Villa Malaparte. Jacquemus AW24

Another season, another postcard show by Jacquemus presented in a very Jacquemus-esque location. We’ve had lavender fields in the south of Provence, we went to a beach in Hawaii and visited Fondation Maeght near the idyllic Saint-Paul-de-Vence. Yesterday, the French designer flew his muses and friends to Capri and drove them to the flame-red Villa Malaparte to be exact. Designed by Adalberto Libera for Curzio Malaparte, starring in Jean-Luc Godard’s “Le Mépris” and once photographed by Karl Lagerfeld for a coffee-table book, this place is charged with history and a certain art-centric aura. Did Simon Porte Jacquemus do this place justice via his new season clothes? The designer has a tendency to scout highly-photogenic locations and create a masterful marketing ploy around it that certainly fuels an instant selling boost of his brand. If that strategy didn’t do commercial wonders, he wouldn’t repeat it each season. But the actual clothes tend to meander and stumble, being largely disconnected from the location except for a couple of architectural, yet flat-looking silhouettes, and the fluffy coat-dress that visually reassembled the bathrobe Brigitte Bardot wore in the aforementioned Godard film. I also didn’t feel Capri-ness in this collection. Everything looked quite stiff, even over-calculated, lacking a sense of sprezzatura. While menswear had daring moments – like tops derived from sailor’s smocks or really good looking pants with sharp pleats – womenswear was rather uninspiring and repetitive, focusing on flowing sack-dresses and hourglass silhouette that made the models look too covered-up. One can’t not respect what Jacquemus built: a successful, independent brand that’s based on a childhood dream. But I wish the designer was more of a designer when it comes to his fashion. 

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Haute Consumption. Balenciaga Resort 2025

Balenciaga went to Shanghai for resort 2025, and while looking at the show unfold on Museum of Art Pudong’s riverside pier, I couldn’t help but wonder: are the far-fetched destination cruise shows as exciting as they used to be a decade ago? The heavy rain that started pouring on the show’s evening was the actual star of the event. It brought a sense of grit and urgency to the rather very schematic Demna collection. It mostly consisted of his Balenciaga classics: all-black, all-goth apparel, a bit of bourgeoisie chic (seen through a “Shanghai noir” lens) and Cristobal Balenciaga couture riffs in the larger-than-life eveningwear. There were extreme platform “metalhead” boots, worn with overlong coats that would have dragged well along the floor if not for the extreme creepers. “I made this collection on a very instinctive level of what I like, what excites me, what creates desire in me,” he said. “Where I’m bringing Balenciaga with this show is finding a new type of balance between all these different facets of my aesthetic and style.” But isn’t that already a routine at the brand?

At least the final series of experimental semi-couture and couture dresses had something to say. They orbited around the idea of materialism and (over)consumption – ironic, noting that China has over fifty Balenciaga stores in total. A cocoon column-like dress was pieced together from travel bags, another was cut from gift packaging gold foil, and a third was made from Tyvek paper, a subtle nod to one of China’s inventions. The closing gown was constructed from a collection of pink plastic bags over a decade old, the strips cut by hand and pierced with wires to create feathers that resembled a piece from the house’s archive. While Demna’s ready-to-wear collections lag lately, I so can’t wait for his haute couture show later in the summer.

Just five Balenciaga pieces I’m obsessed with at the moment…

ED’s DISPATCH:


Balenciaga Le Cagole Boot Crinkled-leather Shoulder Bag



Balenciaga Sunday Suede Clogs



Balenciaga Oversized Wool Blazer



Balenciaga Asymmetric Draped Cape-effect Pleated Crepe Dress



Balenciaga Wrap Injection Plastic Cat-Eye Sunglasses

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Stately. Burberry Resort 2025

Daniel Lee is finally getting it right at Burberry. Resort 2025 is his best collection so far, and it seems to be a moment where the designer really knows what he wants to make out of the brand. I think he’s gradually taking a smart approach of making Burberry the British Ralph Lauren. Less superfluous runway styling, more stately clothes that are interweaved with a sense of authentic Britishness. The resort lookbook nicely co-ordinates high and low, making the checkered apparel look as good as the more daring pieces – especially all the gorgeous suede leatherwork with hand-cut florals and the furry fringes of mint-green and caramel-beige bolero jackets. The collection also offers a truly charming, cross-generational appeal. “It’s giving a modern spin on British tradition,” Lee remarked about the immaculately cut yet plain-seeming brown wool men’s blazer, worn by model Will Chalker. It’s part of Burberry’s remit to serve men’s suits; Lee smartly pushes a sense of Savile Row restraint, but not in a conservative stuffed-shirt sort of way. “It’s a modern interpretation of what you think King Charles would wear,” remarked the designer. Well, I can definitely see the King fronting Burberry’s next campaign. “Trans-seasonal, with a soft tactility” is also something Lee said about the collection. “Everything has to look good on a hanger. Worth the money. Because ultimately we’re making expensive clothes we want people to want to wear for a very long time.” The realization is that each piece has to live alone and justify its usefulness and quality, but it’s the way you put them together that creates character. You can see that when Lee styles a cargo pant with a pointy mule, and tops the look with a polished chestnut leather belted moto-jacket. Very 1990s Spice Girl. But also pieces will age well.

Here are some very good Burberry by Daniel Lee pieces you can update your trans-seasonal wardrobe with…

ED’s DISPATCH:


Burberry Calf Hair Point-toe Pumps


Burberry Strapless Leather-trimmed Checked Wool Mini Dress


Burberry Embroidered Quilted Leather Ballet Flats


Burberry Belted Cotton-gabardine Trench Coat


Burberry Wool-jacquard Throw

Burberry Calf Hair And Leather Shoulder Bag


Burberry Printed Satin-jersey T-shirt

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Spanish Lesson. Louis Vuitton Resort 2025

Twelve years ago, in his final show for Balenciaga, Nicolas Ghesquière referenced Spanish culture with finesse and grace by revisiting the famous, stiff ruffles from a Cristobal Balenciaga dress circa 1968. This was one of the greatest Ghesquière collections ever, and an absolute sublimation of his tenure at the brand. In 2024, the designer returns to Spain again, physically, and with Louis Vuitton. The Hypostyle Room of Antoni Gaudi’s Park Güell in Barcelona was a fitting background for Nicolas’ off-kilter take on Velazquez, Goya, as well as the legendary filmmaker Luis Bunuel – even though the results felt a bit heavy-handed (which was never the case at his Balenciaga). The resort 2025 collection began with a parade of tailored, mostly neutral looks, all worn with straw gaucho hats and mirrored racing shades. Ghesquière said that the first exits were modeled on the sailor’s traditional vareuse – note their wide collars – but their broad shoulders and upside-down triangle shapes borrowed equally from the 1980s silhouettes of his youth. By the end, though, the strictness of his jupe tailleurs and coat dresses was replaced by the voluptuous drape of silk skirts and trousers, their chiaroscuro folds of silk nodding in the direction of the Spanish masters he referred to. The white cloak made you immediately think of the architectural habits of priests captured by Francisco de Zurbaran. Meanwhile, pops of polka dots and ruffles nodded more to the culture of flamenco, than Balenciaga’s heritage. When Ghesquière comes to work, he delivers collections that have all these Easter eggs to decipher.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Is Gucci Really A Feeling? Gucci Resort 2025

It’s really interesting to observe how badly Sabato De Sarno‘s Gucci tries to force everyone into thinking the brand – in its current situationship – is a “feeling“. You rather catch feelings, especially the good ones, instinctively and spontaneously. Genuinely. Not when somebody signals it in such a straightforward manner. De Sarno’s first resort collection traveled from Milan to London, and it aimed to somehow tell a story that connects the city and the Italian brand. I didn’t grasp that press release blah-blah at all. Just like I didn’t entirely get the point of the location – Tate Modern – and the plant-filled runway setting. If you want to position a brand as an art-loving platform, instead of stripping a London museum to bare walls and place tons of greenery inside, why not focus around some actual artworks that are contextually or emotionally close to the designer?

And now the clothes. Yes, resort 2025 is in some way better than De Sarno’s previous attempts, because at least it’s not repeating three styles throughout 50 looks. And there’s finally some range in terms of style. But here’s where the real problem starts. If not for the eventual Gucci logos and appearance of Jackie and Blondie bags, it’s really difficult to catch where the actual Gucciness is hiding in this collection. Not to mention De Sarno’s footprint which still feels blurry and indistinct. Some of these 1970s-inspired looks gave hints of Miu Miu and Coach. The pleated finale dresses could easily be Victoria Beckham (ironically a designer who often has trouble with finding her own voice – at least the eveningwear is emblematic!). The denim part of the line-up felt like the many iterations Pierpaolo Piccioli used to deliver at Valentino (where Sabato worked at before Gucci). Some of the outerwear and pieces covered with sequin-embellished checks could equally have a Burberry tag on and no one would question that. What was most confusing however were the vintage-y pussy-bows that instantly made you think of Alessandro Michele’s highly-memorable debut for Gucci, an instant breakthrough for not only the stagnating brand at the time, but 2010s fashion in general. Their presence seemed to say that there’s a large Gucci client base that wants that kind of style back as they don’t identify themselves with De Sarno’s reductive minimalism. So… I think Gucci fails to be a (good) feeling. Especially in times when the demand for luxury is decreasing and people investing in fashion want ingenuity and authenticity.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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