Anderson’s Couture Craftmanship Captivates at Loewe for Paris Men’s Fashion Week

Designer Veronique Nichanian accepts applause after the conclusion of the Hermes Menswear Spring/Summer 2024 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday, June 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)
Designer Veronique Nichanian accepts applause after the conclusion of the Hermes Menswear Spring/Summer 2024 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday, June 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)
TT

Anderson’s Couture Craftmanship Captivates at Loewe for Paris Men’s Fashion Week

Designer Veronique Nichanian accepts applause after the conclusion of the Hermes Menswear Spring/Summer 2024 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday, June 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)
Designer Veronique Nichanian accepts applause after the conclusion of the Hermes Menswear Spring/Summer 2024 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday, June 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

A sparkling mist of water from towering fountains cooled overheated VIP guests at Spanish luxury fashion house Loewe’s show on Saturday at Paris Fashion Week.

Its Northern Irish designer Jonathan Anderson masterfully translated the essence of sculptor Lynda Benglis’ works into a spring collection that explored themes of sparkle and elongated form. It was a fitting showcase of his continual innovation for Loewe’s and underscored Anderson’s status among the Parisian design elite.

Here are some highlights of the day’s spring-summer 2024 menswear collections, including an interview with a fashion teacher whose school was the site of a shocking explosion earlier this week:

ANDERSON REIMAGINES MENSWEAR WITH ARTISTIC SPARKLE

Against the backdrop of the monumental, water-spouting sculptures, Loewe’s latest Paris Fashion Week show was nothing short of a spectacle — and with Anderson at the helm, traditional menswear was reimagined and reshaped.

High-waisted trousers bore a touch of vintage nostalgia, their surreal heights commanding attention and distorting perceptions of the human form. Mirroring the shimmering sparkle of the surrounding fountains, sequins and crystals added a festive disco-era energy to the collection.

Anderson’s touch was evident in the deceptively ordinary blazers, coats, and knits — his cuts transformed the seemingly straightforward items into gestural art works. A suede tunic with a conjoined handbag created from the same leather tickled the fancy of the audience, including actor Brian Cox, and drew a flurry of camera clicks.

The collection featured a subdued palette of soft pastels, blues, blacks and khakis, dramatically offset by accessories such as crystal-embellished sunglasses and a crystal hummingbird on a shredded brocade top. An array of footwear and oversized bags added a further dimension to Anderson’s study of proportions.

The show proved that Anderson’s imaginative leadership at Loewe continues to show his prowess as an innovator, with a whimsical fusion of art and daring.

The runway at Loewe’s was also a stage for the artworks of Lynda Benglis. Three modernist fountains lined the catwalk, introducing an artistic pulse that echoed through the entire show. The sculptures, made from materials ranging from bronze to glitter, showcased Benglis’ skill in redefining conventional sculpture boundaries.

From the dramatic form of “Crescendo,” a sculpture resembling a crashing wave, to the stacked flower-like forms of “Bounty, Amber Waves, Fruited Plane,” and the algae-rock essence of “Knight Mer,” they provoked a visceral response and a flurry of snaps.

The art-infused runway showed again Anderson’s penchant for blurring the boundaries of fashion.

The global fashion community was shocked by the suspected gas explosion earlier this week in Paris’ 5th district that partially destroyed a building and crumpled the façade of a private academy of design and arts, the Paris American Academy.

Four people remain hospitalized in critical condition after Wednesday’s explosion, and at least 54 others suffered lighter injuries or psychological shock. One person, a teacher, remains unaccounted for.

At the scene, Anne Barr, a 42-year-old merchandising teacher at the academy, fought back tears on Saturday.

“It’s particularly upsetting because it’s such a small school, a family. I knew the director for 25 years. I even studied there,” she told The Associated Press. “Students flew from all over the world, including from the US and Korea, to attend these couture courses.”

Barr said the academy was now in the “immediate need of finding an atelier space” and called on the French fashion and couture federation for assistance, hoping the fashion community can rally together to overcome this devastating setback.

Experts equipped with search dogs had to pause their sifting through the rubble on Rue Saint-Jacques until the site can be deemed secure, authorities said.

HERMES: IF IT AIN’T BROKE DON’T FIX IT

This spring-summer, under the expert hand of veteran designer Veronique Nichanian, the Hermes menswear show unfolded with an air of cool nonchalance and subtle, sophisticated luxury.

The collection offered an inviting array of pastel hues. With a soft palette of shades of steam, light grey, sage, and others graced loose silhouettes, it reflected an airy and comfortable mood. Oversized bags and sandals featuring hole motifs contributed an off-kilter feel.

Gentle geometry abounded, manifesting in stripes that danced across T-shirts and coats, drawing a bold link to Hermes’ emblematic openwork motifs.

Amidst the gender-bending themes dominating many Paris high-fashion shows, Nichanian reinforced the classic realm of menswear, maintaining instead the timeless elegance Hermes has been synonymous with since her tenure began in 1988.

Summer was anticipated in tunics and beach blazers, while the allure of the collection was unmistakably sensual, with heavy silks for summer nights and loose knits for cooler hours.

Nichanian — Paris fashion’s longest-serving, non-founding designer since Chanel’s Karl Lagerfeld’s death — continues to present the Hermes man with an effortless sartorial elegance, all the while enhancing the brand’s reputation for understated, sellable fashion.

The summer, under Nichanian’s guidance, promises to be serene, joyfully sensual, and unequivocally Hermes.

OFFICINE GENERALE: PIERRE MAHÉO’S MENSWEAR HAS DASH OF EASYGOING MAGIC

Officine Generale’s spring-summer 2024 menswear show was a study in controlled simplicity, as designer Pierre Mahéo presented a collection that was refreshing yet retained his signature sophistication.

Starting with a monochromatic palette, the show evolved into a celebration of subtle historic elements. A knee buckle here and a neck scarf there revealed Mahéo’s fondness for bygone elements reinterpreted in a modern context.

Loose white tapered pants and relaxed, pajama-like shirting, paired with tailored foulards, were both casual and elegant. Elasticized waistbands, knee-high socks and garters, painted a picture of comfortable chic.

Mahéo balanced the line between undone and done-up, always sticking with simplicity. Ultraviolet and teal hues, and breezy tank tops and shorts were a surprise touch. The designer confessed to using these as a response to a “cold and rainy” Parisian winter, offering a touch of warmth and sunshine.

The show encapsulated an easygoing mood — Mahéo proved that minimalism can be impactful and that less is more when done with flair and an eye for detail.

KIDSUPER GIVES A THEATRICAL TWIST ON FASHION

The KidSuper collection was exhibited in a novel fusion of fashion and theater. The show was the brainchild of Colm Dillane, the house founder, whose approach to fashion often defies convention.

Held at the historic Théâtre de l’Odéon, the show was shaped by collaborations with artist Thierry Dreyfus, theater company The Big Funk, choreographer Leo Walk, and dance company La Marche Bleue. This unique presentation served to encapsulate Dillane’s vision in a narrative format.

Embodying KidSuper’s distinctive style, the collection was characterized by its use of vibrant colors, prints, and collages. These elements found their place on a variety of pieces, ranging from streetwear staples to Dillane’s tailored garments.

KidSuper’s latest outing continues the brand’s trajectory since its Paris Fashion Week entry in 2020. Dillane’s characteristic blend of fashion with various art forms was evident, once again confirming his alternative, multidisciplinary approach to the traditional fashion show format.

 



Paris Mourns Valentino, the Last Titan of Couture’s Golden Age

An Italian flag hangs at half-mast outside the Valentino Creative Headquarters, following the death of the fashion designer Valentino Garavani at the age of 93 on Monday, in Rome, Italy, January 20, 2026. (Reuters)
An Italian flag hangs at half-mast outside the Valentino Creative Headquarters, following the death of the fashion designer Valentino Garavani at the age of 93 on Monday, in Rome, Italy, January 20, 2026. (Reuters)
TT

Paris Mourns Valentino, the Last Titan of Couture’s Golden Age

An Italian flag hangs at half-mast outside the Valentino Creative Headquarters, following the death of the fashion designer Valentino Garavani at the age of 93 on Monday, in Rome, Italy, January 20, 2026. (Reuters)
An Italian flag hangs at half-mast outside the Valentino Creative Headquarters, following the death of the fashion designer Valentino Garavani at the age of 93 on Monday, in Rome, Italy, January 20, 2026. (Reuters)

Valentino Garavani’s death cast a long shadow over the opening day of Paris Fashion Week menswear Tuesday, with front-row guests and industry figures mourning the passing of one of the last towering names of 20th-century couture — an Italian designer whose working life was closely entwined with the Paris runways.

Valentino, 93, died at his Rome residence, the Valentino Garavani and Giancarlo Giammetti Foundation said in a statement announcing his death. While he built his house in Rome, he spent decades presenting collections in France.

He “was one of the last big couturiers who really embodied what was fashion in the 20th century,” said Pierre Groppo, fashion editor-in-chief at Vanity Fair France.

On a day meant to sell the future, many guests said they were thinking about what fashion has lost: the couturier as a living institution.

Groppo pointed to the codes that made Valentino instantly legible — “the dots, the ruffles, the knots” — and to a generation of designers who, he said, “in a way, invented what is celebrity culture.”

Valentino’s vision was built on a simple idea: make women look luminous, then make the moment unforgettable.

He dressed Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Elizabeth Taylor, among others, fixed his signature “Valentino red” in the public imagination, and — through his decades-long partnership with Giancarlo Giammetti — helped turn the designer himself into part of the spectacle, as recognizable as the clients in his front row.

The end of a fashion era

Prominent fashion writer Luke Leitch framed the loss in similarly outsized terms, calling Valentino “the last of the fashion ‘leviathans of that generation’,” and saying it was “absolutely” the end of a certain class of designer: figures whose names could carry a global house, and whose authority came not from viral speed but from permanence.

Trained in Paris before founding his maison in Rome, Valentino became a rare bridge figure: Italian by origin, but fluent in the rituals that made Paris couture an institution. His career moved between those two capitals of elegance, bringing Roman grandeur into a system that still treats fashion not only as commerce, but as ceremony.

Even as he aged, the house’s founder kept turning up at its couture and ready-to-wear shows, as observed by one Associated Press journalist — until he eventually retreated from public life, all the while radiating quiet grandeur from his front-row seat.

For some in Paris on Tuesday, the loss felt personal precisely because Valentino’s world was never only Italian.

Groppo recalled the designer as “very much more than a fashion brand,” adding: “It was a lifestyle.”

That lifestyle — couture polish, social glamour, and the conviction that elegance could be a form of power — remains a reference point even as fashion accelerates toward louder branding and faster cycles.

“It’s quite sad as he’s so important to the fashion industry, and he contributed a lot and I cannot forget the stunning red he created,” said Lolo Zhang, a Chinese fashion influencer attending Louis Vuitton ’s show in Paris.

“He always celebrated pure beauty, and architecture for the silhouette, and how he used color. The old era just passed by.”

Other guests described a delayed realization — the kind that arrives only when a figure who seemed permanent is suddenly gone.

YSL, Chanel and Valentino

“There are some people who want to be Yves Saint Laurent, Chanel. ... There are also people who are spontaneously Valentino,” said Guy-Claude Agboton, deputy editor of Ideat magazine. “It’s a question of identity.”

For Paris fashion observer Benedict Epinay, the grief was bound up with memory. And with the emotional charge of Valentino’s final bow.

“It was such a great moment. I was lucky enough to attend the last show he gave,” Epinay said. “It was so moving because we knew at that time it was the last show.”

Fashion observer Arfan Ghani pointed to what Valentino represented to younger designers: a “classy” standard of restraint in an era that often rewards noise.

“Because it was very classical materials," Ghani said. "It wasn’t as loud as a lot of other of these brands are with branding.”

Paris-based sculptor Ranti Bam described Valentino in the language of form: less trend than structure, less look than line.

“As a sculptor I saw Valentino as an artist,” Bam said. “He transcended fashion into sculpture.”

“He didn’t follow trends, he pursued form,” she added. “That’s why his work doesn’t date, it endures.”

The fashion house Valentino has for years continued under a new generation of leadership and design — still showcased in Paris.


Pharrell Opens Vuitton’s Monogram Anniversary Year With Cinematic Menswear Show

A model presents a creation from the Fall/Winter 2026/2027 collection by US designer Pharrell Williams for Louis Vuitton during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 20 January 2026. (EPA)
A model presents a creation from the Fall/Winter 2026/2027 collection by US designer Pharrell Williams for Louis Vuitton during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 20 January 2026. (EPA)
TT

Pharrell Opens Vuitton’s Monogram Anniversary Year With Cinematic Menswear Show

A model presents a creation from the Fall/Winter 2026/2027 collection by US designer Pharrell Williams for Louis Vuitton during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 20 January 2026. (EPA)
A model presents a creation from the Fall/Winter 2026/2027 collection by US designer Pharrell Williams for Louis Vuitton during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 20 January 2026. (EPA)

Pharrell Williams opened a celebration year for Louis Vuitton's monogram — marking the house’s 130th anniversary of its most recognizable signature — with a Fall-Winter 2026 men’s show that was equal parts brand pageant and movie set.

Inside the Louis Vuitton Foundation in Paris, the guests encircled the grassy runway. At its center sat a glass-walled, minimalist apartment — part bedroom, part display box — where models kept entering and exiting like characters crossing movie scenes.

It was also a celebrity-heavy room, with a front row mixing music, film and online fame — SZA, Usher, Future, Jackson Wang and others, plus a runway debut to seal the crossover: BamBam of Korean boy band GOT7.

The soundtrack did as much scene-setting as the set. A gospel choir and full orchestra performed live from the balconies, lifting what could have been a straightforward runway lap into something closer to a staged sequence: romantic, controlled, faintly grand.

On the clothes, Williams stayed inside his Vuitton DNA: readable from a distance, richer up close, and always tethered to the idea of travel and the house’s heritage goods.

This season’s lens was 1970s ease spiked with utility. The palette sat firmly in autumn-tonal grays, browns, black, denim, cream — then broke into jolts of bubblegum pink, baby blue and emerald green that kept the mood from turning too polite.

It was Vuitton in full brand mode: monogram year messaging, hero outerwear, high-gloss accessories, and a set built for cameras.

Silhouettes ran long and loose, with baggier trousers that swung into an A-line sweep; suits were often topped with parka coats, a high-low collision that has become one of his signatures.

The details — always his style argument — did the work.

Shirts flashed with glimmering surfaces.

Bows and jabot-style collars delivered the 70s note without going costume.

Utility came through in the hardware language: ties, toggles, belts, zippers; faux-fur collars that read both functional and decorative.

Patent Oxford shoes added a hard, glossy punctuation under the softer shapes.

A monogrammed puffer arrived as the obvious anniversary-era hero item.

Williams also pushed a slightly “undone” finish — wrinkled tops that looked intentionally lived-in rather than sloppy — while widening the fit menu beyond the season’s broader swing toward slimness: skin-tight knits, cleanly fitted suits and oversized tailored shorts.

Then came the Vuitton wink at travel as culture-object: an Art Nouveau travel case in stained glass, rolled through on a trolley — absurd, beautiful, and perfectly on-message for a house that still sells the idea of departure as luxury.


Burberry Beats Holiday Sales Expectations, Attracts More Shoppers in China

A Burberry Check styled shirt with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)
A Burberry Check styled shirt with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)
TT

Burberry Beats Holiday Sales Expectations, Attracts More Shoppers in China

A Burberry Check styled shirt with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)
A Burberry Check styled shirt with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)

Burberry beat expectations for sales growth in the key holiday quarter as its marketing push featuring British celebrities resonated ‌with shoppers ‌and helped attract more Gen ‌Z ⁠consumers ​in China.

Joshua ‌Schulman, who became CEO in July 2024 as sales were sliding, is leading a turnaround focused on trench coats, scarves and the brand's British heritage, while cutting costs after reducing the workforce by 20% last year.

"Our customers responded to our immersive Timeless ⁠British Luxury campaigns and experiences, while the continued strength in our core ‌outerwear category is now extending ‍into accessories and ready-to-wear," ‍Schulman said in a statement on Wednesday.

Comparable store sales rose 3% in the three months to December 27, beating analysts' expectation of 2% growth, according to a company-compiled consensus.

Sales ​in China rose 6% on a comparable basis, as the brand continued its recovery ⁠in the crucial luxury market. Burberry said the performance was supported by "double-digit" growth in Gen Z customers.

The company said its markdown period was shorter and "shallower" than last year, an encouraging sign for investors looking for signs that customers are increasingly willing to buy Burberry products at full price.

Burberry said it expects full-year adjusted operating profit to be in line with the consensus forecast of 149 million pounds ($200 ‌million).