Pure & Sincere. Niccolò Pasqualetti SS25

It’s Niccolò Pasqualetti‘s fourth fashion show, and you could sense real, mature confidence oozing in his spring-summer 2025 collection. The line-up orbited around the connotations with water (“something absolutely pure, something sincere“) and explored contradictions, mixing unexpected combinations of artisanal fabrics with a more refined, pared-back silhouette that played with feminine and masculine notions. Think oversized trench coats and sleeveless jackets, viscose blazers paired with translucent trousers; swimsuits were worn under asymmetric tops and evening gowns. Niccolò also experimented with sequins in many forms: large paillettes glimmering like the sun on the ocean’s surface, sometimes merged with feathery fringes, producing an unusual, chimeric texture. Found objects, like shells and various trinkets were attached to floor-sweeping metal chains, and occasionally integrated into the clothing. Pasqualetti is a designer surrounded by a nurturing support system: his collections are styled by Samuel Drira, while lookbooks are shot by Cecile Bortoletti. The spring fashion show was accompanied by the heavenly – and sublimely intoxicating – fragrance by Vilhelm Parfumerie called “Basilico & Fellini“. It all makes sense.

I had the utmost pleasure of attending Pasqualetti’s show – which makes me super happy as I truly appreciated this collection. Here’s a backstage look:

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Dries Without Dries. Dries Van Noten SS25

It’s still very difficult to comprehend that Dries Van Noten is no longer designing Dries Van Noten. Even though the Belgian designer was in cheerful (and relaxed) attendance at the first studio-designed collection, I find it hard to feel persuaded by the spring-summer 2025 line-up. As Cathy Horyn put it in her review, it’s generic. No narration behind it, just very commercial-looking clothes with no essence or urgency. The collection seemed to check all the boxes what a Dries offering should look like: florals, embroideries, a tension between feminine and masculine. But that’s not enough to make this absolutely important – and needed – brand thrive without its founder at creative helm. A confident mind is needed, ASAP. I would give the job to Jun Takahashi of Undercover – that would be a beyond beautiful match! – or the über-talented, emerging designer Niccolò Pasqualetti.

I shed a tear at the Dries Van Noten boutiques on the Left Bank. I hope these stores will never be rebranded, they are just too charming and 100% Dries!

There’s still time to snap some “real” Dries. Here’s what I would buy…

ED’s DISPATCH:

Dries Van Noten Checked Woven Maxi Dress

 

Dries Van Noten Gold-tone, Beaded, Crystal And Faux Pearl Choker

 

Dries Van Noten Metallic Jacquard-crepon Coat


Dries Van Noten Oversized Gathered Satin-twill Jacket



Dries Van Noten Bead-embellished Embroidered Velvet Clutch

 

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Lightness. Chloé SS25

Pardon my review absence for the last couple of days, but I was in Paris for fashion week. I’m catching up now – equipped with a much-needed, refreshed perspective on what’s going on in the industry, IRL. Let’s start with Chloé!

Chemena Kamali is on a roll. It’s her second full season at Chloé, and the way her take on the brand resonates with the industry – and clients who are literally storming the boutiques in Paris! – is a rare thing to see nowadays. Also, comparing to other designers this season, she presented a proper, summer collection that actually felt summer-ish. And just like in her confident debut, Kamali once again showcases her intimate understanding of Chloé’s history. Photos of Karl Lagerfeld designed collections were pinned to the mood board in her studio. Two of her most inspired lifts were the waist shapers of spring 1977 and the lace bloomers of spring 1978. Jackets – in sturdy workwear cotton or soft suede – gave the sensual lightness of these pieces a reality check. It’s good to see flou femininity back on Chloé runway – for some reason, Kamali’s predecessors thought it wasn’t the right thing to channel. But there’s a new sense of strength in these carefree girls and women wearing floral-bouquet-print dresses in cascades of ruffled chiffon.

And speaking of Chloé stores in Paris, here’s what I saw at the rue de Saint-Honore boutique: the perfect marriage between retail and art. Mie Olise Kjærgaard‘s absolutely beautiful paintings are exhibited across the entire space, perfectly matching the current season.

And FYI, here’s what you should get from new Chloé!

ED’s SELECTION:

Chloé Mona Fringed Leather Pumps


Chloé Cape-effect Open-back Ruffled Silk-crepon Gown


Chloé High-rise Wide-leg Jeans


Chloé Eve Ruffled Suede Knee Boots


Chloé Bracelet Embellished Leather Shoulder Bag

 

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Gossamer. Magda Butrym SS25

Magda Butrym’s spring-summer 2025 “Gossamer” collection marks the house’s first-ever presentation during Paris Fashion Week’s official schedule. The collection fully captures the designer’s sophisticated, distinct and authentic sense of style and aesthetic that she has formed throughout a decade of her oeuvre. It also encapsulates a certain sentiment that’s close to her heart: gossamer.

A fleeting moment, a notion deeply rooted in Slavic sensitivity, a feeling thin like spider’s web drifting in the warm air, an invisible season that softly wraps the senses and dazes the mind. A sun-drenched moment that’s sheerly feminine in its subtlety and changeability. Blink, and you miss it. But when you happen to perceive it, you feel like in a dreamworld.

The spring-summer 2025 collection captures a sense of contemporary urgency and uncontrived, lively chic. Body-hugging, artisanally-woven crotchet is instinctively layered with utilitarian minimalism in form of high-necked, cotton cargo jacket or suede, broad-shouldered coat with a just-right, over-sized fit. Silky jersey dresses that strike with flou lightness are put in unobvious contrast with pragmatic trench-coats and no-nonsense leather outerwear. Floating-in-the-air veils are complementing the unashamedly sexy eveningwear that is subtly flourishing with draped rosettes – and is not afraid of subversive cuts and slits. With new shapes and sizes of the house’s Brigitte it-bag and sling-back mesh pumps covered in intricate crotchet, the collection is a thoroughly considered blend of womanly mystery, daring attitude and Slavic Heritage preciousness.

Other than the idea of gossamer, the collection’s creative impulse are the enduring and singular depictions of Slavic women seen in paintings by Polish artists from the turn of 19th and 20th century: Stanisław Wyspiański, Jacek Malczewski and Józef Chełmoński. In their idiosyncratic, artistic perceptions, where reality blends with buoyant dreams and mystical beliefs, and the visual codes of Polishness are eternally preserved, women are reflected as both strong and sensual; assertive and mythical; refined and esoteric. These women are in-between the real world and the world of goddesses. Their heads are swathed in swirling shawls and draperies – a bold, exuberant vision that inspired SS25’s sculptural headscarves woven with metal threads. Their bodies are covered – and uncovered by gusts of wind – with layers of flimsy silks and precious lace, like literal gossamer. Yet these characters are in their element, in full control of their destiny. In those paintings, women emanate with commanding, perplexing and empowering energy that inspires – and intrigues – the designer. In her SS25 collection, Magda Butrym paints – with transparent jerseys, hand-made crotchets, lasting cottons, brisk suedes and smooth leathers – a portrait of a woman who encapsulates that kind of modern mysticism.

This woman is nobody’s muse – other than her own.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Work in Progress. Hodakova SS25

Ellen Hodakova Larson won the prestigious LVMH Prize earlier this month. This, plus Cate Blanchett’s red carpet endorsement, means growing buzz around her eponymous brand. The spring-summer 2025 collection worked as a primer to those new to the Hodakova world, and held plenty of interest for those who were better acquainted with it. Her haute upcycling approach to fashion is based on the make-do and mend values she grew up with. This season the designer took a walk down memory lane. “For me it’s been a dive into warmth and feeling proud about where you come from,” she said. “I find so much comfort in going back in memories… and my memories are in objects, so it’s more about smells, images, pieces—all of the physical things.” Because of the materials they are made of, deadtock, vintage, and salvage, Hodakova’s designs evoke the past. They carry tales, but neither the designer nor her garments are retro, rather Larsson’s aim is, she explained, “to be present all the time.” Hodakova has a Martin Margiela manner of approaching her craft: just as he made vests out gloves, she uses boots to construct a dress, in a surreal yet gritty, rough way. In her eyes nacre buttons, plastic eyeglass lenses, and zippers are jewels and discarded status symbols; like démodé fur hats can become coquettish dresses. The humanist concept of turn to materiality has been the designer’s main focus in her work, but this season she said she wanted to focus more on silhouettes, and did so with some face-covering column dresses, done her way. Hodakova is a beautiful work in progress. 

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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