In a day that descended into dirty teeming rainy, Paris was treated to four memorable collection by five non-French designers: American Lazaro Hernandez and Jack McCollough’s debut at Loewe, Harris Reed at Nina Ricci, Sarah Burton at Givenchy and Victoria Beckham.
Loewe: The American friends debut with brio
Another day, another debut. This time it was the turn of the American Lazaro Hernandez and Jack McCollough with a tight, cohesive modernist statement for the house of Loewe that was a considerable hit.
By any standards, this was tricky debut, seeing as they followed Jonathan Anderson, who had made Loewe into the hottest show in Paris before departing for Dior, where he debuted on Wednesday.
It turned out that Jack and Lazaro were up to the test, creating a polished primary-color collection, whose key was the 1989 painting by Ellsworth Kelly – “Yellow Panel with Red Curve“, in canary yellow and crimson – that graced the entrance to the show.
Prior to joining Loewe, Jack and Lazaro founded and led Proenza Schouler in New York for two decades, and the collection was very much a meeting of Manhattan and Madrid. Though its key element was the experimental use of leather, the main DNA of this Spanish label.
Sending out ragged suede in some great new jeans, tops or dashing jerkins, or cutting stiff dramatic chess piece style jackets and blazers in hyper iron rawhide, made in glaringly bright shiny primary leather – cobalt blue, dazzling orange, forest green. Detailing with several versions of the brand logo, from curly to block script.
Leather made in multiple layers almost like a malleable plywood, “or a layered cake,” smiled Jack backstage. There were super flowing dresses, or asymmetrical gowns in this leaf-like leather in silhouettes, which those of us who attended Proenza Schouler shows will not have been unfamiliar with.
They also dreamed up another eye-popping new suede, which looked like toweling fabric – cut into wrap around mini dresses that had great appeal. And raised smiles with a couple of leather bags cut to look like a bunch of cockles.
“I think right now there is so much sadness in the world, that we need color, light, optimism and positivity,” added Lazaro, in huddle of editors, as waiters ferried by trays of champagne.
For their entrance into Loewe, the duo created an all-white show space, a looming tent inside Cité Université, a giant campus on the southern ring road of Paris. Guests sat on angle benches made in ceramic tiles, the ceiling cut with slanted factory windows.
The cast – maintaining the house’s reputation for a fresh cabine of models – striding energetically around, more like New York career gals than pampered Parisians. All backed up by an energetic soundtrack by ace DJ Frédéric Sanchez that mashed up “Dame Eso” by John Heaven and “Black Naga” by Pachanga Boys.
Before the famously popular duo took their bow to a prolonged standing ovation.
Nina Ricci: Foxy ladies
There is a learning curve in fashion when comes to working in Paris. Harris Reed is apparently on a rapid upward march.
That’s the incontrovertible evidence from his latest show for the house of Nina Ricci, a fully-fledged tour of Rock Olympia, with goddesses, groovy grand dames and the odd well-heeled groupie.
Presented inside France’s most famous university – La Sorbonne – the collection was smartly juxtaposed to the cut-stone, grand marble and gilded ironwork.
Reed certainly knows how to drive a Paris atelier and on his own terms. Kicking off this show with a babe Contessa in black silk jacquard spinning top look, the blouse cut deep, deep gorge, the dress diaphanous. Indeed, practically every blouse was open to the navel.
He wants Ricci gals next spring to turn heads in bronze satin pants suits; or a great series of mannish sequinned jackets in hues of burnt coffee of cobalt blue. Skirts came flippy and finished at the knee with lace inserts, always anchored in big python boots with brass heels.
For evening, he favors sequin or velvet dressing gowns worn open over semi-sheer chiffon polkadot cocktails or pants. One regretted not seeing more of his tougher tailoring, like a superb frack finished with frogging.
In a tight show, Harris got a decent burst of applause from his audience – half of him whom looked like influencers. Reed’s range is certainly narrow, but what he does, he does well. Plus, after a debut show that seemed like a fashion pastiche, this collection had oodles of seductive chic. He has been learning.
Givenchy: Sexy drama and more
There is a new refined sense of seduction sweeping through fashion now. If you want it dark and diabolical, then Givenchy is your house of choice next spring.
Givenchy Spring/Summer 2026 collection in Paris – Courtesy
Working lots of tough, chic black leather, Givenchy’s creative director Sarah Burton whipped up some real sizzle: from batwing leotards and little black dresses to wicked gents’ coat dresses cut décolleté.
Moving into rock goddess moments with a dynamic black rawhide flight jacket with double zip trim. Plus, she had men and women in the audience audibly go “whoarrrr” when a truly voluptuous new bombshell Emeline Hoarau steamed by in black pocketed leather skirt and push-up bra. The temperature seemed to increase several degrees after that passage. A runway-star-is-born moment everyone suddenly realized they badly needed.
“Peeling back the structure of tailoring to reveal skin and a sense of lightness and ease – and then exploring the female vocabulary of dress and undress,” explained Sarah in her program note.
Givenchy Spring/Summer 2026 collection in Paris – Givenchy
Her tailoring was crisp and clean: statuesque white fine wool double-breasted pants suits or the perfect slimline corporate suit. Plus, Burton played with the single most famous Givenchy item, the Bettina blouse, though with shirting. A snappy officer’s version with pocket and exaggerated shoulders worn by Eva Herzigová, or an Asian beauty in a wonderfully sculpted oversized aristo shirt.
And like in her assured debut in March, the show was packed with great accessories and costume jewelry. Broken star or oversized pearl necklaces; graphic oblong earrings; or studded bracelets.
Her footwear was erratic, impressing with some great leather pumps covered in leather petals, but confusing with the overuse of patent leather mops as shoes.
Givenchy Spring/Summer 2026 collection in Paris – Courtesy
However, at times it felt as if Burton was trying too hard with a half-dozen pleated chiffon and fishnet concoctions – exposing underwear underneath and the models’ figures. Plus, one cavewoman bra and skirt combo was nothing short of unfathomable. Looks several of the cast clearly didn’t love.
A slightly erratic performance yes, yet one with great gusto. Staged before Napoleon’s tomb in a pristine white circular room, in contrast to the harsh gray rain that greeted guests as they exited.
Victoria Beckham: Crusin’ insouciantly in the cloister
Victoria Beckham is on a roll. Next Thursday her three-part documentary debuts on Netflix. This Friday she staged a slinky, sexy and sophisticated collection inside the cloisters of Val-de-Grâce
Sacred with the profane, in a collection which showed her growing as a designer. The key to the collection were the very feminine dresses – especially a mid-section of slip dresses. Cunningly constructed with hidden inner rims; trimmed with lace or gathered up with crochet strips. Granting the dresses a novel asymmetry and making them swing ever so slightly and sensually.
“I think having a teenage daughter, I am attracted to a certain naivety and I think we see that throughout this collection,” said Beckham.
With rain teeming outside, DJ Michel Gaubert galvanized the mood by kicking off the show with the theme music from “Knight Ridder”, and the cast all seemed to respond with plenty of strut.
Victoria also upped the ante technically – showing a trio of sculpted tops covered in hand sprayed on rooster feathers. While her tailoring was also impeccable, starring overlong trousers and mannish double-breasted, worn with T-shirts.
“I live in T-shirts myself and am always looking for the perfect hot vest. Which is why we should them with suits,” said Victoria, in a post-show backstage chat.
Seconds later husband David, politely interrupted, “Darling,” he said, passing her a glass of red wine. Both then drank in happy celebration.
Once the target of mocking UK tabloid headlines as her fashion house slipped into the red during growing pains, Beckham could be forgiven for schadenfreude today. Her house has enjoyed double digit growth this past decade, guided by French luxe management partners, comfortably breaking though annual sales of £100 million.
Expect the Netflix series to significantly boost revenues, especially in Victoria’s beauty business, which the house had the chutzpah and brains to develop themselves without a license.
“Making the documentary has made me really think about who I am as a designer. To question what we want to do and continually stretch ourselves as a team. And that is probably a very good thing,” she concluded.
Add designer to Jaden Smith’s considerable list of professions- along with actor, singer, and rapper- after the Californian creator dreamed up an impressive Dadaist display for his debut at Christian Louboutin.
Jaden Smith’s take on the world of Christian Louboutin – FashionNetwork.com
Evoking a whole plethora of influences from Greek mythology and the Great Paris Exhibitions to Dadaism and the great movement for Civil Rights, in an elaborate set in a disused warehouse in Montparnasse. Mount Parnassus, you will recall, was the home to nine muses in arts and sciences.
Two fine works of footwear even had Greek names: The Plato Loafer, a 2017 model with Swisscheese like holes, which Smith updates with the new Neo CL signature on a steel silver coin. And the Asclepius Sling- named after the ancient god of medicine- with the same emblematic coin detail and metallic hardware on the backstrap.
“I brought my personal interest on Greek mythology in as I thought it would resonate with people, as humans at the end of the day are all very similar. I’m combining my perspective of being an African American designer, linked to my more Dadaist thinking into the heritage of a French maison,” explained courteous 27-year-old.
Mythology meets luxury – FashionNetwork.com
Close by stood a Nam June Paik worthy mound of TVs, with video showing images of Martin Luther King’s 1963 March on Washington, The Sphinx, and clips from Dadaist filmmaker Hans Richter.
“That art piece is about the overdose of information we experience. This revolution that we are in the midst of right now. And the fact that information is being thrown at us all the time. And the psychological effects of looking at 10 screens at the one time. While also drawing correlations between my ancestry and Christian’s ancestry, and the history of art,” said Smith, attired in a giant gangster jeans, an oversized parka and pearl encrusted beanie.
Another installation was a broken temple with fluted columns on which were perched Jaden’s new bags. Notably a series of humungous backpacks and biker satchels, some with a dozen exterior zippered pockets with gold lettering reading- coins, pills, keys, tools, phone, documents, phones, and chargers. Alongside a surrealist tote finished like a bucket of overflowing paint and a Dadaist style back made in a black and white photo of an urban madding crowd.
Creator Jaden Smith – FashionNetwork.com
The whole space was dubbed Christian Louboutin Men’s Exhibition, as a small group of models bathed, inevitably, in red light, circulated wearing the new footwear and bags. Large red fabric rolls made into benches allowed one to enjoy a large video montage, including Jaden as a Wagnerian hero posed in front of gothic castles. Which is where we spotted founder Christian Louboutin, in a video stirring a large vat of red paint, before symbolically handing over a paintbrush to Jaden.
“It’s about craftmanship, extreme luxury, and highest level of design. That’s what Christian Louboutin is all about,” said Smith, describing the brand’s DNA.
Eyebrows were raised when Christian appointed Jaden to the position of creative director, as Parisian designers with two decades long CVs gritted their teeth that an untrained talent got such a coveted position. However, judging by this display, Jaden Smith has the chops, talent, and grace to be very effective in this role.
One suspects the gods of style and time are probably rather pleased.
To coincide with Milan Fashion Week, the S|STYLE 2025- Denim Lab is setting up at Fondazione Sozzani for an edition devoted to the future of sustainable denim and water management in the textile industry. Led by the S|STYLE Sustainable Style platform, founded in 2020 by independent journalist and curator Giorgia Cantarini, this initiative forms part of an ongoing programme of research and experimentation into responsible innovations applied to contemporary fashion.
Designers brought together for the S|STYLE 2025 – Denim Lab project – Denim Lab
The exhibition, open to the public on September 27 and 28, features a site-specific art installation by Mariano Franzetti, crafted from recycled and regenerative denim. Conceived as an immersive experience, it brings fashion design, technological innovation and artistic expression into dialogue.
Water: a central issue in fashion sustainability
Developed in collaboration with Kering‘s Material Innovation Lab (MIL), the Denim Lab brings together a selection of young international designers invited to create a denim look using low-impact materials and processes. They benefit from technical support and access to textiles developed with innovative technologies aimed at significantly reducing water consumption, chemical use, and the carbon footprint of denim production.
This edition places water at its core, an essential issue for a fabric whose production has traditionally demanded substantial volumes of water, from cotton cultivation through to dyeing and finishing. Denim therefore serves as an emblematic testing ground, both familiar and closely associated with the environmental challenges facing the fashion industry.
Outfit created for the Denim Lab by designer Gisèle Ntsama, one of the participants – Maison Gisèle
The fabrics were developed by PureDenim Srl, a specialist in low-impact dyeing techniques, while treatments and finishes were applied by Tonello Srl, a recognised leader in sustainable washing and finishing technologies. The selected designers, from Europe, Asia, and Africa, each offer a distinctive interpretation of denim, blending formal exploration, textile innovation and reflection on the contemporary uses of clothing.
Next has won the bidding race to take over the Russell & Bromley premium footwear business, ending almost a century-and-a-half of family ownership.
Russell & Bromley
Working with bidding partner and stock clearance specialist Retail Realisation, it’s set to takeover the 147-year-old retailer under a pre-pack administration deal.
Crucially, it means 33 of the company’s standalone stores/outlets and nine concessions (many of them in Fenwicks branches) are likely to eventually close.
The extent of the challenges Russell & Bromley faced can be seen from the fact that this is only a £2.5 million cash deal. Next is also paying £1.3 million for some of the retailer’s current stock with Retail Realisation handling the clearance of the rest.
Assuming the deal gets court approval on Wednesday afternoon, Next will own the intellectual property and just three of the stores.
Those stores are in London’s Chelsea and Mayfair, as well as the Bluewater shopping centre in Kent. Interestingly, that Bluewater store is just a stone’s throw away from the former House of Fraser branch that this year will reopen as a Next megastore.
The remaining stores and concessions will continue to trade for “as long as [they] can” as Interpath’s Will Wright and Chris Pole “assess options for them”. Russell & Bromley currently has around 440 employees.
A source close to another bidder, Auralis, told The Times it was disappointing that its offer, which aimed to safeguard jobs and stores, wasn’t given greater priority by those running the sale.
Russell & Bromley CEO Andrew Bromley called the sale decision a “difficult” one but insisted it’s “the best route to secure the future for the brand… we would like to thank our staff, suppliers, partners and customers for their support throughout our history”.
So what are Next’s plans now. That’s not clear. There had been a lot of attention focused on its likelihood of closing the store chain in the run-up to the sale but on Wednesday, Next said that it will “build on the legacy” of the business and “provide the operational stability and expertise to support Russell & Bromley’s next chapter”.
Next had also been reported to be eyeing a similar deal for LK Bennett, but Sky News reported that it has stepped away from this.
It remains one of the most acquisitive retailers on the UK high street, however, and in recent years has bought brands such as Cath Kidston, Joules, FatFace, Made and Seraphine. It also has deals to handle other key brands in the UK market such as Gap, Victoria’s Secret and Laura Ashley.