Dior mania and K-Pop overtake Paris Fashion Week menswear

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Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Models wear creations as part of the Dior menswear Fall-Winter 2023-24 collection presented in Paris, Friday, Jan. 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

PARIS ā€“ Dior mania descended on Paris Fashion Week menswear Friday as over a thousand screaming fans thronged the magnificent Place de la Concorde for a glimpse of their favorite stars, with some almost risking their lives in snarled traffic.

The minders of the show's VIP guests, including David Beckham, Naomi Campbell and Korean band BTS members J-Hope and Jimin, navigated the crowd like salmon swimming upstream.

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Inside, Dior men's designer Kim Jones paid homage to Yves Saint Laurent, who became the worldā€™s youngest couturier at 21 in 1957 upon Christian Diorā€™s death.

Here are some highlights of fall-winter 2023-2024 collections:

YSL: AN HOMAGE

In 1958, Saint Laurent unveiled his first collection for Christian Dior. It was a global event which saw the designer draw thousands upon thousands of screaming fans who thronged avenues. Some things never change, even in 65 years.

Kim Jones used that womenā€™s collection as the inspiration for his menā€™s -- mirroring its contrasts of masculine versus feminine and British tailoring versus couture.

Jones also captured its fluidity to produce a gender-neutral display with softened shapes and loose waists. Unbuttoned suits that unfurled cut a nice trapeze silhouette, as did clever white knit sweaters with sleeves snipped away to flap like a poncho.

Jones did his homework. In Saint Laurentā€™s debut, he famously abandoned Diorā€™s cinched waists and lengthy fabrics in favor of more fluid shapes in which the body disappeared, effectively inventing the trapeze silhouette.

Some Jones styles, like an update marine sailor top, were lifted directly from the 1958 archive.

But this sublime show was much more than mere homage. Three-dimensional printed shoes followed contemporary sheer organza vests with tiered banding, and looked aggressive yet feminine. Off the shoulder tailoring on one embellished pearl coat simultaneously evoked a slouchy rebel and an opening flower.

DIORā€™S STARS, THESPIANS

The unique fusion of celebrity, artistry, hysteria, beauty and wafting perfume at Diorā€™s show simply overwhelmed the senses. It began with remarkable filmed performances of actors Gwendoline Christie and Robert Pattinson reciting poetry excerpts, interspliced with images of the Dior collection.

ā€œI am truly so happy to be here at the Dior show," Christie told AP. ā€œItā€™s no surprise that Kim Jones is one of our greatest living current designers that we have. Iā€™m also very lucky in that heā€™s a very old friend of mine.ā€

But even the cool Christie, star of both Dior show and ā€œGame of Thrones,ā€ seemed overwhelmed when journalists ditched her in a split second upon the arrival of BTS's Jimin, who recently was announced as Dior brand ambassador.

PAUL SMITH CHANGES CENTURIES

Smith delved into the history books for a thoughtful display that seemed to merge London from the 1970s with the city in the 1870s.

A quilted coat with checked cape demonstrated this perfectly. It flared out at the back looking as if it were fashioned on Baker Street and could have been worn by Sherlock Holmes if it came with a pipe.

Elsewhere, a high white collar had a prim 19th century feel, while a dark velvety coat with a big collar sported a beautiful textured thickness.

Such old-fashion musing gave fall-winter a more austere style than usual, but it was a welcome change.

The 1970s, a Smith touchstone, also were on abundant display. The designs included blown up checked coats, vibrant blue printed pants and loose colored suits with broad, rounded shoulders.

The best looks were ones that fused the two eras, such as a loose cerulean trench coat with voluminous layers, twinned with a striped blue silk foulard.

BOTTER IS SUPERLATIVE

Flashes of bright color and kinky quirk infused the fabulous co-ed fall fare of Rushemy Botter and Lisi Herrebrugh.

If there was an overarching theme in Botter's ever-creative and eccentric show, it was surely the haphazard.

A blue bikini was sewn humorously atop a shimmering satin shirt-dress. A suit jacketā€™s outer layer peeled off to reveal a snakeskin-like underlayer. A mermaid look featured a salmon printed on a tight vest descending to a rippled metallic satin skirt ā€œtail.ā€ A neon-pink knit sweater placed on the front of another sweater was probably a tongue-in-cheek swipe at how cold the Paris weather has been of late.


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