Here’s everything you need to know from days four and five of Paris Fashion Week.
Chloé SS25
Chloé
Chemena Kamali celebrated her first year at the helm of Chloé with a collection inspired by 70s nostalgia and the joy of the warmer weather season. Discussing her SS25 show she said “I wanted to capture that longing for summer and the way summer makes you feel – taking the essence of Chloé’s roots as a starting point, building new foundations and capturing that fantasy moment of the summer months when you reconnect with yourself. When you pause, escape, explore, discover and recharge. The mood is light, weightless, sensual and joyful.”
Dries Van Noten
Dries Van Noten revealed its first collection since its eponymous founder left the lead role at the house in June. While the search for the new creative director is still underway, the Dries Van Noten design studio took the lead for the SS25 collection. Inspired by the house archive – in particular, the house’s 1997 summer season – the show saw a mix of patterns, embroidery and rich colourways from olive green to fuchsia.
Schiaparelli
Schiaparelli’s SS25 show explored bright colourways, prints and airy shapes revealed through the house’s legendary couture lens, and – of course – with an eye to the future. As creative director, Daniel Roseberry explained “The world may feel more chaotic than ever, but here, the mood is celebratory: both of what fashion can be, [and] how fashion can make you feel. At the beginning of this collection, we decided we were going to make clothes not just for our clients, but for their daughters and granddaughters. Future Vintage, I’m calling it.”
Loewe
Jonathan Anderson revealed his SS25 collection for Loewe at Paris Fashion Week this morning. The designer unveiled structured hooped silhouettes updated for a contemporary audience, alongside sequined ultra mini dresses. Elsewhere, light, floral fabrics were contrasted with heavier leather and satin in dark hues. Anderson championed historical icons in his show too, with prints featuring a portrait of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and the artwork of Vincent Van Gogh.
Giambattista Valli
Giambattista Valli’s Spring 2025 collection was the result of “inward reflection” in an increasingly turbulent world, according to the designer, resulting in the title “Very Valli.” There were some of the signature designs which he has become known for over his house’s 19 year history – from botanical prints to rose motifs and exquisite embroideries all elevated for the new season.
Victoria Beckham
For Spring-Summer 2025 Victoria Beckham brought a new collection which pushed boundaries but still honoured the house codes. Key looks included Gigi Hadid in an olive green silk gown, transparent fabrics and unstructured tailoring.