that let the fluid garments take center stage but also felt touchingly real (black tie at home feels bohemian, but the vibe is best accomplished sans shoes). —Leah Melby Clinton

Balmain

Courtesy of Balmain

Balmain

Courtesy of Balmain

Balmain

Courtesy of Balmain

Balmain

Courtesy of Balmain

Kenzo

Courtesy of Kenzo

The new Kenzo under Felipe Oliveira Baptista is made for the era of social distancing. The designer showed his debut collection for the French house last season inside a hermetically sealed plastic bubble, and the please-keep-your-distance vibes continued for spring, thanks to the giant netted beekeeper’s hats that covered nearly half the collection. “Beekeepers with their mesmerizing clothings and hats … echo so strongly the fragility and distance imposed and needed today,” Oliveira Baptista explained in his show notes, also noting that the collection was “an ode to the bees, the regulators of the planet.” That focus on nature’s all important pollinators—who are facing an existential threat due to climate change—also came across strongly in archival Kenzo poppy and hortensia prints given a digital “crying” effect. —Alison S. Cohn

Kenzo

Courtesy of Kenzo

Kenzo

Courtesy of Kenzo

Kenzo

Courtesy of Kenzo

Kenzo

Courtesy of Kenzo

Dries Van Noten

Viviane Sassen

The Dutch lockdown last spring found designer Dries Van Noten asking big questions: What’s going to be important in the future? Is there still going to be fashion in the future? The answer, according to the spring 2021 look book he shot on a beach in Rotterdam with artist Viviane Sassen, is a resounding yes. “I wanted really to make something that was ‘fashion optimistic,’” he said. That motive translated into a vivid profusion of mood-lifting color; gone were the usual heavy heritage jacquards in favor of floating cotton organzas. Van Noten drew inspiration from the color-drenched experimental films of Len Lye, an early 20th-century artist who painted directly on celluloid, decades before the psychedelic movement. What appeared as simple stripes on balloon-sleeve dresses, belted coats, and bathing suits (a first for the brand) were, in fact, shards of light cast through a louver shutter, captured, and printed. Van Noten put it best: “The total look of the collection looks more simple but it’s more in depth.” —Alison S. Cohn

Dries Van Noten

Viviane Sassen

Dries Van Noten

Viviane Sassen

Dries Van Noten

Viviane Sassen

Dries Van Noten

Viviane Sassen

Thebe Magugu

Courtesy of Thebe Magugu

If Thebe Magugu’s spring 2021 Counter Intelligence lineup, which oscillated between sharp, tailored pieces and fluid dresses, seemed to have multiple style personalities, well, that’s because it did. “Our immediate picture of spies is largely informed by their portrayal in popular culture—slim, ostentatiously demure, fashionable and aloof,” said the Johannesburg-based designer and 2019 LVMH Prize winner. “Truth is, spies are all around us, they are our beloved teachers, friends, and family members.” Magugu’s collection is an ongoing exploration of the traditions, culture, and racial dynamics of South Africa, and this season took its cues from a series of interviews he conducted with former spies who worked with the country’s old apartheid government. Prints featured authentic documentation including a mug shot on a cotton blouse and a trompe l’oeil polka-dot pattern on a handkerchief-hem dress that was made from fingerprints. —Alison S. Cohn

Thebe Magugu

Courtesy of Thebe Magugu

Thebe Magugu

Courtesy of Thebe Magugu

Thebe Magugu

Courtesy of Thebe Magugu

Thebe Magugu

Courtesy of Thebe Magugu

Coperni

Courtesy of Coperni

As we all collectively look to the future of fashion, it’s become obvious that we’ll need our clothes to work harder and do more, but also up the level of pure pleasure we receive from wearing them. Coperni met that two-fold challenge head-on, revealing a technical jersey that fights bacteria, UV rays, and wrinkles while still allowing itself to be beautifully manipulated into slouchy trousers and tailored jackets. A sporty vibe ran throughout too, with zippers, paneled leggings, and high-shine shorts that would befit a boxer in the ring. Even though the collection was shown on a Parisian rooftop sprinkled with rain, there was something decidedly California girl about it (doubly so when you remember that built-in sun protection). —Leah Melby Clinton

Coperni

Courtesy of Coperni

Coperni

Courtesy of Coperni

Coperni

Courtesy of Coperni

Coperni

Courtesy of Coperni

Marine Serre

Courtesy of Marine Serre

If Marine Serre’s spring collection feels like the wardrobe from a sweeping dystopian saga, it’s because it is, more or less. The designer created a short film exploring “the urgent need for change and adaptation” as an accompaniment to the collection, handily casting our clothes as tools for affecting tangible change (she was early to the face-mask-as-fashion, too, showing them for fall 2019). Serre focused on the interplay of creativity and practicality, hiding deceptively sleek silhouettes behind bold styling and experimenting with upcycled and repurposed fabrics such as biodegradable nylon and recycled moire. A monochromatic jacquard highlighted expertly tailored lines: Seen through Serre’s vision, it’s fit for a corporate cyborg, but it’s also just a beautifully cut jacket. And a moonfish-skin pattern fluctuated in size to create the illusory effect of out-of-this-world curves (“A utopian augmented body,” per the show notes). Peel back the costumed layer, and it’s simplicity you’ll find. —Leah Melby Clinton

Marine Serre

Courtesy of Marine Serre

Marine Serre

Courtesy of Marine Serre

Marine Serre

Courtesy of Marine Serre

Marine Serre

Courtesy of Marine Serre

Alaïa

Courtesy of Alaïa

From razor-fine cutouts to gathered pleats, Alaïa is all about precision, and even the breeziest of this bunch had meticulous details ready to captivate. A square-neck trapeze dress used vertical scallops for a delicate flutter, a crisp shirtdress distinguished itself with a vented back and pleats cinched by a wide belt, and a halter dress shocked with a crimson lining. So although this spring was slightly more casual than what we’d expect from the label that practically defined body-con, everything was geared toward the woman who can’t have her basics feel basic. There were more day dresses and shorts than longer, formal silhouettes, and one wonders if that was a decision made in response to the shopper’s revised social calendar where gatherings are smaller and less grand in nature (though every bit as chic). Even the images themselves, shot on Parisian streets, spoke to a future time when she dresses for the sidewalks, not the soirées. —Leah Melby Clinton

Alaïa

Courtesy of Alaïa

Alaïa

Courtesy of Alaïa

Alaïa

Courtesy of Alaïa

Alaïa

Courtesy of Alaïa

Dior

Estrop/Getty

Fashion and intellectual culture often meet at Dior, and Maria Grazia Chiuri’s spring 2021 collection, conceived during a time of vast societal transformation, was no exception. The designer, who lives in Rome, drew inspiration from “To Cut Is to Think,” a 1997 essay written by the late Italian art critic and curator Germano Celant, who passed away from COVID-19 earlier this year. “Cutting structures language, but also clothing,” wrote Celant. “It is an intervention into the traditional conceptions of representing and seeing a body or thing, and thereby produces a new sensation.” Chiuri brought a “new sensation” to founder Christian Dior’s iconic Bar jacket through the addition of laces that allow it to be cinched tightly to achieve the classic wasp-waist silhouette, or worn loose, over lace dresses and wide-leg trousers. She also looked to the personal wardrobes of two of her favorite female authors—Susan Sontag and Virginia Woolf—for the reinvented simple white shirt (by turns, it became a tunic or a dress) and ample coats in heathered fabrics, which both featured prominently throughout the collection. The later were styled with coordinating peekaboo bralettes, a very Chiuri pairing. —Alison S. Cohn

Dior

Victor Boyko/Getty

Dior

Estrop/Getty

Dior

Stephane Cardinale/Corbis

Dior

Estrop/Getty

Wales Bonner

Courtesy of Wales Bonner

Grace Wales Bonner showed her spring 2021 collection via an original film by the Jamaican artist Jeano Edwards and with a digital publication titled Reflections on Essence. Bonner began a three-part series of collection that explores the diasporic connections between Britain and the Caribbean last season. Essence was the second in the triptych, and explored the early ’80s dancehall music scene in Jamaica. For the menswear in the collection, that meant reworking and reinterpreting Adidas tracksuits and other sporting sets. The women’s looks were more polished with shirting and tailoring interspersed with more languid silks and crochets, all done in a soft and easy palette of white, cream and black. —Kerry Pieri

Wales Bonner

Courtesy of Wales Bonner

Wales Bonner

Courtesy of Wales Bonner

Wales Bonner

Courtesy of Wales Bonner

Wales Bonner

Courtesy of Wales Bonner

Cecilie Bahnsen

Courtesy of Cecilie Bahnsen

Cecilie Bahnsen is a sort of intellectual romantic, a designer who leans into an ethereal beauty while imbuing it with something steady and enduring. For this collection, the Copenhagen-based designer had “a woman on a journey across a landscape” in mind, and was inspired by Hashimoto Shoko’s ’70s black-and-white portraits of Goze musicians, James Turrell’s immersive light installations, and a P.S. Krøyer painting of a summer night by the sea in Denmark. These weren’t just esoteric ideas: The Turrell colors showed up in bright pink and green pieces. But the collection was mostly black and white, which calls to mind the black outfits worn by the blind Japanese women musicians in the photographs and the dreamy white gowns of two women walking on the beach in Krøyer’s painting. The looks were all a bit dreamy, like they might float off if the breeze hit just right. —Kerry Pieri

Cecilie Bahnsen

Courtesy of Cecilie Bahnsen

Cecilie Bahnsen

Courtesy of Cecilie Bahnsen

Cecilie Bahnsen

Courtesy of Cecilie Bahnsen

Cecilie Bahnsen

Courtesy of Cecilie Bahnsen

Nanushka

Courtesy of Nanushka

Nanushka designer Sandra Sandor titled this collection Natural Order, delving into a theme the designer has long considered: the relationship between humans and the natural world. She created the collection to be approximately 48 percent sustainable, with her signature oversized vegan leather jackets mixed with knitted suiting and backless dresses, in a landscape-inspired palette of browns, greens, and sky blues. Shoes, bags, and hats brought the drama that her legions of Instagram-obsessed fans will fall in love with. —Kerry Pieri

Nanushka

Courtesy of Nanushka

Nanushka

Courtesy of Nanushka

Nanushka

Courtesy of Nanushka

Nanushka

Courtesy of Nanushka

Koché

Imaxtree

Christelle Kocher focused on breathing new life into things this spring, first examining the rather archaic idea of a physical fashion show through a lens affected by the global pandemic. Though she didn’t switch up the format, she did frame it with a fresh perspective: Shows are about emotion and movement, ghosts and dreams, and a necessary form of resistance. She revealed a new take on streetwear and slipdresses, too, both collection mainstays, rethinking them to be altogether softer. Smooth leather and fine lace soothed sporty silhouettes, while slips, so delicate by nature, somehow felt even more vulnerable. It’s likely down to the way they appeared plucked from one’s grandmother’s lingerie drawer and reworked to be intimate couture, handcrafted pieces that sit right next to the skin. When the physicality of a real-life show feels novel, clothes that celebrate it are needed more than ever. —Leah Melby Clinton

Koché

Imaxtree

Koché

Imaxtree

Koché

Imaxtree

Koché

Imaxtree

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