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Carven Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Carven Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

“We know we’re a small maison, small but mighty,” said Mark Thomas ahead of his headlining debut at Carven. In its 80 years of existence, the house has maintained a lower profile compared to the giants, so amidst some mega runway productions elsewhere, being invited into Carven’s HQ made for an intimate counterpoint. Models started off in the courtyard, walked through the lobby, emerged briefly outside on the Rond Point des Champs-Élysées and finally headed into the store, all white and emptied out like a gallery.

Today was not Thomas’s first show for the brand—he accompanied Louise Trotter through the entirety of her stint at Carven—just his first in the driver’s seat. Now that Trotter has jumped to Bottega Veneta, this collection brings his vision to the fore.

As he sees it, this is the “second chapter” of their combined era, and one of the most noticeable departures was the shift in silhouette focus: his tailoring grazing closer to the body, his states of undress tapping into a more effortlessly Parisian déshabillé.

“It’s a very feminine dial up,” Thomas said, explaining how he applied the notion of a house to the wardrobe itself. Hence the pillowy flip-flops, the lace-edged slip dresses worn over base layers and the theme of French bed linens and tablecloths interpreted as garments—and some of these were edgier as vinyl backed with satin.

Several looks—including a subtle print on silk, a floaty jacquard dress and more generally in some of the undulating shapes—could be traced back to a white orchid that Madame Carven developed with a botanist, Marcel Lecoufle, in 1993. While florals have seemed anathema to the brand’s streamlined aesthetic, these abstracted variations were softy rendered and unobtrusive.

Thomas has a solid eye for outerwear and among standout pieces was the safari-style jacket with zipper accents and ruffled trims that riffed on the sculpted “Esperanto” silhouette, something of a Carven signature along with his summery trenches. Pearls poked out as cufflinks and around the cuffs of cable knits—just the kind of easy embellishment that elevates a look.

Most of all, there was a pleasing sillage—that French term often associated with fragrance and the trail it leaves when someone passes by. Whether the hint of a bra from shirts unbuttoned at the back or trousers constructed with floaty panels, this made the difference between clothes that were a touch sensual versus strict.

The soundtrack revealed how Thomas injected a personal flourish that also reflected the women-forward purpose of the brand. Macca, the host of a breakfast program on NTS radio (a British platform) recorded an introduction that gave way to a wide sampling of female music artists, like listening to someone’s playlist at various points in her day. The tracks conveyed summer yearning, no question, but also a soulful vibe to Carven that hadn’t come through until now.

With the stakes so high this season, Thomas has proven two strengths: welcoming and wearable. While he already benefits from an on-site atelier, with the means to do more, he could really put the house on the map.

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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r.e.m. Beauty Wicked For Good Makeup Collection Review
Fashion

r.e.m. Beauty Wicked For Good Makeup Collection Review

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

I personally consider myself a Glinda rising, Elphaba sun, and Nessarose moon, so I immediately gravitated towards the moody, earthy tones in the Elphaba Makeup Set and the Ozian Forest Eyeshadow Palette. For an everyday fall look, I used a couple matte neutral shades from the palette — a pale beige called “Confusifying,” “Witching Hour” (a warm tan), and “The Grimmerie” (a milk chocolate) in the crease. Then, I applied a plummy lip & cheek tint from the Elphaba set (the shade is “Braverism,” which…love) as a lipstick and blush, and added the glossy balm in the shade Wickedness (a sheer brown with golden-magenta micro glitter) to round out the lip combo. I already happened to be wearing a green cardigan and my hair in a long braid, which totally brought the Elphaba vibes to life.
October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Avenir Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Avenir Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

The last couple of shows that I’ve seen by Avenir, the Berlin-based zero waste upcycling brand by Sophie Claussen and Maximilian Luers, took quotidian reality and made a charming thing of it: a city life tableaux held outside where you didn’t know at first who was walking the show and who was just walking down the street, while another took a more conventional runway format, but did it with the chattering informality of a great book party—you know, the cool crowd who are doubly cool because they actually read.

This past July, instead of staging another show during Berlin Fashion Week, Luers walked me through some key looks in an installation setting, and explained they were going to present spring 2026 for sales during the Paris collections and shoot a lookbook sometime over the summer. If some young brands might have seen that as a slip backwards after the adrenalin (and maybe also, let’s be honest, ego) rush of live shows, not him, and not Claussen: Avenir is a brand that likes to keep it real and talk it real. They’re interested in making things that last, and they want to last—and there’s a refreshing pragmatism about what it might take to get there.

For spring, then, Luers explained, they’d dubbed the collection TALIS, after talisman, with all that implies: something of lasting value and meaning which constantly brings a little magical joy. Luers and Claussen were also, he said, looking to the work of early 20th-century female sculptors, like the German Renée Sintenis. Of course, there’s the prizing of female creativity and talent amidst the male dominated annals of art historical ‘worth’ going on here, yet there was also a more direct connection for Luers. “We had this idea of using the fabric like clay, something very pure in its application for form and volume,” he said. “We were thinking about the pureness of the materials we were using, even if they’re everyday, to make something unique and outstanding and elaborate.”

A case in point: Building on the denim embroidery technique that they had started doing last fall. Essentially, that had meant cutting strips of old, worn denim, sewing them onto a garment in bias or criss-cross striations, though for spring, he said, the idea was to go more fluid, resulting in a body-skimming tank, a lean skirt with fraying edges, or a dress (long and short). All were constructed out of the upcycled denim built onto a base fabric which dissolves in water leaving only the delicate but durable denim behind. It’s a great idea, creating pieces which feel, with the sleight of hand from the disappearing base, light and airy—and also special, a keepsake.

Elsewhere, Avenir offered a distillation of a contemporary wardrobe of clothing which is grounded but can fly a bit with imagination too: “strong and functional,” Luers said, “but also with special details.” They do great trenches, this time around in ice blue, a gauzy softness to it, while another was durable stone bonded cotton. There were oversized shirts, including one, jeans jacket style, in pink drill, with a very bricolage effect of a black and white photo portrait of Sintenis patched onto it, a tad chic but also punkish in spirit.

Wide pants came in silken emerald green or raw denim with circular seams tracing their legs. And, another trademark of theirs, roomy, shrug-it-on blazers, adorned with their signature metal pin which looks for all the world like a tuning fork. Feels appropriate: that’s one way to suggest harmony when today everything is so discordant and chaotic. Avenir may be on the quieter side as a label, but in our ever more clamorous era, that’s a quality not to be underrated.

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Mugler Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Mugler Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

For Mugler’s new creative director Miguel Castro Freitas, the dream of the brand is Paris—but there’s always room in his head (and heart) for Antwerp. Today marked the showing of Freitas’s debut collection, in a shadowy brutalist underground car park in Paris’s hip but with an edge 11eme arrondissement. The venue took me back to the late ’90s, when you knew something conceptual and uncompromising was afoot, usually involving the influx of Belgian designers to the city. (A fantastic and early—1998—Olivier Theyskens show in a dankly menacing industrial space with swinging lightbulbs lives on in my mind.)

For Freitas, the thinking was that the venue would be all the better to showcase, via the power of contrast, his precise and exacting vision of Mugler. That meant the house’s iconic hourglass silhouette—a rolling, exaggerated topography of shoulder, waist and hip—rendered in strict double face wool or satin tailoring in shades of concrete gray and a pinky beige not unlike that of a 1950s T. Leclerc face powder. Freitas also wanted to lean into the exemplary handwork Mugler was once renowned for, and which he is looking to restore to its name: elaborate jeweled bodices, as if you were wearing a chandelier, but denuded of any sparkle and shine by virtue of the fact they’re in the same matte colors of his suiting; and, feathers—from a curvaceous 1940s-esque chubby in frou-frou marabou (like a fantasy of Joan Crawford in Mildred Pierce), to a jacket sprouting exotic plumes, as if the model wearing it was mid transformation from someone human to something avian.

Freitas’s debut lands, of course, amidst a whole slew of new starts, not just in Paris but also Milan. (Twelve, if you’ve been paying attention to Vogue Runway’s leader board—and if you’ve not, you really should!) Given some of the marquee household names involved there’s been a lot of noise, as well as the big question of how a designer makes the brand they’re now leading speak the language of 2025. In Freitas’s case, he’s faced with much the same challenge as Dario Vitale is with Versace: honor and celebrate the incredible legacy of the house you’ve been gifted, but also find a way to add your name above the door, which is not so easy because both houses are blessed with extraordinary and extraordinarily identifiable brand images. If Vitale remixed all the things he loved about Gianni Versace’s work and reimagined it for Gen Z, Freitas instead first found common ground between him and Thierry Mugler via their shared love of the Golden Age of Hollywood. Movies, Freitas said at a preview I had with him a few days before the show and wrote about here, provided him with a theoretical framework for the collection. But then he brought his own aesthetic outlook and preferences to bear on the proceedings. So yes to va-voom Mugler valkyries, but also a resounding yes to the cool nocturnal creatures of fashion’s 1990s era of Flemish deconstruction.

What all of that meant in practice: minimalist second skin body suits with skirts exploding with feathers, or draped in a very mid-century couture manner; exaggerated nip-waist coats and dresses in black patent; and, a scrolled rosette motif on a rather fabulous black leather dress with next spring’s de rigeur off the shoulder décolleté, the neckline standing away from the body as if inflated outwards. What became clear with this first outing of Freitas’s is that we are about to see an awful lot of Mugler walking red carpets the world over: in a gleaming gilded pant suit whose jacket had built in gloves, say, or the Mugler Angel-like silver stars adorning a body suit worn with pin sharp pants, or as a constellation over a sheer draped dress. All very Mugler, and all very Freitas, and all very likely to garner attention. Going forward, though, it would be nice to see him lean into a less conceptualized vision of the brand, because he has the talent and making skills to do so; to let his tailoring still come to the fore but with more of an eye to the everyday life of women, even it’s an exalted version of it. And speaking of; next time let’s get out of the darkness of today’s venue, to shine a light more clearly on Mugler’s new era.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Acne Studios Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Acne Studios Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

“That’s a good look right there—I like that,” said Shawn Stüssy as the first model passed us, and he wasn’t wrong. It was also just the first of many highly-likable looks in this strong Acne Studios collection.

Backstage, Jonny Johansson said that six months ago he’d been thinking about all the sheer dressing he was seeing, and started to go strongly in his own direction. He shaped a collection whose supporting beam was the masculine/feminine. So we saw many excellent womenswear looks that were styled around archetypally masculine pieces, and set on semi-satirically, over-emphasized masculine footwear: tooled leather cowboy boots with extra-extended cutter toes and work boots with swollen uppers.

Oversized blazers came in treated leathers and suedes and paper-effect fabric, over straight-cut high-rise jeans with a generous break. Long-hemmed check shirts were sometimes layered over sheer skirts. An oversized biker with wide whipstitch details was a gorgeous remixed archetype.

Johansson filtered the conventional lens of gendered gaze with gestures that included the cut-out garments whose voids acted as frames for photographic images by artist Pacifico Silano. Corseted and girdled womenswear, its silhouette pushed out away from the body, was papered over with jigsaw-like irregular patches of lace: these brittle cocoons of femininity made for a sly, raised-eyebrow critique to the conventional pendulum of opposition in gender-defined dressing. Another gag were the gaudy and chunky crystal earrings worn with some of the most hyper-masculine looks.

Johansson’s fellow Swede Robyn contributed a soundtrack that started with a version of “Robotboy” and then spiraled into a fantastic deconstructed ear-smacking sonic soup. The set, all wood veneer walls and brown carpet, was made to look like a cigar box: “I wanted something ultra-traditional to represent this never ending story, and why I was questioning it,” said Johansson. This was a clever collection that he was also smart enough to ensure remained highly wearable.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Casablanca Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Casablanca Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Little wonder that during this show Casablanca’s CEO Fred Lukoff was wreathed in smiles and chair-jacking like he’d been transported to the Sound Factory Bar circa 1993. The brand he operates pulled off a great coup today, partnering with “Little” Louie Vega to premier “Lift Me Up,” a new track that designer Charaf Tajer reported backstage will be released in collaboration with the brand.

Vega stood behind the decks at the end of the American Cathedral’s aisle-runway, framed by a mirrored backdrop and the gospel choir that delivered his vocals with roof-raising oomph. The building was not made for deep bass and the punchy delivery of the ear-trumpet Void Acoustics Air Motions (the high hat was echoing like crazy) but to watch Vega, a master at work, was uplifting indeed.

His involvement framed a collection set around clubbing. Backstage Tajer, who years ago, with Pain O Chokolat operated the Paris club Le Pompon, said the best night out of his life was last season’s closing party at Amnesia in Ibiza. He added: “I’ve been getting into house for a few years now. So basically we wanted to tell a story about house music, but we didn’t know where to start: rock ’n’ roll has its own looks, hip hop has its own looks but house doesn’t so much, you know?”

Part of that is because house started out as an underground art form before ricocheting around the world. But over the decades, house—now a very broad church—has welcomed many typologies of character under its roof. You could spot some of them in Casablanca’s collection today: the DJ booth diva closing look; the ’90s Cream kitten in a knit pink romper; the business-minded geezer with no visible source of income in a many-pocketed parka and bucket hat; the Manumission performer in her tactical harness; the money man in his progressively pocketed black tailoring, and so on.

More broadly Tajer created prints and jacquards inspired by different stages of club flyer aesthetic and presented many versions of his probably strong-selling going-out tracksuit. Vega’s involvement and that clubbing context lent this collection a causal reason to be: that made it one of the most effective Casablanca sessions in recent seasons.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Tom Ford Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Tom Ford Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Haider Ackermann has found his place. There’s only one Tom Ford, but Ackermann shares the brand founder’s flair for the cinematic, and he directs his models like they were actors on a movie set. “I told them I want them to seduce. They’re aware they’re seducing, but they act as if they’re not aware of it—it’s all this kind of game,” he said backstage in the quiet before the show began.

They certainly didn’t move like models on other runways, with their unsmiling, bored faces and their wiggleless hips. Ackermann’s girls and boys slithered and slinked their way up a glossy dark blue set, trying for eye contact with the audience, or casting side glances at their fellow catwalkers. Erin O’Connor and Scott Barnhill, in hers and his navy silk suits and matching slicked-back haircuts, put their arms around each other, like old friends or new lovers. David Bowie was singing about lovers in a searing acapella version of “Heroes” on the soundtrack.

“It’s all about a midnight swim,” Ackermann shared. “In the summer I like to take a dive in the ocean at midnight. I think that’s the most dangerous and sexy thing in the world.” Those are two qualities Ford would co-sign. He’d likely also appreciate the patent leather pieces laser-cut with tiny slits that looked like they’d taken a dip in the ocean too. Though there were no straight-up bathing suits, there was more bare skin here than at Ackermann’s debut last season. On the girls, little triangle bra tops stood in for shirts; and on the boys, jockstraps were clearly visible beneath teeny sheer shorts.

With their wire construction, evening numbers defied gravity, the single strap of an asymmetric long dress arching over the shoulders to cup the opposite breast. Others challenged decorum à la Rudi Gernreich’s monokini and an Ackermann collection of old (see spring 2011) featuring topless dresses suspended via the barest of strings from somewhere south of the navel. Ackermann has quickly mastered Ford’s signature panache, but here he let his own distinctive style shine through.

And then there was the color—lime green, baby pink, and mint satin pantsuits; draped dresses and skirts in orange and pool blue; all of it standing out all the more in the so deep-blue-it’s-almost-black of the show space. For the finale, Ackermann cranked up the smoke machine, a signature move of his own from way back. Consider us seduced.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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OG box office collection day 7: Pawan Kalyan-starrer crosses 160 crore mark, makers celebrate film's success
Bollywood

OG box office collection day 7: Pawan Kalyan-starrer crosses 160 crore mark, makers celebrate film’s success

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Published on: Oct 01, 2025 10:20 pm IST

OG box office collection day 7: Pawan Kalyan was praised by the cast and crew for his dedication at the success meet of the film.

OG box office collection day 7: Sujeeth’s gangster film They Call Him OG has shown a strong performance at the box office in its first week, since its release in theatres nationwide on 25 September, with paid premieres on 24 September. The Pawan Kalyan-starrer has crossed the ₹160 crore mark in India in just seven days, according to the latest update. The makers held a success meet of the film in Hyderabad today, with Pawan Kalyan in attendance. (Also read: ₹275 cr; beats Empuraan, Sitaare Zameen Par lifetime”>OG worldwide box office collection day 6: Pawan Kalyan film crosses ₹275 cr; beats Empuraan, Sitaare Zameen Par lifetime)

OG box office collection day 7: Pawan Kalyan plays a gangster named Ojas Gambheera in the Sujeeth film.

OG box office update

As per the latest update on Sacnilk, OG collected ₹ 5.96 crore on its seventh day of release. The film showed a slight dip in collections during the week days, but it has still managed to hold on to the momentum, given there has been strong word of mouth praise for it. OG opened with ₹ 21 crore, and saw a massive Thursday, collecting ₹63 crore- its highest single-day haul so far. Taking Wednesday’s collections into account, the film’s total collection after six days is ₹160.81 crore.

About OG

OG tells the story of a samurai named Ojas Gambheera (Pawan) who travels to India during the Second World War and grows up to become Satya Dada’s (Prakash Raj) right-hand man. He gives it all up due to an unforeseen incident and leads an idyllic life with Kanmani (Priyanka Mohan) and their daughter Tara before circumstances force him to pick up his katana again. The film ends by teasing a sequel which will explore more of OG’s story.

At the success meet, Pawan’s co-star Sriya Reddy praised him and said, “Pawan Kalyan sir encourages women. As a woman, I feel we’re not supported by men as much as we deserve. Then comes someone like Pawan sir… He’s not insecure about me taking center stage in a scene. I am in awe of him.”

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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Ganni Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Ganni Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Ganni choosing a presentation over a catwalk show for spring was not only unexpected; it was arguably an even more rebellious move than jumping from the Copenhagen calendar—where the brand became known for its blow-out shows—to the Paris one. “I think every time people do something that’s a little bit unexpected, it’s just interesting,” said creative director Ditte Reffstrup. Choosing this way of showing, she explained, was “a big change, and we’re not saying that we are not going to go back to [the runway], but it’s our third time in Paris and everything is on such a fast track. I really wanted to try to take this collection a little bit more slow. I really wanted people to be able to see the actual product and see the craft qualities and the details.”

Visitors to the exhibition at the Bastille Design Center, an industrial building dating to the 19th century, were greeted by dressed wooden mannequins standing among flowers. Behind them played a dreamy movie meant to evoke a sense of summers past, captured in blurred images as if seen from a moving vehicle—“fragments of a dream,” as the designer put it. At the top of the stairs was a wall of bags and on the second floor the collection was presented, again on wooden mannequins, styled less dramatically. Even so, the pieces defied expectation.

Reffstrup carried on with the warped floral prints introduced last season, and added a leopard one: she said they capture the feeling of time passing, and the way memory alters things. This season’s double-belted trench had an extravagant pannier-like volume; its belled shape was that of a tulip, in keeping with Reffstrup’s desire to explore “the flower universe.” Dense appliqués of flowers on denim, and crochet pieces with dimensional blooms looked heavy; the less literally flower-like pieces were more sophisticated and had less of a loving hands at home feeling. “Posy,” Ganni’s take on a gardening bag, looked poised to be a hit. A khaki dress in recycled patent was smocked in such a way that the usual puckers took the form of flowers. A white printed dress was given a crinkle treatment so it resembled peeling wallpaper, a sort of manifestation of those dream fragments the designer had mentioned. “I’m always a very nostalgic person, but especially when the world is a little bit rocky or noisy, I’m always longing to go back. So the whole journey to this collection has really been to dive into the childhood memories,” said Reffstrup, who traces the birth of her creativity to the free summer days she happily passed in a seaside town in Jutland.

Clogs were the most typical Scandi element. There were few monochrome looks; these included a drop-waisted gray dress, and its sibling, an off the shoulder buttoned top, lined in a print fabric with jeans. The Nordic region is known for layering, but what was on show was of a different kind entirely, with bandeau tops worn over everything from a red satin dress to a crinkled organza jacket. Most looks featured trailing scarves that fell from shoulder straps, or otherwise embraced the body. “I think there have been so many seasons now where it has all been so muted and simple, and I have this need of exploring a more feminine side,” said Reffstrup, adding “this is for sure not dressing up for a man, this is really dressing up for you.”

There was another dress-up aspect to this collection, too: That of standing in front of a mirror, often in borrowed clothes, and knotting and belting them not only to adjust the fit but as a way to arrive at one’s personal style. There was a physicality to many of the pieces, which were pulled and tied, that really was best appreciated up close and personal.

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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Stella McCartney Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Stella McCartney Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

I was just thinking about how good so many of Stella McCartney’s guests looked in their Stella McCartney, which you can’t say of every brand’s front row, when one of them, Helen Mirren—Helen Mirren! I was beside myself, fanboying like crazy—got up dressed in her Stella suit, and black square-toed Stella pumps, a microphone in her hand, and began to speak. “Here come old flat-top, he come groovin’ up slowly, he got ju-ju eyeball, he one holy roller…” Mirren intoned. Oh hang on, I know this. It’s…. “He say, ‘I know you, you know me, one thing I can tell you is you got to be free….’” No, really, I do. It’s… it’s…. “Come together, right now, over me.” Well, duh, of course: It’s “Come Together” by The Beatles.

A look at the always informative The Stella Times, the newspaper McCartney distributes at every show, told us that come together is, yes, a double entendre—this is Stella McCartney, people, and as a Brit, I am here for her Brit humor. Yet more importantly for McCartney, the idea of come together is a statement about the uniting of people, and of us with the natural world, and from there, into McCartney’s own world, of fashion, and how its oppositions—masculine/feminine, structure/softness, rebellion and romance—can, and need to, co-exist.

McCartney’s collection played to all of this: The now McCartney-classic snappy wide shouldered suiting, some of it scissored away at the sides of the jackets, loosening up even more her roomy silhouette; the peplum shirts over wiiiiiide utility pants; softly Grès-like draped evening dresses dramatically contrasted with sculpted bodices; and, more of her brilliant (in both senses of the word) biodegradable sequins splashed over a jacket atop slouched up denims, or embellishing the front of cotton drill pants worn with a supersized tee.

Elsewhere, perusing McCartney’s paper also gave some background on two of the strongest elements of the collection: the jeans and the feathers. For the former, she used denim, woven with PURETECH, which, the notes said, “literally cleans the air we breathe.” It’s a material which could have uses, and implications, beyond fashion—though for now, its use in the standout jeans, one pair in striations of different blues, another with a curving back panel which looked like a denim jacket had been knotted at the waist, was very satisfying. As for the feathers, well, they weren’t. They were Fevvers, a plant based feather alternative, and lovely they looked, too, on Alex Consani, who fluttered down the runway to close the show in a strapless column dress in purple eco-plumage.

Of course, division is all we seem to live, breathe and experience these days, a gloomy, despondency-inducing state of affairs, and yes, you can say what good does raising this at a fashion do. But I for one am glad McCartney did; a rare acknowledgement that things are really quite desperate and dreadful, but speaking about it doesn’t detract from also celebrating creativity, and reminding us of some much needed joy and lightness. Quite the opposite. Come together, indeed.

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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