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creativity rules with Niccolò Pasqualetti, Duran Lantink, Ottolinger, Atlein

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Nicola Mira

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March 10, 2025

Paris Fashion Week Women is drawing to a close, but continues to feature interesting surprises. On Sunday, it showcased inventive collections by several emerging labels, all of them standing out this season for their ground-breaking research and increasingly sophisticated looks. Like those presented by Niccolò Pasqualetti, Duran Lantink, Ottolinger, and Atlein.

Niccolò Pasqualetti, Fall/Winter 2025-26 – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

In his second show on the Parisian calendar, Pasqualetti confirmed he is a talented designer with a collection that was both chic and nonchalant, enriched by a couture touch. The looks had an extremely contemporary feel, and featured classic items reinterpreted via unusual constructions and impeccable cuts, each silhouette made more appealing by a special little twist.

Skirts, dresses and coats were made from roughly assembled fabric swathes, their edges often unstitched. But genuine couture expertise could be glimpsed beneath this apparent simplicity and improvisation. Everything fell just so, thanks to a painstaking attention to deconstruction and draping, to asymmetries and minute details. Pasqualetti harmoniously blended the most disparate materials.

A frilled leather doublet was matched with a skirt embroidered with glittering rods, the look elevated by a maxi fur stole. A grey wool sheet, seemingly balanced on one shoulder, morphed into an elegant minimalist dress, the model’s neck covered by a removable ribbed collar extending into a plastron, on which four crystal blocks held within a fine mesh acted as a necklace.

The trousers were ample, the sweaters soft and loose, the coats enveloping like throws. After an opening series of austere looks in total black, the collection was all light and purity, for example the sheer pearl tunics, and ended with a sequence of more experimental, unbridled items.

Duran Lantink, Fall/Winter 2025-26 – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Duran Lantink captivated his audience with an ultra-inventive, high-quality collection brimming with great ideas and amusing quirks, like the flesh-coloured silicone t-shirt reproducing a muscular chest with macho pecs, worn by the cute brunette who opened the show, and its female counterpart with big bare swinging breasts, flaunted at the end of the show by a young blonde guy to thundering applause.

The Dutch designer, a serial award winner at the most prestigious fashion competitions who is slated to become Jean Paul Gaultier‘s next creative director, surpassed himself as he transformed his wardrobe by introducing new shapes and constructions. Seemingly classic trousers and skirts overflowed on the sides, worn low on the waist and held in place by an astonishing technical feat.

In some cases, the trousers’ upper section was removable, being simply attached to the waist by a belt, leaving the buttocks bare at the back while the model’s legs were encased by the trousers from thighs to feet. The same principle was applied to pleated skirts that became double, one worn as normal and the other attached at the front. And to broad rectangular check skirts that were simply affixed to the front like aprons. Upside-down shirts, their sleeves hanging free, were also transformed into skirts.

This season, Lantink also featured a variety of printed patterns which he mixed and matched with gusto. Like animal-print (snakeskin, zebra, leopard and cowhide) and camo patterns. The collection did feature some of the label’s typical silhouettes, with rounded, burgeoning shapes obtained with padded extensions, but Duran Lantink’s wardrobe for next winter also explored trompe l’oeil effects with slinky jumpsuits hugging the body like a second skin, looking almost like body paint, matched with tonal oversize boots.

Ottolinger, Fall/Winter 2025-26 – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

 
A strident note sounded within the vast space home to the Ottolinger show. The models stepped across the hall with a determined stride, ready to face what promised to be a long day. They oozed vibrant energy in their spare, sporty outfits, whose garments, fastened and done up with laces and drawstrings in signature Ottolinger style, literally clung to their bodies to create skin-tight silhouettes.

The clothes reflected the mindset of women with an overbooked diary. They were functional and versatile, suitable for both private and public engagements. Hoodies, T-shirts and jersey tracksuit tops were wrapped tight around the chest. They were worn with form-fitting skirts and leggings made of Lycra and other stretch materials, all of the latter seemingly made using nylon tights in different skin tones.

Cushioned pads and rings added volume at the sides, belly or shoulders of these long, sleek silhouettes. A detachable pad nestled behind a model’s neck, tied like a hood by a simple strip of fabric, or attached to fasteners slipped into the sleeves.

Designers Christa Bösch and Cosima Gradient, both from Switzerland, reintroduced skinny jeans this season, but after their own fashion, with cut-outs for a distressed effect, and detachable pockets revealing a darker indigo print, notably on some gold-painted jeans.

The collection put the accent on practicality, featuring cocooning ultra-light neoprene jackets lined with felt, and business suits in stretch fabric. A more creative element was introduced by the lace tops, skirts and trousers decorated with prints of graphic works by Julien Ceccaldi.

Atlein – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Atlein continues to broaden its range. The label’s founder and creative director Antonin Tron has expanded his vocabulary with new looks and materials. Long draped or gathered jersey dresses are still the core of his wardrobe, but Tron has shifted away from evening wear to also include tops, coats and trousers in a more urban sportswear mood.

“I really wanted to add to the wardrobe, showing the other side of Atlein. I took my time, but I now have a wider range of coats, cropped tops, trousers and jackets,” Tron told FashionNetwork.com. Yet, even with this outerwear and daywear register, Tron still painstakingly curated each garment’s lines and architecture.

The jackets and maxi coats with a wide woollen collar, cinched at the waist with a bathrobe belt, looked very attractive. The shearling faux-leather aviator jackets were cut shorter, to further streamline the silhouette. Suit jackets featured statement shoulders, but fitted tightly at the back through a system of drawstrings and gathers. Wool trousers rose high on the waist, tapering to a V where they fastened. A tracksuit top in a cotton and elastane blend took on volume and an almost couture-like shape.

Tron has found ingenious solutions to design looks suitable to all sizes and tastes, notably by creating a series of draped and gathered bodysuits, worn simply over a pair of tights, as a top slipped into trousers, or transformed into majestic evening dresses with the addition of a sheath skirt. For a small independent label like Atlein, managing to maintain this level of detail and quality in today’s tough business environment deserves the utmost respect.

Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.



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Whistles and Hush join ‘Brands at M&S’ platform, Nobody’s Child to expand concession format

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M&S continues to grow its ‘Brands at M&S’ fashion and lifestyle portfolio adding Hush and Whistles to its online platform this season. Meanwhile, its part-owned Nobody’s Child brand will also be doubling its in-store footprint to 56 stores.

First, Hush and Whistles will become the first dedicated womenswear brands to launch on the platform this year, continuing its growth to over 100 third-party brands. Hush will join the website from 12 March, followed by the arrival of Whistles in April.

The pair will introduce more than 300 new season womenswear products to M&S.com, including day dresses, trend-forward denim, boho-style blouses, co-ords, outerwear, and a selection of bags, heels and sandals.

The range will also include an exclusive 12-piece collection from Hush, “which offers effortless summer separates and Hush’s best-selling barrel leg jean in leopard print” exclusive to M&S’s website.

As the retailer claims to continue “to drive style perceptions” (+6ppts) while “holding its highest market share in womenswear for years” (10.4%), M&S said womenswear is a top performing category within Brands at M&S, making up 49% of sales in the last 12 months, with sales up 18% vs last year.

The retailer also claims to have welcomed over one million new customers to the platform in the last year.

“Hush and Whistles will bolster the existing offer of stylish womenswear brands and sit alongside Chinti & Parker, Baukjen and Nobody’s Child, which was the first third-partner brand to launch at M&S in 2020, bringing the total number to 26”, M&S said.

Additionally, M&S will be welcoming back Nobody’s Child pop-up shops to stores for the SS25 season. Having seen 100,000 customers shopping the brand in store last year, for 2025, the retailer is expanding its store footprint to a further 28 new locations including Kew, Merry Hill and Braehead. That will bring the total number of M&S stores the brand is available in to 56.

The pop-ups will offer a capsule collection of 40 pieces from Nobody’s Child’s SS25 collection, including a mix of signature dresses, tops, blouses and trousers.

Nishi Mahajan, director of Third-Party Brands, Clothing & Home at M&S, said: “Four years ago we introduced a small selection of third-party womenswear brands to M&S and today, it continues to be our best-performing category.

“We’re continuing to listen and learn from our customers; we know that in womenswear, they want highly credible, fashion-led brands which complement and enhance our core offer at M&S. We’re confident the arrival of Hush and Whistles as well as the return of our Nobody’s Child pop-up shops, will ensure we are the destination for womenswear this season as we continue to drive style perceptions and grow market share.” 

Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.



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Billionaires at Trump’s swearing-in have since lost $210 billion

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Bloomberg

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March 10, 2025

As Donald Trump took the oath of office on Jan. 20, he was flanked by some of the world’s wealthiest people. The billionaires present that day — including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg — had never been richer, flush with big gains from frothy stock markets.

Louis Vuitton – Spring-Summer2025 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Seven weeks later, it’s a different story. The start of Trump’s second term has delivered a stunning reversal for many of those billionaires sitting behind Trump in the Capitol Rotunda, with five having lost a combined $210 billion in wealth, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The period between Trump’s election and his inauguration was a boon for the world’s wealthiest, with the S&P 500 Index hitting several all-time highs. Investors piled into equity and crypto markets, expecting that Trump’s policies would be advantageous to business.

Musk’s Tesla Inc. gained 98% in the weeks after the election, hitting a record high. Arnault’s LVMH added 7% in the week before Inauguration Day, making the French magnate $12 billion richer.

Even Zuckerberg’s Meta Platforms Inc., which banned Trump from the social-media platform in 2021, gained 9% before the beginning of the new term and an additional 20% in his first four weeks in office.

But any expectations that the start of Trump’s new term would continue to fuel market returns have been upended. The S&P 500 has lost almost 7% since he took office, as mass layoffs of government employees and the president’s back-and-forth on tariffs have roiled equities, with the benchmark index tumbling more than 3% on Monday.  

The companies behind the inauguration attendees’ fortunes have been some of the biggest losers, falling by a combined $1.43 trillion in market value since Jan. 17, the last trading day before the inauguration. Here’s a look at some of those fortunes as of 2 p.m. Monday:

Elon Musk (down 5 billion)

The 53-year-old Tesla chief executive officer’s net worth peaked at $486 billion on Dec. 17, the largest fortune ever recorded on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Most of his gains came from Tesla, whose stock nearly doubled after the election. Since then, the electric carmaker has given up all of those gains, knocking Musk’s net worth down by $157 billion. Consumers in Europe have soured on Musk’s support for far-right politicians, with Tesla sales in Germany falling by more than 70% in the first two months of the year. Chinese shipments also fell by 49% last month to levels not seen since July 2022.

Jeff Bezos (down billion)

Bezos, 61, who clashed with Trump over the postal service and his ownership of the Washington Post during the president’s first term, congratulated Trump the day after the election on Musk’s X social-media platform. Amazon donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund in December, and Bezos dined with the president last month, the same day that Bezos announced that his newspaper will prioritize personal liberties and free markets in its opinion section. Amazon shares have fallen 15% since Jan. 17.

Sergey Brin (down billion)

Brin, 51, who co-founded the company then known as Google with Larry Page and still retains a 6% stake, joined a protest against the Trump administration’s immigration policy at the San Francisco airport in 2017. After Trump was re-elected in November, Brin dined with him at Mar-a-Lago the following month. Alphabet Inc.’s shares tumbled more than 7% in early February after it missed quarterly revenue estimates. Representatives from Alphabet, which is currently facing pressure from the Justice Department to break up its search engine company, last week met with the government and asked it to take a less aggressive stance.

Mark Zuckerberg (down billion)

Meta was the standout winner among the Magnificent Seven tech stocks at the beginning of this year. Even as the group of companies that has powered much of the S&P 500’s gains over the past few years were flatlining, Meta rose 19% from mid-January to mid-February. Since then, though, the stock has lost all those gains. The Magnificent Seven index is down 21% since its mid-December high.

Bernard Arnault (down billion)

Arnault, 76, whose family owns the luxury conglomerate behind brands including Louis Vuitton and Bulgari, has been a friend of Trump’s for decades, speaking with the then-candidate the day after the Pennsylvania assassination attempt in July. After declining through most of 2024, LVMH jumped more than 20% from the election through late January. It’s since given up most of those gains. Morningstar analysts said last month that a 10% to 20% tariff on European luxury goods could depress sales, which have already been struggling.



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Louis Vuitton, Gabriela Hearst, and Zimmermann

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A contrast in styles across three collections at Paris Fashion Week 0n Monday – the corporate, the committed, and the cool, from Louis Vuitton, Gabriela Hearst, and Zimmermann.
  

Trans-Euro Vuitton

Designer Nicolas Ghesquière took Vuitton on its latest journey on a runway Monday night, departing from a virtual station beside a real one, the Gare du Nord.

Louis Vuitton – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Presenting his latest blend of futurism, active sport, techy materials and tongue-in-cheek humor to an audience of 400.
 
Winning prolonged applause for what will surely be judged as one of his best collections for Vuitton. At the finale, greeting First Lady Brigitte Macron in a long embrace as he toured the multi-runway set.

A long and energetic collection staged before a gang of Nicolas’ actress pals – Saoirse Ronan, Alicia Vikander, Lea Seydoux, Jennifer Connelly and Emma Stone.
 
Taking risks with every look, right from the beginning: leather shorts cut like lotus flower-shaped Kiki Bachi basins, paired with transparent Latex dusters. Latex jumpsuits worn over red orchid velour shirts; graphic anoraks with road signage Vuitton logos; or tartan blankets brilliant draped into sexy after-hour saris. For evening, Samurai armor-shaped, knitted-over-vast-folds-of-mille-feuille-chiffon dresses.

Louis Vuitton – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

 
The models dashing about the large triangular atrium, as if desperate not to miss a train, or a lover departing for the weekend. Guests sitting on metallic platform seats.
 
Plus, the bags were something else – violin or mandolin cases in Damier print; or double satchel bags in Vuitton monogram tied around the waist like Uilleann pipes. As were Nicolas’ latest footwear, starring high heels or Chelsea boots wrapped in two-inch thick soles; or ballerinas’ thick socks built into cool new boots.
 
“Recreating the bustling ambience of a Paris train station – where fleeting moments are shared amongst strangers, weaving a tapestry of stories,” was Ghesquière’s explanation.
 
A fleeting moment that ended up becoming a punchy fashion statement.
 

Gabriela Hearst: Neatly neolithic 

An immigrant to America herself, Gabriela Hearst, to her credit, has not forgotten where she came from, and that others like her will want to follow her path.

Gabriela Hearst – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Exiting her latest show in Palais de Tokyo, guests were given a flyer from the ACLU explaining how one should interact with heavies from Immigration and Customs Enforcement at work, or at your door. 
 
Entitled “Know Your Rights”, the flyer offering precise legal advice on how to deal with ICE. Revealing this scourge of all immigrants is spelled L’ice in France, which sort of speaks volumes.
 
Back inside, the audience was able to enjoy a clever, composed and cool collection from Hearst, inspired by the concept of Goddess symbolism. Where ancient and neolithic signage – spirals, zigzags, and snake incisions were the connecting idea of the collection. In the belief that abstract motifs indicate women’s roles as protector and nourisher of humankind.

Gabriela Hearst – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

 
The result was some great looks: opening with a series of strong coats and jackets in leather, often trimmed in treated shearling, whether shaggy or shaved. Few designers drape or tailor leather as effectively as Gabriela, though then again as the daughter of Uruguayan rancher, it’s in her personal DNA. Her sharp blazers and shirts; ever so flared skirts and brilliant gather cocktails were all excellent.
 
In a busy season for Hearst, she also opened a deluxe seven-month-long pop-up in the Bristol Hotel, which will remain open until November 1.
 
Capping off a fine moment, to heavy applause, as she received her ovation in an ACLU cap. Making her humanism apparent at her bow.
 

Zimmermann: Picnic at the Petit Palais

One of fashion’s great recent success stories is the house of Zimmermann, which presented an enticing vision of haute-bohemian chic on a chilly Monday in Paris.

Zimmermann – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Perhaps, the initial thrill of discovering Zimmermann a decade ago in New York has worn off, but Nicky Zimmermann continues to dream up fresh takes on her Optimistic Oz signature style.
 
For next fall, she wants to attire her fans in diaphanous ruffled chiffon or organza dresses.  Semi-sheer, showing lots of underwear and worn with big, hefty boots, their ankles finished with woven leather straps.
 
Entitled, “Hypnotic”this Fall 25 collection drew inspiration from one of Australia’s greatest movies, the eerie fictional Victorian crime story “Picnic at Hanging Rock” about the disappearance of three schoolgirls and a teacher. 
 
“Picnic at Hanging Rock celebrates its 50th anniversary this year… Our collection, like the film, is guided by a mysterious spirit and the haunting, ethereal and romantic qualities of a dream within a dream,” explained designer Nicky Zimmermann.

Zimmermann – Fall-Winter2025 – 2026 – Womenswear – France – Paris – ©Launchmetrics/spotlight

Noting that the use of Victoria guipure and lace; dramatic silhouettes; dusty Outback colors of Australian nature; maps of Mt Macedon; and the pinafores of the schoolgirl’s uniforms.  
 
All told, a highly evocative collection staged with wit and vigor inside the Petit Palais with thespian fans Katie Holmes and Rose Byrne sitting front row.
 
And, with scores of buyers looking very happy in the front row, the latest example of chill and commercial Zimmermann. You see, unlike the boarding school in Picnic at Hanging Rock, which went bankrupt due to the scandal, Zimmermann continues to boom.
 

Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.



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