8 Gorgeous Summer Maxi Dresses That Will Make You Look Stunning (Guest Post)

Summer’s here, and that means it’s time to embrace the warm weather, dive into the pool of fashion, and bask in the sunshine in style. When it comes to defining your summer wardrobe, nothing makes a statement quite like a beautiful maxi dress. Breezy, stylish, and incredibly versatile, these floor-grazing beauties will have you turning heads wherever you go. So, without further ado, let’s dive into eight stunning summer maxi dresses that are sure to elevate your style game.

Bohemian Floral Maxi Dress

Picture this: vibrant florals splashed across a canvas of soft, flowing fabric, dancing in the summer breeze. This dress is not only a feast for the eyes but also incredibly comfortable, making it perfect for a lazy Sunday brunch or a beach day. Pair it with some strappy sandals, a floppy sunhat, and a wicker bag to complete the boho-chic look.

Sultry Satin Slip Maxi Dress

For those balmy summer nights when you want to make an impact, consider slipping into a sultry satin maxi dress. With its minimalist elegance, this dress speaks volumes without saying a word. Its simplicity is its strength, effortlessly segueing from a breezy day look to a more formal evening ensemble. The gentle kiss of satin against your skin gives your outfit a touch of lavishness, making you feel as captivating as you look.

Style it with mules, an eye-catching clutch, and understated jewelry to finesse an air of refined sophistication.

Ethereal White Lace Maxi Dress

Immerse yourself in a wave of summer elegance with a white lace maxi dress. This garment exudes an ethereal allure, making it a divine choice for all your sun-kissed escapades, from garden soirées to beachside nuptials. It’s less about the label, more about the artful blend of intricate lacework and the gracefully flowing silhouette creating a timeless tableau of romanticism.

Enhance this celestial ensemble by teaming it with nude heels and gleaming gold accessories.

Statement Striped Maxi Dress

If making a fashion statement is your modus operandi, a boldly striped maxi dress is a must-have in your summer wardrobe.

This striking choice takes a classic motif and gives it a fresh lease of life with the elongated elegance of a maxi dress. A harmonious marriage of fashion and function, this dress is your perfect ally for a bustling day in the city. Sport it with crisp white sneakers, a practical yet chic crossbody bag, and trendy sunglasses for an ensemble that screams urban chic.

Vivacious Tropical Print Maxi Dress

This frock is like a wearable vacation, teeming with bright hues and exotic patterns. Whether you’re lounging by the pool or jetting off to a tropical paradise, it’s your ticket to an instant burst of holiday cheer.

Round off this lively look with comfortable espadrilles, oversized sunglasses, and a colorful clutch to fully immerse in the tropical theme.

Gingham Maxi Dress

For a quintessential summer look, a gingham maxi dress is a no-brainer. This picnic-style print, paired with the comfortable silhouette of a maxi dress, is the epitome of casual chic. Ideal for a day out in the park or a relaxed backyard barbecue, this dress marries style with comfort.

Pair it with some comfy sandals, a straw tote, and a wide-brimmed hat for a charming, sun-ready look.

Please note this is a guest post.

Commanding. Khaite Resort 2024

Khaite resort 2024 fashion collection. Black sheer dress worn over lingerie. Art collage. Anna Ewers model.

Resort is the moment for Catherine Holstein to explore the more laid-back aspect of Khaite, the New York-based brand that keeps on stealing women’s hearts across the world. Super-chunky cashmere hand-knits and impressive sweater dresses clash with fluid sheer evening dresses and billowy ruffles. A stretch jersey henley bodysuit worn with high-waisted leather pants just might be the star of the season; it’s sexy in the offhand way of that virally famous Khaite cashmere bra that Katie Holmes wore a couple of seasons ago. You’ll also find the jeans that are a foundational part of the business – the silhouette of the moment is ’90s-ish, full-legged and relaxed – and an array of leather jackets that are unmistakably cool. A group of silk twill pieces in a souvenir print with depictions of New York City landmarks was a surprise, a charming one. Holstein likes an exaggerated shoulder and a defined waist, or a cropped one, and she experimented with military-style buttons on some styles. The coat silhouettes are oversized and commanding.

And here’s a couple of my favourite Khaite pieces you can catch now:

Khaite crystal-embellished suede tote

 

Khaite frayed mid-rise straight-leg jeans

Khaite satin pumps

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Angels At The Chateau. Valentino AW23 Couture

Simplicity” and “paradox” were the two terms framing Pierpaolo Piccioli’s elevating Valentino haute couture collection, held on the grounds of the majestic Château de Chantilly. “Simplicity is complexity resolved,” the designer said at the press conference, quoting artist Constantin Brancusi, whose sculptures are the modernist epitome of absolute purity. “It’s somehow paradoxical to show in an historical site that I believe is a metaphor for status and power, a symbolism that has to be questioned and re-contextualized,” he said. Staging the défilé en plein air, out of the Château’s regal interiors, was Piccioli’s way of visually performing the metaphor of freeing the constrictions of a walled, elitist life, opening up the seclusion of privilege – Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité. Models – angelic and stoic – walked around one of the castle’s vast parterres à la Francaise; the catwalk sneaked around a circular bassin d’eau, leaving in the background the elegant silhouette of the 17th century manor. This was hands down one of the most spectacular moments of the couture week. One of the paradoxes of couture is that it’s a craft wrongly synonymous with heavy complexity. Piccioli believes on the contrary that the essence of couture is profoundly simple, monastic in its silhouettes. He made the case for this by showing a collection devoid of pyrotechnics, superfluous gimmicks and crowd-pleasing distractions. It was simplicity at its most masterful, a celebration of imaginative, extravagant clarity.

Draping, one of the most challenging haute couture constructions, infused the gesture-defining vertical, pure, essential silhouettes with vitality, modernity, and with the impact of the sophisticated caprice so inherent to Valentino’s aesthetic. Column dresses and tunics were treated to deceptively simple bias-cutting and soft-draping techniques, making them lean sensuously on the body; hooded capes became “mantles of modern Madonnas,” bodices with skin-baring cut-outs extended into twisted knots framing the face. What Piccioli wanted to achieve, he explained, was an effect of almost no gravity. A handsome white dress in featherlight, velvety cashmere with an asymmetrical trailing hem at the back was made on the bias with just one cut. A white tunic in heavenly soft velvet was draped in a way as “to freeze the spontaneous motion of the dress in a sort of still image.” Inventive paradoxes abounded throughout the collection, one of the most striking being the opening look on Kaia Gerber. A pair of slouchy jeans reprised from classic vintage Levi’s were actually made of silk gazar, entirely embroidered with tiny pearlescent beads dyed in 80 hues of indigo to reproduce an actual denim texture (take that, Bottega Veneta’s leather-denim!). Worn with an immaculate oversized masculine white shirt, gold flat slippers and dangling rhinestone chandelier earrings, they were a handsome example of what Piccioli called “a simply paradoxical trompe-l’oeil.” The same approach was echoed in a billowy trapeze-shaped gown, whose circular feathered ruffles were made from  500 feet of white organza. To make the feathers even more featherlight and preternaturally weightless, they were burned one by one to achieve the right quivering cadence. An apparently impossible mission, but not for the formidable Valentino atelier.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Open To Imagination. Viktor & Rolf AW23 Couture

The first part of Viktor & Rolf‘s autumn-winter 2023 couture collection nearly made me stop browsing the looks: the parade of cheesy swimsuits was ridiculous. But then the ridiculous became couture, big camp way. Instead of transforming their 30th anniversary collection into a line-up of humongous, ballooning dresses in the predictable shape of improbable Viktor & Rolf-ish birthday cakes, Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren went the opposite route: undress. Catchphrases like NO or I WISH YOU WELL were extended from décolletages in 3D cubic type (a nod to their ground-breaking autumn-winter 2008 show), an apparent replacement for sleeves. Yet the show stopping icing on the birthday cake were headless mannequins donning female black tailored tuxedos, hanging onto the models’ backs, or twisting in multiple formations around their bodies as if they were desperately calling for attention and didn’t want to let go. The meaning of all this? “It’s open to imagination,” answered the designers in unison. Obviously, the V&R repertoire doesn’t include the banality of logical, reasonable explanations.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Bohemian. Jean Paul Gaultier AW23 Couture

The guest designer gigs at Jean Paul Gaultier have become one of the best moments of haute couture fashion weeks. Julien Dossena‘s take on the couturier’s legacy was definitely a triumph. (Paco) Rabanne’s creative director wanted to achieve “a feeling of characters you pass in the street in Paris,” he said. “I wanted to make all of them queens, each with a different crown.” The honor of being able to bring his interpretation to the work of a national treasure of French couture couldn’t have been more sincerely felt. “Jean Paul was the first designer I ever saw on TV when I was very young. Watching him, I understood for the first time: oh, fashion can be a job! What he did (became) infused into my cultural background in general.” Over lunch with his idol, Dossena discovered that Gaultier had known Paco Rabanne, who had recently passed away. “He asked me to make something to honor him. But I had from him this complete sense of freedom. There’s this feeling in the couture ateliers that anything can be done.

At Rabanne, Dossena’s ability to modernize chainmail and turn it into new techniques in zillions of ways has been one of the hallmarks of his talent – that, and the slant on bohemian glamour that frequently comes through his collections. His unmistakable double-salute to Gaultier and Rabanne was to whip up a replica of the famous pointy-bra dress from Gaultier’s first collection in 1984 in silver chainmail. But the dimension of Gaultier’s work which sparked Dossena’s imagination the most was his street-observation and inclusiveness – decades before it became fashionable. “Jean Paul was really the first to treat fashion as almost sociology, watching what people wear in the street, expressing communities in his shows. Joyously mixing people together.” Dossena’s presentation of chic-ified looks included a pinstriped trouser suit and a lace dress over a pair of trompe l’oeil beaded jeans with sweeping trains. Mid-way, in a stunning moment that spoke dramatically to the beauty of human togetherness, he draped shining gold and silver swathes of chainmail to connect pairs of models – a man apparently carrying a woman’s train, and two individualistic goddess warriors, each symbolizing a different culture. There were references to Gaultier’s giant trapper hat, to the sweeping floor length coats in his “Rabbi Chic” collection, and to off-the shoulder lace he used in his “La Concierge est Dans l’Escalier” show. Dossena said he’d deeply related to Gaultier’s habit of trawling flea-markets for vintage finds – a route into developing rich techniques. Part-way, there was a dress made of Irish-crochet lace, embroidered with gold paillettes meticulously made to look vintage. There was a peach satin lingerie dress layered over black lace, a floral lace apron worn over tailoring. And just as you thought Dossena might have missed a little something of the subversive wit that got Gaultier permanently labeled the Enfant Terrible of French fashion, sure enough, there it was. Clearly glimpsed through a couple of sheer dresses, a pair of trompe l’oeil embroideries of pubic hair. Sitting in the front row, Jean Paul Gaultier raised his eyebrows and chuckled as they passed by.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
Don’t forget to follow Design & Culture by Ed on Instagram! By the way, did you know that I’ve started a newsletter called Ed’s Dispatch? Click here to subscribe!

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