Here are some highlights of Thursday’s spring 2025 menswear shows:
Miyake takes flight
The breathtaking menswear displays in the show “Up, Up, and Away” featured couture-like poetry: seemingly weightless textiles that billowed like parachutes or kites. The garments seemed ready for flight.
In Mobilier National’s cobbled courtyard, the Homme Plissé show Thursday morning took inspiration from all things windy, transforming the elements into wearable art.
The collection was a testament to the deft innovations with fabric techniques by Satoshi Kondo and the Homme Plisse design team.
A vivid blue coat cut a striking figure, with stiff, angular sleeves that contrasted beautifully with the softness of its pleats. This was not just a coat, but a sculptural piece that transformed with the air, reminiscent of the house’s signature romantic approach to silhouettes.
Spring saw garments brought to life, like kites in the sky with voluminous silhouettes created by fastening and unfastening buttons. One standout piece, a pale blue hooded look, billowed like a parachute when the model walked across the cobbled courtyard, its back panels filling with air dramatically.
A beige T-shirt and waistcoat ensemble looked red carpet-ready with its chicly pleated, arrow-thin assorted tie.
The spring show was a poetic masterclass in fusing complexity with simplicity, and when the collection entered to rousing applause, the Paris sun finally peeked out from between the clouds.
Owens celebrates Hollywood
Rick Owens floored guests with a surreal Ben-Hur-style galley theatrical spectacle, like a tableau from a Hollywood epic, as he put on a fashion tribute the “boulevard of vice” and model of “inclusivity” – Tinseltown.
The American it-designer reflected on his personal journey there after fleeing his judgmental hometown. Spring, he added, was an homage to Old School “black and white biblical epics, mixing art deco, lurid sin and redeeming morality.”
Cut to a glittering, shimmering, audacious cauldron of hard-edged flamboyance at the Palais de Tokyo. Gym shorts paired with chiffon capes, alongside basketball sneakers, created an edgy blend of streetwear and high fashion. Models stomped on jumbo geobaskets — the size of space boots, echoing the gothic meets glamour aesthetic. Crowns created in an Art Deco style added the necessary haute drama, which Owens loves to court.
Hooded biker jackets worn over silk gazar jumpsuits were bonded, in a wacky touch, with aluminum foil and veg-tanned parchment cowhide. Yes, this choice underscored the designer’s ethical commitment to the environment beneath all his bravado about vice.
It was virtue, not vice, that in fact defined this collection.
Owens emphasized the importance of “unity and reliance on each other” in the face of global “intolerance.” He invited students and faculty from Paris fashion schools, as well as old friends and members of the trans community, to walk in the show, expressing a powerful message of inclusivity and solidarity.
Yamamoto’s urban swag
Low visors, busy prints, and monochromatic urban flair set the tone for Yohji Yamamoto’s latest show.
On a raw-looking runway, his models exuded a cool, insouciant air. Their different ages, backgrounds, and unique profiles were unified by loose silhouettes and funky utilitarian edges like deconstructed collars and suits.
Yamamoto is known for the avant-garde spirit of his clothing. His signature oversized silhouettes in black often feature drapery in varying textures.
Yamamoto played with myriad suit buttons in haphazard positions, reflecting his signature focus on texture and fabric.
The looks were often teeming with details, creating a visual feast of beaded necklaces with an ethnic feel and raw fiber hats.
Black trilby hats added swagger in a cultural contrast, echoing the fusion of styles that defines Yamamoto’s brand.
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Published: 20 Jun 2024, 11:41 PM IST