Christian Dior Hosts Live, Audience-free Fashion Show

FILE:Creations on display during a photocall for the "Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams" exhibition at the Victoria & Albert (V&A) Museum in London, Britain January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
FILE:Creations on display during a photocall for the "Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams" exhibition at the Victoria & Albert (V&A) Museum in London, Britain January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
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Christian Dior Hosts Live, Audience-free Fashion Show

FILE:Creations on display during a photocall for the "Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams" exhibition at the Victoria & Albert (V&A) Museum in London, Britain January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
FILE:Creations on display during a photocall for the "Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams" exhibition at the Victoria & Albert (V&A) Museum in London, Britain January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

Christian Dior hosted a live but audience-free fashion show on Wednesday in the Italian city of Lecce, in a dazzling celebration of local crafts and traditions that included a dance spectacle in the middle of the baroque main square.

Luxury labels are tentatively returning to the catwalk after the coronavirus pandemic, and Dior streamed the show live without the usual array of celebrities in the front row.

But the French brand upped the ante by staging an extravanga with a live orchestra and dancers performing a modern take on a traditional tune, while models wound their way through a gallery of lights called Luminarie in Lecce’s Piazza del Duomo.

Outfits in the so-called “Cruise” collection included embroidered dresses with firework patterns, in a nod to Italian folklore, while artist Pietro Ruffo’s wildflower drawings were translated onto colorful dresses.

Dior’s Italian creative chief Maria Grazia Chiuri said she had sought to showcase the craftmanship of the Puglia region - her father’s homeland - and help it endure by casting it in a fresh light, Reuters reported.

“I understood in this process where my passion and my origins are from and why I am so attracted to this type of work, this embroidery, this tradition,” Chiuri told Reuters in an interview.

“I saw my grandmother, my aunts, women used to sit outside their homes and create this beautiful work.”



Spain's Top Fashion Retailers to Launch Trial to Collect Clothes Waste in 2025

A street performer dressed as a bear stands outside a Primark store in Madrid, Spain, October 2, 2024. REUTERS/Susana Vera
A street performer dressed as a bear stands outside a Primark store in Madrid, Spain, October 2, 2024. REUTERS/Susana Vera
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Spain's Top Fashion Retailers to Launch Trial to Collect Clothes Waste in 2025

A street performer dressed as a bear stands outside a Primark store in Madrid, Spain, October 2, 2024. REUTERS/Susana Vera
A street performer dressed as a bear stands outside a Primark store in Madrid, Spain, October 2, 2024. REUTERS/Susana Vera

Spain's largest fashion companies will start collecting discarded clothes from April next year as part of a voluntary pilot scheme to manage textile waste that anticipates EU regulations expected to come into force in 2026.
Zara owner Inditex, H&M, Decathlon, Ikea and Primark are among 10 brands that will participate in a trial that will separate textiles and shoes from other waste collection so they can be reused or recycled, according to organizers of the project, dubbed Re-viste.
Spain is awaiting final approval of new EU regulations that will require member states to separate textiles from other waste before it issues rules to fashion companies, which will meet the cost of managing the textile waste, Marta Gomez, director of quality and environmental evaluation at the ministry of energy transition, told fashion leaders at an event in Madrid.
The EU regulations won't come into force before 2026 as authorities will give companies at least a year to adapt, government officials and fashion industry sources said.
"The regulations show us the way, but we have decided not to wait to comply with the legal requirements," said Andres Fernandez, president of Re-viste and head of sustainability at retailer Mango, which is also part of the trial.
The rules will mean that companies that sell more clothes and shoes are likely to have to pay more for managing the waste, Reuters reported.
In Spain, just 12% of used clothes are collected separately and 88% end up in landfill, according to official data. Each resident in Spain discards 20 kilos of clothes per year compared to an average of seven kilos in Europe, authorities say.
During the year-long trial, Re-viste plans to set up dozens of containers in churches, stores, shopping centers and streets to collect the waste in bags and take it to plants for sorting.
Once the legislation comes into force, fashion companies estimate that Spain will need one textile waste container for every 1,200 residents.