Porterville. Rick Owens AW24

Rick Owens‘ autumn-winter 2024 fashion show was womenswear continuation of the Porterville” collection that the designer presented back in January. “Porterville” 2.0., shown again at the Place du Palais Bourbon location, was equally moving and breath-taking as the menswear version. “When I’m talking about Porterville” – his California hometown, whose name appeared in an Art Deco font marching across capes – “I’m talking about oppression and intolerance, and that’s a fact of life that’s never going to go away,” he said. “Part of my role in life is to counterbalance that with this cheerful perversity.” This Owens season seems to be one of starkest examples in fashion history where a designer is processing childhood trauma in such a powerful way. Hussein Chalayan and Demna did so too, but in response to being refugees of war-torn countries. “It’s not easy for a lot of designers to be so autobiographical,” said Owens. As one of Paris’s last independent designers standing, he has fewer voices in his ear and pure independence to do as he pleases. This was a collection through which Owens takes hold of his demons, in which his gothic instincts duked it out with his inclination for goddess-y silhouettes. Batwing shoulders scraped the earlobes, puffer vests swaddled torsos like protective shells, and leather-and-down boots that riffed on the inflatable rubber ones he put on his men’s runway evoked space costumes, as if his models might’ve just returned from a walk on the moon. The deep pink dress worn by Matières Fécales’s Hannah Rose Dalton looked like it had sprouted wings in back. Incredible.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Intuition. Chloé AW24

Somehow this season, you really see the difference between how men design for women, and how women design for women. Take Anthony Vaccarello’s Saint Laurent where the all-sheer dresses impose unreal standards. And now look at Chemena Kamali‘s Chloé debut, where ease, frivolity, chic, and joy interweave, opening up a new, very promising chapter at the brand. The authentic stir of enthusiasm among female front-rowers of the show were the first sign that Chemena’s has is to make Chloé really, really cool again. Kamali knows the history of the brand inside out, and worked there as a Chloé-obsessed junior designer in the noughties under Phoebe Philo’s creative direction, and then again under Clare Waight Keller. Nobody knows better than Kamali the spontaneous feeling of it-ness that belongs to the female-centric Chloé philosophy; a power recharged through so many generations since the house was founded in the 1950s by the Jewish-Egyptian emigré Gaby Aghion as a free-spirited ready-to-wear antidote to Parisian haute couture. Kamali called autumn-winter 2024 fittingly, as the “Intuition” collection. “You know, it’s how it makes you feel and how you want to feel,” she said. “I think there’s this connection where today as a woman you need to be able to follow your intuition and be yourself. It’s very much about an intuitive way of dressing, about lightness, movement, fluidity and emotion. I also, love the power of nostalgia; where you go backwards, you go forwards – you also think of today and what women want to wear now.” The collection was triumphant remix of all things Chloé stands for. Karl Lagerfeld’s 1970s time at the brand was referenced by brilliant white scalloped-edged blouse and swirling musketeer capes, modernized with cool boot-cut flares and kitten-heel clogs. Then, we had splendid iterations of bracelet-bags and platform sandals that were Chloé’s bread-and-butter during Philo’s reign. Bananas and pineapples (redone as gilt jewelry) were nods to Stella McCartney’s tongue-in-cheek time at the house. What felt very Chemena was the ease with which she remixed the brand’s codes, and how she single-handedly gave rebirth to the style of the both real and fictional 2000s It-girls: Sienna Miller, Serena Van Der Woodsen, Kate Moss, the Olsen twins. Finally, huge lived-in bags, platform clogs, sexy denims, lingerie dresses are back, baby.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Everyday Rituals. Undercover AW24

Jun Takahashi presented an immensely beautiful and important collection. The Undercover designer explained he was thinking about everyday life – the preciousness of the commonplace and the value of ritual. “Perfect Days“, a new film from Wim Wenders (highly recommend watching it on a day when nothing seems to make sense!) about a Tokyo toilet cleaner named Hirayama who’s remarkably sanguine about life – finding beauty in his books, the tapes he plays on his commute, and the photos he takes of trees in parks – was a creative stimulus for Takahashi. So moved by the film, he asked Wenders to write and read a poem for his soundtrack about a woman not unlike Hirayama in her approach to life. “Watching a Working Woman” illustrates a picture of a single mother, 40-years-old, with a job in a law firm, and a young son she likes to go to the movies with. After she puts him to bed, she writes letters and reads books. What made it so resonant and affecting was its relatability; this wasn’t a fashion designer concocting some “real“, yet absolutely fantasy woman, with an improbable wardrobe to match, but rather someone actually… real. The show opened with what looked like a white tank top and a pair of jeans; in fact, it was a jumpsuit with ribbed knit spliced into the pants’ side seams that matched the sweater the model carried in her hand. To follow, there were many more reworkings of “everyday” garments – like a cardigan, a gray marl sweatshirt, and more formal tailoring – to which he bonded swatches of excess fabric (wispy chiffon, metallic tinsel, a shaggy mohair), rendering them anything but ordinary or prosaic. Pure poetry. Make sure to take a look at the bags, made in collaboration with Brigitte Tanaka: haute-crafted grocery shoppers and yoga-friendly totes. Obsessed.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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A High Moment. Dries Van Noten AW24

Dries Van Noten‘s show was definitely a high moment of the rather “play-it-safe” first days of Paris Fashion Week, where many brands based their collections on vapid, blurry ideas and concepts. The Belgian designer titled his autumn-winter 2024 collection “The Woman Who Dares to Cut Her Own Fringe“. “This means for me audacity, but also considered… She is in one way really tender but also very strong.” This too: “it’s about style and not so much about fashion.” The Yves Saint Laurent quote – “fashion fades, style is eternal” – is forever relevant, and during fashion month you really see how neglected that wisdom is. Van Noten’s latest collection was pure style, because how else can you call a gray sweatshirt fabric with iridescent sequins, or lavender silk duchess worn with faded denim jeans?

The show started with a camel coat, double-breasted with a stand-up collar and rounded sleeves, but its neutral minimalism was more of an appetizer that prepared your taste buds for the next dishes. This was a collection of many colors, often in surprising pairings or trios, even better if Van Noten could add strange textures ranging from shaggy fur-like mohairs to tinselly metallics. “There is no process and there is especially not a system. The last thing that I want is a system because then it feels organized. These things need to happen in a very spontaneous way.” Emphasizing that sense of spontaneity, zip-up hoodies were worn with one sleeve off and wrapped around the neck like a scarf and button-downs were shown back-to-front, the collars popped under stretchy nylon shirts. The offbeat, irreverent mix was the thing, but he also made a point of saying, “every piece has to stand on its own. It’s important that it’s not just looking nice when it’s an outfit, every piece has to have its value.” See, there’s a big different between “style” and “styling“. Most shows we see today are pure styling, a combination of clothes that separately would mean nothing. With Van Noten’s clothes, you’re equipped to create style.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Construction. Marie Adam-Leenaerdt AW24

Belgian designer Marie Adam-Leenaerdt is working her way through the building blocks of a woman’s wardrobe, and her third runway collection proves she has a capacity to do that. The show she put for autumn-winter 2024 is devoted to the skirt. Her idea was to test the skirt’s versatility and to explore its possibilities. There were a couple of midi skirts that she also showed as trapeze dresses, the waistband slipping asymmetrically off a bare shoulder; coats with collars that looked more like waistbands; and bags of all sizes designed with horizontal zips – remove the middle sections and guess what they look like? “Skirt skirt, dress skirt, coat skirt, bag skirt,” is how she put it on her press notes. Even the wedding dress finale was constructed simply, like a skirt with hoops that gave it its tenting volume. Adam-Leenaerdt used to work at Demna’s Balenciaga, and the designer is very assertive in making the codes she formed at the brand now her own. So no, these volumes, saturated color palettes, and cape-coats aren’t Balenciaga knock-offs. They originally were 100% Marie Adam-Leenaerdt.

Here are couple of absolutely amazing Marie Adam-Leenaerdt pieces you can shop now!

ED’s DISPATCH:


Self-Tie Silk Cape Blouse



Mange Debout Caped Midi Dress



Fitted-Back Oversized Button Down Shirt



Long Pinched Trench Coat



Reversible Wool Maxi Skirt Suit

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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