Embrace. Rick Owens AW26

Rick Owens’s ritualistic processions and towering, otherworldly silhouettes have become a piercing aperture in the midst of the Paris shows – one that entrances the viewer and draws you deeper and deeper with every season. Some say the designer is increasingly repeating himself, but I prefer to see it as a process of perfecting. His black gowns are leaner and more elongated than usual; the collars of the jackets reach a totemic monumentality; wrap-around dresses and outerwear become shelters.

The fact that Marlene Dietrich served as Owens’s muse this season adds another layer. He said he admired the arc of her life – from societal provocateur to wartime hero (the actress volunteered for USO tours, traveling to Algeria and across Europe to sing for the troops) and, later, to a steely cabaret legend. Dietrich’s iconic swansdown jacket inspired Owens’s spectacular goat-hair coats, whose monumental proportions engulf the wearer in a powerful embrace.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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New Frontiers. Chloé AW26

At Chloé, Chemena Kamali delivered her best – and perhaps most daring – collection to date. The designer, who captured the hearts of women around the world with her revival of bohemian spirit, has now tweaked her Chloé girl, taking her somewhere less expected. READ MY FULL REVIEW HERE.

ED’s SELECTION:


Chloé Eve Suede Over-the-knee Boots



Chloé Paneled Leather Jacket



Chloé Tiered Organic Silk-mousseline Maxi Skirt



Chloé Paddington Embellished Leather Tote



Chloé Gathered Tie-detailed Lace-trimmed Silk-satin Mini Dress

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Palette Cleanser. Alaïa AW26

Before moving to Milan to join Versace for good, Pieter Mulier delivered one last outing at Alaïa – a collection that felt less like a grand finale and more like a palate cleanser, even a kind of foundation laid out for his successor.

During his five years at the brand, Mulier pushed Azzedine Alaïa’s codes in unexpected directions – sometimes achieving remarkable finesse, at other times proposing busy, hectic ideas that risked overdressing the woman. His epilogue, however, is pleasing precisely because it returns to the core of what the house represents at its essence: body-enhancing clothes that appear simple, yet are in fact the result of meticulous construction and extraordinary precision.

That was Monsieur Alaïa’s intention behind every haute couture and ready-to-wear collection; Mulier seems to have taken it fully to heart here – better late than never. “To reduce, reduce,” he concluded backstage. No bags, no jewelry. “Only beauty and clothes and a naked shoe.

And indeed, that understated beauty was visible in the clean lines of flared coats, scoop-neck engineered jersey dresses, and a perfectly tailored leather blazer.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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