Christian Dior S/S 2026 Paris | Page 8 | the Fashion Spot

Christian Dior S/S 2026 Paris

It’s very ambitious but the basic garments really cheapen the entire collection, all that denim were completely unnecessary. The tricks that worked at Loewe don’t jam so well at Dior.

Some of the garments manipulations were interesting but for a couture house everything feels very heavy handed, it looks tortured. Especially the embroidered pieces.

I’m hoping for couture he can conjure something with more refinement.
 
It’s very ambitious but the basic garments really cheapen the entire collection, all that denim were completely unnecessary. The tricks that worked at Loewe don’t jam so well at Dior.

Some of the garments manipulations were interesting but for a couture house everything feels very heavy handed, it looks tortured. Especially the embroidered pieces.

I’m hoping for couture he can conjure something with more refinement.
There's a part of me that agrees with you and another part of me that goes "Computer says noooo." We shall see.
 
From Lauren Sherman at The Puck.
Jonathan Anderson’s first women’s ready-to-wear Dior collection, which he debuted on Wednesday, representedhis vision—and his alone. There were no LVMH executives tinkering from the background on that Luca Guadagnino–designed set. In many ways, this represented the LVMH ideal. Bernard Arnault built his €265 billion empire on the notion that investing in creativity is more profitable when the suits don’t butt in at the end with fulsome notes. Arnault has scaled his company partly because he let John Galliano and Marc Jacobs work freely at Dior and Louis Vuitton, respectively. He afforded Anderson the same freedom at Loewe, and now at Dior, too.
Of course, there are challenges inherent in this operating model. Dior makes €7 billion in annual sales (at least) and employs thousands of people. The business has also reported double-digit declines, up to 20 percent, during the past few quarters. Bernstein analyst Luca Solca has estimated a 10 percent sales decline this year, and that could be optimistic.
Anyway, there’s a lot riding on Anderson’s vision. Instead of letting the pressure get to him, Anderson appeared to channel it through a collaboration with the documentarian Adam Curtis, a British institution of sorts (his docs run on the BBC) who most Americans associate with Can’t Get You Out of My Head, his six-part series that explores the rise of individualism and its often destructive path. Enlisting—and convincing—Curtis to tell the story of an LVMH fashion house was a bold thing to do, and over this past week, Anderson made it clear in conversations that he was indeed nervous about it.
The end result, which I watched via videos sent to me by attendees, and also on the livestream that flickered between the screen and the front row—populated by the likes of Bernard Arnault and his children Alexandre, Antoine, and Delphine—was one-part self aggrandizing, one-part horror movie; a history of Dior, LVMH, and consumer culture all rolled into one. “Do you dare enter the House of Dior?” was the leading caption.

Jonathan’s Personal Touch​

As for the collection itself, let’s start with the positives. Anderson is an undisputed genius when it comes to advertising and communications. His swift rebranding of the house will be studied by marketers for decades, starting with Theo Wenner’s self-portraits for the menswear hard launch, leading into his funny, beautiful, bored-girls series starring Greta Lee, Mia Goth, and Mikey Madison—stars right at the intersection of critical acclaim and mass appeal. It’s the little details he gets right, from the social media rollout (DMing folks) to the egg-plate invite. And of course, there’s the logo tweak, which did away with the harsh upper-case.
You could argue the clothes themselves are almost an afterthought, but they can’t be at Dior. The men’s collection received mixed reviews, but I loved it on the runway—it was a commentary both on the way people dress today and on Anderson’s very personal history. Did it look like J.Crew, with those cable-knit sweaters and khakis? Sometimes. But I loved the arrogance of that gesture.
For women’s, the fashion was harder to get behind, and you could see it in the audience. Arnault père, who knows the difference between a good collection and a bad one, was depicted on the livestream, and his expression did not reflect confidence. I thought the most successful aspect were the shoes, which ranged from basic with a rude little flick on the throat (I will buy) to downright fantastical pumps fashioned from a satin rosette. The bags, too, showed promise: It’s such a tricky category for Dior because the Lady silhouette, its hero style, is an uptight box. He’ll work his magic there, I’m certain.
dior ss26 shoes

Photos: Peter White/Getty Images
I wanted to love the clothes. But my favorite thing was worn off the runway, by guests: the rugby shirts. Once again, Anderson was looking to interrogate the banal, but this time all I could think of was Jenna Lyons–era J.Crew, with its daywear sparkles and double denim. In fact, the amount of denim on the runway was shocking. The pricing was not. A line sheet revealed that the bowtie shirt, made of 100 percent cotton denim, will cost €1,700. The pink denim miniskirt will be €1,300.
Some of the pieces shown, including a few of the jackets, were labeled haute couture, and therefore had no price attached. But many ready-to-wear garments were in the five-figure range, as was the case with the men’s collection. (That opening white silk dress is €19,000. The red pleated blouse is €12,000.) Was this collection challenging? Yes. Did it show potential? Yes. Was it sensational? No. It was directional—but is this a direction we want to go in? (The return of steampunk is happening, and Anderson is leading the charge.) Unlike the menswear show, it did not feel optimistic.
dior ss26 bags

Photos: Peter White/Getty Images
Anderson has earned the flexibility that the Arnaults have afforded him, and they have to put on a brave face—particularly Delphine, who is under tremendous pressure to turn this thing around. Whether they liked it or not is beside the point. They chose Jonathan, and gave him this platform. This collection is incredibly consequential, and it will play a role in determining the future of the business. It may also answer some related questions about the impact that a mega-talent can have on a megabrand in a marketplace that’s evolved considerably since Galliano and Jacobs were in their heyday.
 
So they hired one of the most talented footwear designers and came up with basic heels with C D 🥱, ugly bows and flattened floral pumps (see Daniel Lee's Burberry flop rose bag). The bags are just as abysmal - the pimply bubble wrap bag, more flattened bows on bags and the thousandth version of the Lady Dior in a trending silhouette that looks like a speedy. They can put these bags and shoes on all the k-pop stars and celebrities but there is no dream, fantasy and JWA lacks the intuition to know how women want to dress.
 
Ok i just watched the collection again. Just to be sure if I saw what I saw. There's no
Magic, there's no glitter No fairy glitter dust. Some of the shapes were absolutely unattractive. Particularly all of the pants. I love some of the preppy looks but they just gave me ralph lauren. The hats were fashioned for the show I have no problems with that. Those big clunky loafers are ugly. The opening video was weird. And everyone looked bored out of their mind , just like going to a contemporary art opening.
But these pants my god ! 🤨😐

Just like there was a Maria hate train.Whether it was good or not
I think there's a Jonathan love train.Whether this is good or not because it's not that good.

20251001_171744.jpg
 
The mannequins really imbue a stronger sense of preciousness in the clothes that seems really out of character. Which sounds odd, because the Dior woman is inherently as precious as she is extravagant. But the twee-ness and limpness has his vision for the Dior girl (not woman) seem like a very weak person. Painfully infantile, a wallflower of a gamine who’s clothes have a hastiness to their make because there’s something incredibly unsure as to how it all works.
 
Arnault is a product and marketing guy: the products are solid and the campaign is efficient.
Couture will be a challenge for JWA because it’s a money making/profitable activity for Dior. He has to create a surprise and desire.
 
Frankly, the more I look at it, the more interesting I find it, even the things I don't necessarily like. He obviously concerned himself quite a bit with the history of the house and decided to take many elements and try to interpret them in fresh ways. Some of it didn't land maybe, but a lot looked positively lovely, from the fluid pleated pants to the Chanel-style dress that made Julia Nobis look probably the prettiest I've ever seen her. The flippy little coats with tails in the front were also rather nice, and "grounding" them with some denim wasn't a bad idea either, particularly in form of those spiral-cut jeans. I even enjoyed the sometimes peculiar shoe options and the chaotically historical looks with white Napoleonic hats and lace veiling.
What could've been done better was the styling/order of the show - that black hat didn't need to appear 10+ times and some of the more elaborate dresses could've been kept til the end of the show; there is no need to permanently not just repeat looks in different colors, but to also keep jumping in with a previous proposition after we've moved on from it.
Overall, I'll say he ate up both Raf's and Maria Grazia's respective rtw debuts for the house in terms of both novelty and being dedicated to the house codes.
 
Last edited:
"undisputed genius of communications and advertising" might be an overstatement, if whe consider that the disclosure of 30% of this collection in the summer concerts and festivals diluted the impact of this.

The clearest example is Anya's dress, who was presented in three different and sadder versions. Nobody can think that they were improving the original, which was really vibrant.

By the way, what happened to Jisoo's green lovely gown?

Haute Couture will be a challenge for sure, because for many people Dior means perfection, and so far the technical skills are not yet there.
 
From Lauren Sherman at The Puck.
Double digit decline for Dior seems quite dramatic. But then that would make me question the decision to move MGC over to Fendi.
As we saw with Valentino, pushing an already big brand to bigger numbers don’t mean that the formula will work for a smaller brand that is already big.

I think the MGC/Michele situation proves a reality in fashion today: overt-commercialism only works for a very short period actually.

MGC left Dior before completing a decade. Michele the same. Demna, the same at Balenciaga. On the contrary, a JWA had a steady power at Loewe for example. The way to go for those brands is to balance accessibility and exclusivity. But it’s not just about commerce but also in the creativity.

You have to maintain the aura and intriguing part of a house. I think JWA will succeed in that. Even if it has to be pretentious.
 
MGC had to leave but I think the biggest nail in the coffin was the sweatshop scandal. That really had a negative impact on consumer perception of the brand. Her designs were abysmal but ladies loved it. With JWA I dont think there is enough of a halo effect to lead consumers to buy basic bags that consumers already have multiple options already in terms of top handle and bucket bags. The world he is creating with bored girls reading books reeks of Miu Miu but there is no magic. Not enough dream and world building on his part because what does JWA even dream for women? And the Arnaults know this. If that collection showed us anything he is haunted by the greats before him.
 
MGC had to leave but I think the biggest nail in the coffin was the sweatshop scandal. That really had a negative impact on consumer perception of the brand.
The blowout from this was odd because all brands of a similar level do this kind of thing. How else is Prada able to churn out so many nylon products, or the Versace baroque shirts and underwear, or the Gucci belts and socks/hosiery etc. In what world is a monogrammed canvas book bag going to be made by petit maines? The clientele are part of the problem. They’re fooled into thinking such a basic piece is the height of luxury and feed into the demand.

Lowest common denominator marketing tactics work on the foolish. Well done for being sucked into the funding of a conglomerate.
 
Had he edited to 36 looks and keep all the basics for the store, this would have been great. Bags and shoes will definitely sell. I want to see his HC because this collection felt much more like a clean slate. Hopefully, we can he a full vision.
 
Am I the only one who doesn’t like that ‘O’ / hole in the logo on the first bag? To me the bag feels too classy to have such a gimmicky detail, it really has the potential to become a second Lady Dior. At least it’s not as bad as a Kelly with a Labubu :rofl:

Just like the ones from Loewe, these single-handle bags (where the handle isn’t centered) seem like a hassle if you want to carry your phone or anything even slightly heavy in them

 
Last edited:
Re: Vanessa Friedman, I liked her stance a while back against influencers, generally appreciate her tough cookie vibe, respectfully she's not the person I want to read from regarding this debut. She anchored most of her piece around the film, not the collection. Had she been more surgical with the "push-pull between day dressing and dressing up" part, or the "sense of playfulness" it would have made for a much better read. I mean the zest is there. Without it, technical finesse can only go so far, i.e: MGC. In a way he has what she lacked.

Ideally, I'd prefer to hear from someone like Anna Piaggi's cut. The dauphin vibe in this collection is strong which, in a way, makes perfect sense for Melania Trump.
 
Am I the only one who doesn’t like that ‘O’ / hole in the logo on the first bag? To me the bag feels too classy to have such a gimmicky detail, it really has the potential to become a second Lady Dior. At least it’s not as bad as a Kelly with a Labubu :rofl:

Just like the ones from Loewe, these single-handle bags (where the handle isn’t centered) seem like a hassle if you want to carry your phone or anything even slightly heavy in them


Incorporating the "DiOr" into the grommet doesn't land for me. I wish designers and merchandisers had enough faith in the attractiveness of their product to leave labels off. If the design is good, it will be recognizable on its own.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

New Posts

Forum Statistics

Threads
215,064
Messages
15,285,060
Members
89,000
Latest member
matiezevega
Back
Top