Men’s fashion takes centre-stage in Paris for five days from Wednesday,
with Balmain’s first menswear show among the highlights on a packed
schedule.
Taking over from last week’s menswear extravaganza in Milan, Paris men’s
fashion week will see catwalk shows by some 50 labels including Valentino,
Hermes and Louis Vuitton.
Saturday’s debut menswear show for French luxury label Balmain is one of
the key dates ahead of Paris’ haute couture week, which starts on July 5.
Olivier Rousteing — the designer christened “Mr Popular” by Vogue — has
brought glamour, sex appeal and strong silhouettes to Balmain since
becoming the label’s creative director in 2011 at the age of just 26.
When he isn’t busy adding lashings of leather and embellishments to his
creations, Rousteing can be found sharing snaps of himself with celebrity
friends including Rihanna, Kim Kardashian and Kanye West with his 1.1
million Instagram followers. His young fans are eagerly awaiting his new
collaboration with high street chain H&M, which hits stores in November.
Paris to host over 50 runway shows during men’s fashion week
Balmain’s show will shine a spotlight on its men’s ready-to-wear line,
which already accounts for 40 percent of its sales after launching in 2009.
Australian label Strateas Carlucci will also be making its Paris men’s
fashion week debut. The minimalist, high-tech brand, which Peter Strateas
and Mario-Luca Carlucci launched with an autumn-winter 2012 collection, was
a finalist for the prestigious Woolmark Prize in January for its men’s
line, as well as being shortlisted in March for women’s ready-to-wear.
Lemaire — the brainchild of former Hermes womenswear artistic director
Christophe Lemaire and Sarah-Linh Tran — will also be presenting a new
menswear collection for spring-summer 2016. The brand has a collaboration
with Japanese chain Uniqlo coming out next autumn. New York streetwear
brand Hood by Air, which has a cult following in the hip-hop world, will
also be showing its menswear in Paris for the first time after presenting a
women’s collection last year.
Style-watchers will have an eye on the new collection by Rick Owens — the
designer who raised eyebrows in January when his male models strutted down
the Paris catwalk in long tunics that revealed a flash of genitalia.
Belgian designer Kris Van Assche’s label is notably absent from the
programme after he announced its closure last month, but he’ll be there as
men’s artistic director for Dior, one of the must-see shows.
Fashionistas get a week to recover before the lights go back on for Paris’
haute couture fashion week, with 30 shows on the programme. Schiaparelli’s
show on July 6 is among the most hotly-anticipated events in the diary as
French designer Bertrand Guyon makes his debut as style director.
(Anne-Laure Mondesert, AFP)
Images: AFP
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