PARIS FASHION WEEK RTW S/S 2018 PART 9

I'm sad to say that its the last Paris roundup post which means that fashion month is over for another season. I have enjoyed sharing with you some of my favourite shows from each day of fashion week. I hope you have enjoyed a more editorial style posts because I have really enjoyed writing them. 
Disclaimer: I do not own any of the photos used, the rightful owner(s) have been credited. The photos were all taken by ' Indigital'

CHANEL 



Chanel went to the beach for it spring summer show, inspired by the shores of Sylt, the German island Karl Lagerfeld visited as a child. Lagerfeld delivered tweeds in amped-up volumes most of the jackets were boxy and paired with matching or mismatched skirts and beach-worthy biker shorts. Dresses in all styles: shift, floaty slips and halter bandeau in black and white for the evening. The palette was dominated with pastels but also on the neutral side in sandy beiges, black and whites. As for logos, it was one earring, bags and a top and a skirt set spelled out the brand names in two parts: “CHA” and “NEL”. For shoes Lagerfeld left the model barefooted and carrying their shoes, mostly low-heeled slides.

BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE 



Designer of Beautiful People, Hidenori Kumakiri made linen into a fabric made for eveningwear, proving that natural fabrics aren’t just restricted to leisurewear. The linen was delivered in natural cream and rich burgundy as well as pops of lime and blue. Prints were discreet, small checks and striped in blue with skirts tied at the front.

MIU MIU 



Miu Miu spring collection was the standard way of girly dressing, knee socks, oversized bows at the shoulders and necklaces with crystals and even some denim was added at the end for a more evening-friendly look. Miu Miu explored sweetness through silhouettes including blazers, python skirts and croc trenches. Cropped knits were paired with sheer or sequined pencil skirts. Roses were overgrown and attached to the shoulders and hips. A touch of femininity with pink incorporated in shift dresses and a slick leather overcoat.Floral print dresses came as tunics with cuts at the midriff and worn over tiny biker shorts. Denim was put into full pleated skirts and patchwork into dresses trimmed with beading.

LOUIS VUITTON 


The Louvre’s courtyard was transformed into a sci-fi runway with silhouettes taking flight. Nicolas Ghesquière has to do something big to close off Paris fashion week, and he did just that giving a collection to dress empowered women and to break gender binding rules.
Six-fi took on chic dressing as silhouettes of neat jackets, Aline dresses, narrow trousers and fluid dresses and bag had a sparkle of stardust as bags  in shapes of spaceships were transported down the runway. The women came out in frilly sleeves, colourful patterns linking to the pace age and sweet florals on simple shirts and trousers. The males were in surreal print t-shirts or jackets and trousers over a roll-neck too.
For Ghesquière futurism is always at the heart of his collections and this season he played on the subject of gender-neutral dressing, a topic dominating at all four cities this fashion season. He’s speaking to the new generation growing up not caring about those definitions but playing around with clothing that works for them.

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