Paris is expecting one of the quietest haute couture seasons in memory — devoid of shows by Dior, Gaultier or Valentino and of any major debut, albeit as the parallel high jewelry season continues to expand rapidly.
In the wake of Maria Grazia Chiuri’s departure from Dior and her successor Jonathan Anderson’s decision to concentrate on menswear with his acclaimed open show in June, the house is skipping the season. Valentino is also taking a break, robbing the calendar of another one of its favorites.
Furthermore, Jean Paul Gaultier — following the appointment of Duran Lantink as the founder’s ultimate successor in April — has brought to a halt its much-admired strategy of staging a couture collection designed by a visiting guest talent.
Balenciaga will stage the final collection by its departing creative director Demna, who leaves to take over as designer of Gucci, another brand within the troubled Kering luxury empire.
“Balenciaga by Demna” retrospective. – Courtesy of Balenciaga.
Informed couture fans will certainly profit from next week in Paris to see “Balenciaga by Demna,” a résumé exhibition curated by Demna of 101 selected hits from his decade at the house from 2015–2025 — staged at Kering’s headquarters inside the historic Laennec landmark on rue de Sèvres on the Left Bank. A highly impressive display of design codes, volumes, silhouettes and attitudes that have defined the Georgia-born designer’s unique oeuvre.
“Balenciaga by Demna” includes a catalog, designed like a glossy fashion magazine, and the complete collection of all his Balenciaga cool conceptual show invites. It is on view from June 26 through July 9 and is open to the public. His invitation to Balenciaga this season is a spool of golden wire thread, and his final Paris fête will be in Maxim’s. Maurice Chevalier would have approved.
Two ready-to-wear houses have jumped on the bandwagon to stage shows on Sunday, July 6: Patou in the evening and Celine at 2 p.m. In effect, the debut of Michael Rider at Celine may well turn out to be the biggest show of the week — though he has a very hard act to follow, seeing as his predecessor Hedi Slimane tripled annual sales to over €2 billion in his seven-year tenure.
The season also boasts shows by critically acclaimed couturiers, from avant-gardists like Iris Van Herpen and Viktor & Rolf to classicists such as Elie Saab and Giambattista Valli, and fresh talent like Julie de Libran, Ashi Studio and Yuima Nakazato.
The couture season, which runs from Monday, July 7 to Thursday, July 10, features a respectable 24 houses on the official calendar, including double shows by Armani Privé and Chanel. The latter will be the final show designed by an in-house studio. The house’s new designer, Matthieu Blazy, stages his first show in October.
Though in a sense, Chanel has already kicked off the season with a dazzling display of haute joaillerie inside its Place Vendôme boutique and showroom on Friday afternoon. It turned out to be a brilliant display, containing the final collection of the house’s elegantly skilled jewelry designer Patrice Leguéreau, who died last November. A meeting of three key elements in Coco Chanel’s DNA — stars, wings and her favorite symbol, the lion — it marked a brilliant creative adieu by Leguéreau. The presentation featured multiple highlights, such as the “Wings of Chanel” diamond necklace, centered around a 19.55-carat sapphire and priced at €11 million.
“Wings of Chanel” high jewelry necklace from the Reach for the Stars collection. – Courtesy of Chanel.
More than a decade ago, the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode, French fashion’s governing body, designated the final day of couture to high-end jewelry — when star brands of the caliber of Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron would stage private viewings and exclusive dinners. Subsequently, couture has been invaded by international jewelry brands and the jewelry divisions of top fashion labels, fighting for attention when thousands of VIP clients, hundreds of editors and scores of influence peddlers are in Paris.
The array is impressive — from Damiani, the Italian luxury jeweler that celebrated its centenary last year, to Serendipity, from the talented Chinese jeweler Christine Chen, which will be shown in Musée Guimet, Paris’ key museum of Asian art. Or one can go to Sotheby’s Paris HQ where Greek creator Niko Koulis will present 30 exceptional pieces and 10 event-specific creations in a debut selling exhibition.
The more commercially inclined will attend David Yurman’s couture breakfast at his rue Saint-Honoré showroom. Others will seek out the debut of yet another jeweler: Sahag Arslanian. The third generation of a family of diamond experts with over 70 years of legacy rooted in Antwerp, Arslanian will officially launch his own first high jewelry collection.
Part of a week where the best-heeled women in the world converge on Paris to acquire the most elegant and expensive creations the City of Light can offer.
Safilo has confirmed that it will not make a binding offer to acquire British business Inspecs Group plc. The Italian eyewear group disclosed this following the announcement made on December 10 by Inspecs, noting Bidco 1125 Limited’s proposal to acquire it at a price of 84 pence per share.
Safilo
The Padua-based global eyewear company had expressed interest last October in acquiring Inspecs, making an initial approach to the UK-based eyewear designer, manufacturer, and distributor in relation to a potential acquisition of its Eschenbach Group and BoDe assets. Safilo subsequently made two possible non-binding cash offers to acquire the entire issued and to be issued share capital of Inspecs. Both proposals were rejected by Inspecs.
Today Safilo issued an announcement pursuant to Rule 2.8 of the Takeover Code. Accordingly, the company stated that, unless the Panel consents, Safilo (together with any persons acting in concert) will be subject to the restrictions set out in Rule 2.8. These restrictions include, among other things, that for a period of six months Safilo may not announce an offer or possible offer for Inspecs, nor acquire any interest in Inspecs shares that, in aggregate, would confer 30% or more of the voting rights in the British company.
However, Safilo pointed out that, pursuant to Note 2 of Rule 2.8 of the Takeover Code, it reserves the right to depart from these restrictions should certain circumstances arise: if a third party (other than Bidco 1125) announces a firm intention to make an offer for Inspecs; if Inspecs announces a proposed waiver of Rule 9 (relating to the obligation to make a mandatory takeover offer) subject to the approval of independent shareholders, or a reverse takeover (as defined in the Takeover Code); or if the Takeover Panel determines that there has been a material change of circumstances.
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NARS Cosmetics has revealed Kaia Gerber as its newest global brand ambassador, saying she’s a “beauty and fashion icon [and] a longtime collaborator” of founder and creative director, François Nars.
Kaia Gerber by François Nars
She certainly adds a newsworthy element to any brand she fronts having walked the runways for the biggest global designer labels as well as appearing on the covers of the world’s top glossy magazines.
She’s been in demand by high end and mass-market labels this year and in May was announced as Mango’s latest face in a deal that the retailer called a “collaboration” set to run throughout the year. Two months earlier she’d appeared with her mother Cindy Crawford for Mango’s rival Zara with the duo headlining a new session of its ‘Zara Streaming’ initiative.
She makes her debut for NARS with the launch of a campaign shot by François Nars for the new Afterglow Lip Balm. That product launches in January and continues the trend for high-end brands diving deep into a once-humble category and backing their launches with major campaigns.
Shiseido-owned NARS has been expanding in recent periods and only in October announced a strategic partnership with Indian giant Reliance Retail’s omnichannel business Tira to boost accessibility in the country. Gerber’s presence is likely to be a boost for its growth plans.
François Nars said of her: “Kaia is a true beauty, a supermodel of today who carries with her the spirit of another era. Working with her on this campaign felt like stepping back into the age of the original icons. Those supermodels were more than faces; what I always loved about them was their joy. They loved the camera, the artistry of makeup and hair, and fashion itself. Most importantly, they gave everything in front of the camera, pouring their energy into creating the most beautiful images possible. Kaia has that same spirit and photographing her was like reliving the magic—one of the very things that made me fall in love with this industry in the first place.”
NudeProject is advancing its European expansion. The Spanish urban fashion brand has added Germany to the list of markets in which it has a retail presence: on Friday December 12, it opened a store on Alte Schönhauser Straße in Berlin.
New Nude Project store in Berlin – Nude Project
The store is the brand’s first permanent location in the German capital, although it tested the market in the city last spring with a pop-up. With this opening, Nude Project now operates four international brick-and-mortar stores, alongside existing locations in Milan, Lisbon, and Amsterdam. In October, the brand crossed the Atlantic to make its first foray into US retail with a temporary pop-up in Miami.
Founded in 2019 by Bruno Casanovas and Alex Benlloch, the firm has become a phenomenon among younger consumers and has progressively expanded its catalogue in recent years, spanning both womenswear and menswear, as well as accessories.
Collaborations are a key part of the brand’s identity; in fact, it has just unveiled a new capsule with Playboy, its third joint launch. In financial terms, it reported revenue of €26 million in the 2023 financial year (the most recent figures available).
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