Dior Men F/W 2024.25 Paris

God forgive me but I like it. I really do. Idk there is a nureyev charm about it. Shoes are awful of course but I'm intrigued.

And the shorts would look better if the models actually had muscular legs, but they skip leg day like the plague.
 
^^^ He's so consistently bland that his kind of design can't even illicit any emotion from me...

You know, I’m fascinated by the likes of Kim Jones/EdwardEnninful/Virginie Viard. Coming up, they’ve had the very rare privilege of being exposed to, working next to, and just marinating in the laps of the greatest talents of the industry— and yet, they themselves are always at this level of midrange department-store mediocrity reinterpreting/copying/ripping off high fashion when taking the lead. I get that we’re brewing in the era of mediocrity and creatives have to temper their talent— but my god, these three are the embodiment of blandness and mediocrity is in the heart, with Kim Jones always just so unconvincing in everything he touches and so excruciatingly bland design by corporate marketing numbers. Just throw the ZARA logo over this show, and none would be the wiser it’s Dior. And this isn’t dismissive of ZARA, since the mohair fuzzy full-cuts, neutral pastels, mixed with a handful of faux-artisanal feminine coats/capes have already been shown by them LOL
 
They may need to lean in on the house designed capsule collections for fall because this is mostly a waste of fabric and resources and i can’t imagine the various and wide range of Dior customers wanting it. I don’t get who this is for in Dior’s wide universe

Ugly cuts, weird propositions that are so unconvincing that they don’t even elicit a reaction

Poor thing. A new cd is needed at Dior men asap.
 
At least Pharrell is shamelessly commercial, I cannot even see how are most of these clothes able to sell.
It's Dior so the entire commercial department will be watering down that collection into shorts, t-shirts and sneakers. Fashion show was just smoke and mirror to cover up his lack of vision and give them time of the day.
 
Was he always this bad? (Don't answer that.)

When given the assignment to just focus on the menwswear, with the given resources available at a big-name brand like Dior & LV ($$), he can do good. I don't recall exactly which collections it were, but I definitely recall his prior mens (mens...not boys) work w/ Dior that looked mature, clean, professional, and expensive, which is what Dior should be. There were good suiting, good seperates, good accessories, and as far as runway is concerned, good styling too.

But this just all looks like stuff that'd ONLY looks like runway-crap, with little to no basis in what men want to wear in real life.

One thing's for sure...like Raf, he doesn't have the creativity to move gracefully from womens to mens. He should pick one, but certainly not both.
 
Nureyev cosplay with grandma clothes in Chernobyl (radiation made grow those extra pair of sleeves).
 
a couple of interesting ideas ̶c̶o̶p̶i̶e̶d̶ ̶f̶r̶o̶m̶ ̶ inspired by other designers.

the styling (if there was one) didn’t really work for me.

the trousers were the only good piece I could really appreciate plus the look with the black crocodile embossed leather or real croco… (46) and the grey look right before (45).

the shoes were dégueulasse.

overall it felt messy and lost.
 
According to WWD, ⅓ of the collection shown was Men's Haute Couture with some pieces selling for as high as €200'000:
PARIS 2024 MEN'S FALL
Dior Men’s Fall 2024

Kim Jones unveiled his first full line of haute couture for men, inspired by Rudolf Nureyev's personal wardrobe.

By JOELLE DIDERICH
JANUARY 19, 2024, 2:53PM


Paris Couture Week doesn’t kick off until Monday, but Kim Jones got a jumpstart on the exclusive showcase with a display of his first full line of haute couture for men at Dior.

Exquisitely embellished pieces, made to order for a handful of clients, have always been sprinkled into his collections at the French fashion house, but Jones wanted to give them a dedicated section in a show inspired by Russian dancer Rudolf Nureyev, who collected kaftans, kimonos and precious shawls that he enjoyed wearing in private.

“His clothes were really extravagant,” Jones said in a preview.

To the dramatic strains of the “Dance of the Knights” from Sergei Prokofiev’s “Romeo and Juliet,” which Nureyev performed with his legendary dance partner Margot Fonteyn, models in artfully draped pants and intricately embroidered coats formed a circle in the center section of the runway, which rose in a dramatic finale, spinning to exhibit all the looks.

Fonteyn was a Dior client, but it turns out Jones has a personal connection with the theme. His uncle Colin Jones, a former dancer with The Royal Ballet, went on to become a photographer, and his images of Nureyev off-duty and in rehearsals informed the collection.

“I was lucky to have these things in my life as a child and they stuck with me,” Jones said.

He purposely kept the 40 ready-to-wear looks “clean and minimal,” focusing on the categories that are the brand’s bread-and-butter: tailoring, with iterations of his signature Oblique suit; outerwear, with roomy wool melton and leather jackets, and accessories, including mary-jane sneakers and a quilted satin rucksack in ballet slipper pink.

Other elements were direct references to the more low-key elements in Nureyev’s wardrobe: ribbed knits, a robe coat with an extra-wide belt, twisted turbans and bulging zipped wool jumpsuits and shorts — although those probably should have been left in the history books.

If the section felt a little sedate for a runway display, it’s because Jones was just getting warmed up. The climax came with the 20 couture looks, inspired by items from the catalogue of the Nureyev auction at Christie’s in 1995, as well as the Dior archives.

Call it the fashion equivalent of Nureyev’s virtuoso pirouettes.

A sweeping silver kimono woven through with jewel-like blocks of color was based on one of the dancer’s own and took 10 people three months to complete. Meanwhile, a top and pants with a matching stole, sparkling like a night sky, were inspired by the Debussy dress made for Fonteyn in 1950.

There was even a diamond choker, worn with a belted double denim jacket and pants. Another highlight was a gray cape embroidered with a silver pattern inspired by Dior’s trademark toile de Jouy. (Nureyev would have twirled for days.)

With price tags running up to 200,000 euros, the pieces were set to be presented to VIP clients in appointments at the venue the day after the show. “They love to buy things that no one else has got, so I thought that was a really nice way to do that,” said Jones, saying that he’s also thinking about his own contribution to the Dior archives.

At a time of growing synergies between fashion and entertainment, Jones did well to keep the focus on the clothes. Although the presentation was directed by Baillie Walsh, with composer Max Richter revisiting the score, he didn’t want dancers on the runway. “The theatric is in the set,” he said.

Movement director Les Child helped the models navigate the darkened venue, but unfortunately, guests exiting the show did not benefit from stage directions. The resulting pileup was a rather ungraceful ending to a performance that most certainly merits an encore.
Source: WWD

We are officially in hell.
 
Nureyev meets Kandinsky's colour bursts worn by Victorian Twinks swamped in strange JW-esque cuts with Lotta's Miu Miu styling tricks.

It's a lot of other stuff and inspirations that it feels so pointless to really have in the calendar. Empty clothes, in an empty set with a vacuous designer that still gets all these gigs. His LV wasn't ever this bad, not my kind of thing but there was something to it. Now, his Dior makes no sense. And to pass off some of these as couture is honestly laughable.
 
Speaking of that DVN collection and men in ballet, I’m imagining Roberto Bolle in one of those sleek black trousers and chest harnesses. Now THAT is what fashion-dreams are made of. Sigh….
 
Speaking of that DVN collection and men in ballet, I’m imagining Roberto Bolle in one of those sleek black trousers and chest harnesses. Now THAT is what fashion-dreams are made of. Sigh….
Poor Roberto has to wear Burberry non stop for obvious reasons...
 
According to WWD, ⅓ of the collection shown was Men's Haute Couture with some pieces selling for as high as €200'000:

Source: WWD

We are officially in hell.
which pieces are Haute Couture? I’m genuinely and profoundly intrigued.
and confused AF because there’s not a single hint of HC in this collection.

in Hell? the Devil himself wouldn’t allow half of this a**ed collection to cross its gates.
 
Thats just the rumors darling. The truth is - he has no talent. Just a big kiss-a** person….
I did like his LV homme. He HAD some talent. I just think we are witnessing a true Peter principle irl.
 

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