This new innovative, 90-minute beauty treatment is designed for the ultimate experience in wellness and luxury. Dior Beauty announced a partnership with The BeautyHealth Company, home to flagship brand Hydrafacial, to develop a custom Dior powered by Hydrafacial experience which will be available exclusively at Dior spas from April 2023. The Dior powered by Hydrafacial … Read more
The new Dior collection by Maria Grazia Chiuri was unveiled in Paris amid an enormous, site-specific textile installation by artist Joana Vasconcelos.
@Dior Fall/Winter 2023-2024 collection
For her Dior Fall/Winter 2023-2024 collection, Maria Grazia Chiuri delved into French post-War style, inspired by three icons of the 1950s, Catherine Dior—Christian Dior’s sister—Edith Piaf and Juliette Gréco.
For Maria Grazia Chiuri, each collection is an opportunity to reflect on what exactly clothing is in relationship to the body and to fashion.
The reinterpretation of the 1950s – for this Dior autumn-winter 2023-2024 ready-to-wear line – is also a means for the Creative Director to explore, in ever new ways, the history of Dior and to further delve into French style by focusing on three extraordinary figures: Catherine Dior, Édith Piaf and Juliette Gréco. These three women shared an independent spirit that guided their choices. Singular protagonists, each of them was able, through their lifestyle, to subvert feminine stereotypes that were part of the post-war mind set.
For Catherine Dior, this was accomplished through her choice to grow and sell flowers as a message of hope. For Edith Piaf and Juliette Gréco, it was through their voices and their supreme stage presence. Expressing the soul of Paris or inspired by existentialist thinking, they created a wardrobe that reappropriated their heritage and staged it in a narrative marked by physical emotion and the intense rhythm of poems, literary texts turned into unforgettable songs. The experience of clothing is the tactile embodiment of a form of thinking, a means of approaching, of tuning into the world.
Against the backdrop of a bold and organic décor entitled Valkyrie Miss Dior, a monumental work created by Portuguese artist Joana Vasconcelos, the silhouettes expressed a femininity that goes against the grain, at the same time rebellious, strong and fragile.
Floral motifs, a nod to the legacy of Catherine Dior, embellished mottled effect or poplin fabrics. Coats, jackets and straight or “corolle” skirts come in tartan fabrics. Black – a color that Edith Piaf and Juliette Gréco cherished – is predominant throughout the fashion show, but there are also shades of ruby, emerald, topaz yellow and blue.
This Dior collection is the very signature of a femininity that goes against the grain. Rebellious. At once strong and fragile. The floral motifs chosen by Monsieur Dior have been revisited: mottled fabric is interwoven with a metallic thread that breathes life into the fabric, rendering it malleable, erasing contours to obtain an abstract effect. Primary colors take center stage: ruby, emerald, topaz yellow, blue. Delicately nuanced tartan fabrics distinguish coats, jackets and straight skirts, which can also be worn beneath large coats, like the “corolle” skirts. Poplin also shimmers with metallic thread. Embroidery composes little bursts of light.
Maria Grazia Chiuri unveiled a navy ‘Lady D-Joy’ tote and a lizard-effect shoulder bag. Pearls accentuate chokers and ‘Dior Tribales’ earrings, some with Eiffel Tower charms, and slouchy, long leather gloves convey a contrasting femininity to the delicacy of a woven straw tiara.
“L’Or de Vie”, a Dior Skincare Masterpiece Born in Château d’Yquem Vineyards. In 2006 Dior created “L’Or de Vie”, its most exclusive skincare line, infused with the uniqueness of the legendary Château d’Yquem vineyards. In 2022, glassmaking artist and sculptor Xavier Le Normand elevates this unique meeting in an extraordinary Métiers d’Art Edition of L’Or … Read more
Men’s Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2023-24: runway recaps from Milan to Paris. Fendi Designed by Silvia Venturini Fendi, Artistic Director of Accessories and Menswear, the collection is a perfect fusion of sophisticated comfort, relaxed opulence and the elegance of the unexpected. The designer sent out a wardrobe marked by classicism, with trompe-l’œil pieces that play with … Read more
Guided by the stars, Dior debuted its Fall Men’s 2023 collection against the Great Pyramids of Giza.
@Dior Fall Men’s 2023 collection
As night fell on the captivating Egyptian desert, Dior presented a collection unique in more ways than one, celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Maison.
Dior Men Artistic Director Kim Jones remains faithful to the heritage of Christian Dior with a collection inspired by the founder’s fascination with symbols, superstitions and stars. After nearly tripping over what became his lucky star, Monsieur Dior was convinced that his destiny lay in haute couture. This latest runway event was equally symbolic, since it culminated a series of memorable shows in 2022. The trilogy began at dawn in winter on the Pont Alexandre III bridge in Paris, followed by Granville and Charleston on a warm summer day, and finally, a show beneath the stars in Egypt.
“My interest in ancient Egypt is about the stars and the sky. It’s that fascination with the ancient world and the parallels with what we look at today; what we inherited from them and what we are still learning from the past. It links to Christian Dior in that sense and by way of his fascination with symbols and superstitions that recur throughout his life and work, one of which is the star. In both the collection and the show there is an idea of ‘guided by the stars’ and what that can entail in many ways. It’s about how the past shapes the future or an idea of the future from the past.” Kim Jones.
@Dior Fall Men’s 2023 collection
The collection absorbs the lessons of the past, applying them to the present and future, revealing the designer’s equally historical and futuristic vision. A perfect fusion of tailoring and sportswear, the wardrobe features a demi-kilt in crin-like wool, originating from the bias pleated skirt of a dress from the fifties dubbed Bonne Fortune. Outerwear has a protective dimension, while myriad references to space inform the clothes. Accessories in gradations of gray add to the spectacle, revisiting the codes of cannage and the CD diamond. Footwear flirts with futurism with a grounding in traditional savor-faire, united with the excellence in contemporary technical know-how for which Dior is renowned.
Striking sunglasses and bi-material caps offer a level of protection taken to the next level by 3D-printed futuristic helmets. The pockets and fastenings of sporty jackets integrate wearable bags, while a backpack is partly composed of woven papyrus. As the show backdrop, the Giza pyramids inspire pendants and knits, and the night sky is evoked in colorful cosmic prints.
Overflowing with wonders recounting Dior House’s history, the archives inspired several looks in the recently-unveiled Men Fall 2023 collection. Translated through the ingenuity of the atelier’s unique savoir-faire, the ‘Junon’ and ‘Bonne Fortune’ dresses gave rise to embroidered tank tops and demi-kilts, respectively. While the cord-stiffened detailing of a highly refined interpretation of a tracksuit in end-on-end wool comes from the ‘Caramba’ of 1956.
@Dior Fall Men’s 2023 collection
Dior Tears capsule at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza
Dior Tears is the capsule guest designed by Denim Tears as part of the Men Fall 2023 collection by Kim Jones, which was presented last Friday at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza, Egypt.
Backstage before the Dior Tears presentation at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza offered an opportunity to sample some of the splendid details. As just a small selection, the cotton flowers symbolic for the brand’s founder, Tremaine Emory, appear as embroideries; crocheted hats, maxi plaid motifs, collard green prints and striped scarves go all out on color; and ‘Dior Gallop’ and ‘Dior Lingot’ bags come in textured Dior Oblique with cognac leather trim.
@Dior Tears capsule at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza
“I want to share that moment in time, that beautiful moment in time where black writers and musicians and artists were coming from America, running from America, and finding some level of acceptance in certain European cities and being able to have their art respected and who they are respected. It wasn’t perfect but it was just a moment, a beautiful moment for blacks to have the privilege and opportunity to escape from the terror, the horrors of America, a segregated Jim Crow America. Artists like Miles Davis and writers like James Baldwin found refuge in Paris.” Tremaine Emory
A journey of Jazz: a dialogue between New York and Paris, via New Orleans is found in the Dior Tears collection.
There is a meeting of the elegant and the idiosyncratic, the casual and the classical in the collection, Guest Designed by Denim Tears’ founder and creator Tremaine Emory. Emory is a designer much respected by his long-time friend Kim Jones, and one who here incorporates an idea of the American archetypal with French high savoir-faire.
@Dior Tears capsule at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza
The Dior Tears capsule collection still has denim as its basis – the fabric’s origins might be French after all, coming from ‘serge de Nimes’ – with special jacquards and discharge prints developed and added to heritage fabrications, with fifties shapes retained. While a sartorial sensibility is augmented, with the skills of the Dior atelier infusing all. Here, American homespun meets French high craft; a commingling and cross-fertilisation of fashion and cultural codes in the collection reflect the movement and influence of the great African-American Jazz musicians who travelled to Europe to play. They were inspired by what they found in Paris and were in turn an inspiration for Paris itself, propelling the avant-garde culture of the city further forward. The collection mirrors this in its own origins.
The collection is one largely inspired by the look of black Ivy League students of the fifties and sixties and the insouciant style of Jazz musicians from the same period. There is also a nod to the civil rights movement that existed simultaneously with both, where workwear was also worn. Here, preppy meets the origins of ‘cool’ via the world of work in archetypal American garments, such as unpretentious plaid shirts, enduring varsity jackets and effortless chinos combined with the sartorial sleekness of classic wool overcoats, sinuous tailored suiting and elegant cognac leather accessories, such as the trumpet bag.
@Dior Tears capsule at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza
In many ways, the collection is a microcosm of Denim Tears and the world it occupies.
Emory’s collections deal directly with the African diaspora, particularly the experience of the diaspora in the United States of America. Adding to this conversation, Dior Tears also incorporates a dialogue with France. Here, signs, symbols and motifs such as cotton blossom and collard greens, as well as the overall narrative of this collection, reflect these concerns. It is particularly resonant in how it relates to Tremaine Emory himself as an African-American who was born in the rural South of the USA and who grew up in New York City.
The journey of Jazz, with its roots in Africa, is a complex one that changed the world. It is fitting then, that the collection is shown in Egypt, on the site of one of the cradles of civilisation that changed the world. It is presented in ‘tableau vivant’ form, surrounded by the antiquities of one of the greatest civilisations of all in the grand Egyptian museum.
@Dior Tears Capsule – Dior Fall Men’s 2023 collection@Dior Fall Men’s 2023 collection
The frigid fall and winter months can take a toll on your skin. If you’re experiencing issues such as dryness, acne, or signs of aging emphasized by the cold, drying air, you aren’t alone. While there is no way to stop the winter air from taking a negative toll on your skin, there are plenty … Read more