McCartney’s Street Fare: High-Octane Fashion with a Playful, Eco Twist

A model presents a creation from the Spring/Summer 2025 Womenswear collection by British designer Stella McCartney during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 30 September 2024. (EPA)
A model presents a creation from the Spring/Summer 2025 Womenswear collection by British designer Stella McCartney during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 30 September 2024. (EPA)
TT

McCartney’s Street Fare: High-Octane Fashion with a Playful, Eco Twist

A model presents a creation from the Spring/Summer 2025 Womenswear collection by British designer Stella McCartney during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 30 September 2024. (EPA)
A model presents a creation from the Spring/Summer 2025 Womenswear collection by British designer Stella McCartney during the Paris Fashion Week, in Paris, France, 30 September 2024. (EPA)

On an ordinary Parisian market street on an ordinary rainy fall day, Stella McCartney’s high-octane show on Monday was anything but. Guests gasped as the drizzle ceased, the clouds parted, and the sun emerged moments before the show — a heavenly metaphor, perhaps, for McCartney’s optimistic and nature-inspired display.

Here are some highlights of spring-summer 2025 ready-to-wear shows in Paris:

McCartney’s street fare

The designs were dazzling, fusing sparkle, wit, and sharp tailoring to capture a disco-ready sense of fun.

VIPs including Natalie Portman, Greta Gerwig, and Paris Jackson couldn’t resist tapping their feet amid the most infectious soundtrack of Paris Fashion Week thus far. Models strutted with clever hairstyles swaying theatrically, reminiscent of Gerwig’s own film, Barbie, adding another playful element to the spectacle.

Savile Row tailoring was reimagined in true Stella style — strong-shouldered jackets paired with slimline blazers and exaggerated belt loops, while voluminous trousers and cheeky boxer culottes kept things playful. This isn’t new territory for McCartney, who often reworks classic tailoring with an edge.

Pinstripe suits got a glamorous upgrade with clean satin lines and shimmering lead-free crystals, paired with cropped sporty jumpers — another of her signature juxtapositions of high fashion with an easygoing vibe.

Fluid draping was another runway star, from gravity-defying asymmetric silk gowns to vegan leather skirts folding over themselves. Cream bombers with wing-like cutouts and sheer dresses injected an ethereal flair.

Cloud-like creations were a showstopper.

“We had some of these clouds in the knitwear (made of) a yarn that’s made out of recycled plastic bottles, which is amazing,” McCartney said backstage.

Bird motifs took flight, literally and figuratively. Doves painted across silk and origami-inspired details were visual treats — harking back to McCartney’s years-long message to remember to protect nature.

‘Stella Times’ newspaper and Helen Mirren

McCartney’s show kicked off with Helen Mirren delivering a “Save What You Love” manifesto—more a direct punch than a gentle plea. Inspired by Jonathan Franzen’s “The End of the End of the Earth,” Mirren’s voice rang out, urging action before it’s too late. Birds, which are disappearing, were the symbol, a reminder of what’s at stake if we don’t get our act together.

Guests were also each given a newspaper made for the show humorously called the “Stella Times” that spelled out a tongue-in-cheek, yet serious, message about sustainability. McCartney's advice to readers to spur on positive action: “Read! Because I don’t think people read anymore.” And “get a copy of our newspaper. I’ll give you all of the information you need to know. Be more conscious, be more curious, and find out the facts of fashion to be more the future of fashion.”

McCartney has long been ahead of the game regarding eco-conscious fashion. She was one of the first designers to champion sustainability, well before it was on anyone else’s radar. With fashion being one of the world’s biggest polluters, her 91% conscious materials and animal-free production were another sign that the designer is taking the message seriously.

Sacai’s raw construction and deconstruction

A giant wooden structure of a house — just raw beams on display — set the scene for Sacai. It wasn’t just a striking venue, rather it served as a metaphor for Chitose Abe’s ethos: deconstruction and reconstruction in the most unexpected of ways. Like Abe’s clothing, the exposed beams represented an unfinished, yet powerfully architectural take on form and structure.

An urban T-shirt dress was paired with a black leather jacket sporting a ruffled, leg-of-mutton arm, a detail more often reserved for historical gowns. It was the embodiment of Abe’s dualities: urban biker meets historical drama, masculine melds into the overtly feminine.

Throughout the collection, the clever fusion of seemingly incongruent parts was front and center. A crisp white shirt was fused with a dark pleated skirt, set just under the bust. It was all one garment, and this mash-up exemplified Abe’s inventive approach to pattern-making. Her concept of hybridization — combining garments so they look like one thing from the front and another from the back — is more than a gimmick. It’s Abe’s groundbreaking way of challenging the very fabric of what fashion can be.

Another look was simplicity at first glance: a white toggled hoodie. But in true Sacai fashion, the back featured a floor-length, floppy skirt insert, transforming what could have been mundane into something extraordinary.

Volume and silhouettes were in abundance as well, with flattened, boxy shapes taking center stage.

The modest pieces — like the long black skirt fused into a white shirt — were emblematic of her recent exploration in monochrome and shifting her dissected garments into elevated territory.

Isabel Marant embraces crafty Amazonian spirit

Isabel Marant blended South American craftsmanship with the raw energy of an Amazonian warrior, her craft-heavy aesthetic on full display in a powerful celebration of femininity. There’s no “quiet luxury” here. Marant has always been unafraid to explore new territories, and this season she ventured into the tribalist punk influences of the early 1980s, blending it seamlessly with her love craft.

The runway was ablaze with sunset hues: rust, mauve, pink, and purple rippled across tasseled skirts and knot-constructed dresses, evoking the warmth of a Latin dusk. Marant is celebrated for embracing authenticity, and here she let her heritage sing loud and proud, with flat moccasin boots and suede satchel bags that harked back to the bohemian spirit she has championed for decades.

Marant’s strength lies in her ability to craft looks that marry accessibility with audacity, and the embellishments told this story well. Heavy gold bangles adorned models’ wrists as they strode in braided and embroidered silk dresses. The weathered black-gray denim blousons and studded black leather shorts hinted at a rebellious streak.

This season marked another chapter in Marant’s evolution as she leaned even further into craftsmanship — embroidered leather, blanket-stitched suede, and intricate knotting that felt deeply personal. The weighty, luxurious materials were balanced with slouchy, relaxed silhouettes. There’s an unpretentious ease here, a reminder that while Marant’s designs are fiercely statement-making, they are made to be lived in. It’s not about loud for the sake of loud, but about a woman standing confidently in her own skin.



Valentino’s New Designer Puts on Maximalist Paris Ready-to-Wear Debut

 A model presents a creation by designer Alessandro Michele as part of his Spring/Summer 2025 Women's ready-to-wear collection show for fashion house Valentino during Paris Fashion Week in Paris, France, September 29, 2024. (Reuters)
A model presents a creation by designer Alessandro Michele as part of his Spring/Summer 2025 Women's ready-to-wear collection show for fashion house Valentino during Paris Fashion Week in Paris, France, September 29, 2024. (Reuters)
TT

Valentino’s New Designer Puts on Maximalist Paris Ready-to-Wear Debut

 A model presents a creation by designer Alessandro Michele as part of his Spring/Summer 2025 Women's ready-to-wear collection show for fashion house Valentino during Paris Fashion Week in Paris, France, September 29, 2024. (Reuters)
A model presents a creation by designer Alessandro Michele as part of his Spring/Summer 2025 Women's ready-to-wear collection show for fashion house Valentino during Paris Fashion Week in Paris, France, September 29, 2024. (Reuters)

Alessandro Michele’s eagerly awaited ready-to-wear Paris Fashion Week debut at Valentino was unveiled in a setting that hinted at a transformation— a living room in flux. Stools, ladders, and lamps shrouded beneath white blankets evoked a house renovation, signaling not just change, but a conscious revival of past glories. The scene, poetic and subdued, perfectly set the stage for a “maximalist-lite” spectacle that was equally haunted by history and illuminated by Michele’s unique flair.

Meanwhile, under the soaring ceilings of the École des Beaux Arts, overlooking the Seine, Sean McGirr’s sophomore ready-to-wear show for Alexander McQueen arrived with a palpable sense of relief. The shift in setting — from a bleak industrial warehouse outside Paris to this iconic venue — reflected a fresh start for McGirr, whose uncertain debut had left critics shivering, both literally and figuratively. Now, with the benefit of more time to prepare, McGirr appeared more at ease, though hints of his sometimes overly simplistic approach still lingered.

Here are some highlights of spring-summer 2025 ready-to-wear shows:

Michele's Valentino's debut

The mood was set with haunting music and the steady beat of a drum, creating an ambiance charged with drama and anticipation. Michele, who made headlines earlier this year after being named the new creative director of Valentino, following his successful reign at Gucci, brought with him much of his recognizable style. Yet there was a distinctive evolution in his vision — less overtly ostentatious, but still unmistakably eclectic.

Feathers floated on hats, soft and playful. Lingerie peeked through delicate layers. Flowers, fortune tellers’ hats, sparkling embellishments — all coalesced into an eclectic wardrobe that carried a vintage feel. Michele, it seemed, was teasing apart the DNA of both houses he knows intimately: the exuberance of Gucci and the ethereal heritage of Valentino.

Some of the pieces felt familiar to longtime Valentino admirers: the feminine nipped-waist dress, the floppy floral gown with its tiered skirt, and the iconic Valentino red that made its dramatic entrance. Yet in Michele’s hands, these classics were playfully twisted — feathers replaced fur on a billowing stole, and the result was a softer, more modern take that eschewed excessive luxury.

Jared Leto was among the VIPs who sat in the front row, a testament to Michele’s continued draw among Hollywood’s elite. The designer, who had risen to international recognition by infusing Gucci with his beloved “Geek-Chic” aesthetic, seemed to bring a similar ethos to Valentino, though filtered through a more graceful, couture lens.

Throughout his tenure at Gucci, Michele was celebrated for prioritizing his personal vision over the often suffocating codes of heritage houses, and Sunday’s show echoed that defiant spirit.

McGirr's sophomore outing

The opening tailored suit, its lapels rolled as if to ward off an unexpected London downpour, seemed a pointed metaphor — perhaps a shield against the relentless skepticism that followed his first runway outing. This season, McGirr turned to a reference steeped in both his heritage and McQueen’s early days: the dark romance of the “Banshee” show. In doing so, he anchored his own identity more deeply in the label’s legacy, embracing a Gothic allure that was more commercially viable this time around.

It was a collection of contrasts. The precise tailoring echoed McQueen’s subversion of British suiting, twisting and clutching fabric in ways that seemed as though it had been caught in a sudden gust. However, this wasn’t always effective. One such example — a jagged, off-white tuxedo — felt more like a costume of restraint. This overly simplistic take on tailoring lacked the subtle layering and tension that distinguished Sarah Burton’s previous work for the house.

Where McGirr truly shone, however, was in his eveningwear — an area that has become increasingly vital in the era of celebrity-driven fashion. The shimmering embroideries and featherlight silks, frayed and distressed in lilac georgette, signaled his understanding of red carpet glamour. The brushed white chiffon minidress, paired with a gold beaded and sequined jacket, made a convincing case for the designer’s growing confidence. And when the silver chains traced the body’s lines, their intricate embroidery brought a level of audacity that was finally worthy of McQueen.

The night’s high point was a look of pure excess: an extreme gown embroidered with glistening silver chains that seemed to catch every glimmer of light in the venue. It was an ensemble that Daphne Guinness herself — who watched approvingly from the front row — might have worn in a heartbeat.

Despite his strides, McGirr’s sophomore effort still carried the weight of a designer learning the ropes of a storied brand.

Akris: Where utility meets minimalism

Akris’ Sunday collection had the audience leaning in, not for any over-the-top spectacle, but for the luxurious subtleties that Albert Kriemler so masterfully crafts. The designer, true to form, took the trench coat idea — a staple of the wardrobe — and transformed it into something distinctly Akris. With utilitarian detailing threaded through every seam, this was an exercise in functional luxury, the kind that Kriemler has long perfected. His designs don’t shout; they whisper.

The collection opened with takes on trenches, each reimagined to fuse practicality with fashion-forward flair. Minimalism, too, reigned supreme, with looks that kept embellishments at bay to let the craftsmanship shine. A flat, clean-cut fabric top paired with culottes nodded to the timeless Akris aesthetic — unfussy, luxurious, and quietly powerful. This was minimalism of the highest quality, a testament to Kriemler’s commitment to making clothes that defy the viral trend, focusing instead on timeless appeal.