Jonathan Anderson - Designer, Creative Director of JW Anderson & Christian Dior | Page 65 | the Fashion Spot

Jonathan Anderson - Designer, Creative Director of JW Anderson & Christian Dior

Where’s the Dior in all of JW’s attempts?

Also loathe the Ariana archives. Great in theory but they don’t actually fit her so she looks like she’s a child playing dress up in her mums couture closet. It’s not a great look. Even with temporary alterations that can be undone it looks so silly. One’s style can’t be defined by archive pulls. It’s fashion trophy hunting, and it’s sad to witness.
 
but what even is that collection? is it Pre-Fall? Or a capsule or what? Looks so random!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but that must be the commercial lookbook of the runway show collection. Every brand does that now, they have dedicated design team who is in charge of making more commercial (hence basic and banal) offerings taking the fashion show as inspiration. Hence, a more wearable version of specific fashion show ensembles.
 
Could also be resort so there’s continuity in-store with the first men’s delivery. It wouldn’t look out of place if it shared the runway a la Prada shows in the in the mid 10’s.

Speaking of resort there are location scouts in LA for a potential resort show on May 15 per Lauren Sherman at Puck
 
Correct me if I'm wrong, but that must be the commercial lookbook of the runway show collection. Every brand does that now, they have dedicated design team who is in charge of making more commercial (hence basic and banal) offerings taking the fashion show as inspiration. Hence, a more wearable version of specific fashion show ensembles.
Every brand have always done that. Mostly for internal use or buyers.
It only becomes known because of the growing interest in fashion.
 
Someone correct me but these some of these new looks werent on the runway? Jennifer Lawrence’s PR team must have gotten on Dior. That dress with the loops is madness. Natalies dress is like a figure skater proportion.

Tbh if i was an A List actress and they handed me an ugly dior id say you better give me a jennifer lawrence option!
 
Every brand have always done that. Mostly for internal use or buyers.
It only becomes known because of the growing interest in fashion.
True, but I have to say with the growing interest in PreFall and Cruise collections, it feels a bit reductive to add additional commercial collections.
I remember back when in the early 2010's when Gucci under Frida had these very watered down / ultra commercial precollections and that was exactly what you were getting in the store.
Even Versace under Capri had super commercial and basic precollections and then in the stores you could find only heritage pieces.
Nowadays you have precollection shows that are PR stunts featuring very avant garde and flamboyant pieces and then none of them is displayed in the store.
 
Im surprised people thought deltina wasnt lying through her teeth. She doesnt have that panicked pained look permanently on her face bc shes competent.

Im all about body language and face cues so her expression would have me asking her if everything is ok ? Id be sitting there uncomfortable bc of her microexpressions.

All she knows how to do is pull out the quality to increase margins. AKA what anyone can do. People from Nebraska can do that. You dont even need to go to college for that strategy. Shes so incredibly low rent.
 
Everybody in fashion seems to think it's enough to just throw random, sellable merchandise out to the public in hopes that some of it will relate to a customer - What I don't get from any of these recent debuts in particular is a sense of clarity of vision or intent - And in that department, Anderson's Dior ranks pretty high on the list.
 
True, but I have to say with the growing interest in PreFall and Cruise collections, it feels a bit reductive to add additional commercial collections.
I remember back when in the early 2010's when Gucci under Frida had these very watered down / ultra commercial precollections and that was exactly what you were getting in the store.
Even Versace under Capri had super commercial and basic precollections and then in the stores you could find only heritage pieces.
Nowadays you have precollection shows that are PR stunts featuring very avant garde and flamboyant pieces and then none of them is displayed in the store.
But you have Karl to blame for that.
He is the one who made it a thing to hold shows for his pre-collections at Chanel. And it was his right because he had total creative freedom and the best working conditions.

Precollections used to be about updated versions of best sellers from previous seasons or special capsule collections.

I know it’s a controversial topic but I don’t mind seeing crazy pieces on the runway that are only going to be produced through pre-orders. Designers also have to express themselves. I don’t want all the designers to be like Frida either…
When you have 100 stores, which store is going to be blessed with having those pieces in display? Even more today, there are salons where those pieces are shown. The mass doesn’t have access to those salons…

I have more issue when brands do very commercial stuff and never produce them. That was my issue with Prada for a long long time and it’s still my issue today when people are doing it.

But runway collections have always had commercial collections.
Some brands have different system. They have very huge main collections that they got to sell over a whole season.

A runway show is just a window, an expression of a moment. The commercial reality has to respond to a certain form of pragmatism. A designer can show a collection of dresses and coats on the runway but in stores, the logic is wardrobe-focused. So you need to display jeans and tshirts that has to fit in that narrative.
Im surprised people thought deltina wasnt lying through her teeth. She doesnt have that panicked pained look permanently on her face bc shes competent.

Im all about body language and face cues so her expression would have me asking her if everything is ok ? Id be sitting there uncomfortable bc of her microexpressions.

All she knows how to do is pull out the quality to increase margins. AKA what anyone can do. People from Nebraska can do that. You dont even need to go to college for that strategy. Shes so incredibly low rent.
I mean, she talked about quality, she didn’t talked necessarily talked about design…
Dior, even during the MGC era never had big quality issues. They had ethical issues and those will probably never go away but that’s another conversation.
 
JWA should look at the vintage collection of dior that Alaia has on exhibit now its so sharp and modern in line and selection it makes dior look fresh and you can see how Azzedine took from its architecture and made his own ideas from dior.

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WWD

EXCLUSIVE: Paris Exhibition Showcases Azzedine Alaïa’s Journey From Dior Intern to Custodian

The show at La Galerie Dior is "a symbol of hope, showing that anything is possible," said curator Olivier Saillard.
ByJOELLE DIDERICH. NOVEMBER 19, 2025, 12:00AM

PARIS — When a teenaged Azzedine Alaïa first set foot in the hallowed house of Christian Dior, little did he know their names would one day get equal billing.
Alaïa spent only five days in June 1956 as an intern at the Dior haute couture workshops, but he went on to become not only one of the greatest designers of his generation, but also the world’s largest private collector of vintage fashion.
Now La Galerie Dior, the exhibition space at the luxury brand’s historic flagship in Paris, has teamed with the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation to stage a double show highlighting the foundation’s collection of some 600 Dior pieces, of which the majority were designed by the founder.

“This is the first time we’re presenting a collection that isn’t our own,” Olivier Flaviano, head of La Galerie Dior, told WWD during a preview visit. “When we discovered the collection that had been kept secret, we were absolutely amazed — first by the quality, and above all by the fact that there are designs from every year of Dior’s tenure.”

“Azzedine Alaïa’s Dior Collection,” which opens Thursday and is set to run until May 3, features 140 outfits in total, of which three quarters come from Alaïa’s collection.
And from Dec. 15 to May 3, the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation will showcase 30 Dior creations collected by Alaïa alongside a similar number of his own, as part of its ongoing series of exhibitions demonstrating how the French couturier of Tunisian origin was influenced by the designers he admired.
Both shows are curated by Olivier Saillard, director of the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation, in collaboration with archivist Gaël Mamine, who worked with the teams at Dior Heritage to catalog the collection. Each dress was identified, with the house sourcing dozens of related documents, from sketches to press clippings.

“Not one of these pieces has been shown until now, and we also wanted to highlight all the behind-the-scenes digging that Dior Heritage carried out to document everything,” Saillard said. “This allows a student, or anyone unfamiliar with fashion, to understand that it’s not just an art: it’s a science.”
Among the documents on show is the original employee card from Alaïa’s brief stint at the house. “Dior was still alive. They could have crossed paths,” Saillard noted. Poignantly, the exhibition will open just two days after the eighth anniversary of Alaïa’s death.
“This collection returning here is such a symbol of hope, showing that anything is possible. Azzedine came from a poor background and became one of the greatest fashion designers. He was here for only five days, yet that was enough to inspire boundless admiration. The proof is this collection, which is truly worthy of a museum,” he said.

Indeed, the Alaïa Foundation is applying to be registered as a museum, a lengthy procedure under French law, Saillard revealed.
Alaïa’s collection got its first major show in 2023 at the Palais Galliera, the Paris fashion museum that Saillard headed from 2010 to early 2018. Dior has previously worked with the fashion historian on books, including a series of coffee-table tomes from Assouline chronicling each creative director of the brand.
Alaïa was known for collecting designs that mirrored his own passion for structured, exacting tailoring, and there are plenty of examples in this show, which reflects Dior’s architectural approach to design.


“I have no wish to deprive fashion (and the ladies) of the added allure and charm of color, but I could perfectly well design a whole collection simply in black or white,” the couturier is quoted as saying in the exhibition catalog published by Rizzoli.
A row of gray and black designs illustrates how Dior even named his collections after geometric shapes and letters, from his Ligne Ailée for fall 1948 to the Ligne Fuseau of his last collection in 1957. Facing the clothes is a wall filled with his original sketches and press releases providing an insight into his skill for communication.

“This is the first time we have shown so many original sketches by Monsieur Dior,” said Flaviano. “When Mr. Dior created a collection, he would draw between 600 and 800 sketches, narrow them down to about 200 that would be made into toiles, and ultimately present a show of around 180 models.”
There are conceptual designs like the Patchouli dress, a contemporary of the Cigale, whose cage-like construction was a key inspiration for Jonathan Anderson’s debut collections for the house this year. Minimal designs like the Surprise tunic signal why Dior has inspired Japanese designers, including Yohji Yamamoto.
“I really wanted to make a connection to architecture, because Azzedine always said that as a teenager in Tunis, when he looked at fashion magazines, he was fascinated by Dior dresses that seemed to stand on their own. He always wanted to uncover that mystery — the hidden architecture within the dresses,” Saillard said.


More surprisingly, Alaïa was also sensitive to the romantic side of Dior, collecting gowns bursting with floral patterns, embroidery and vivid color.

A room showcasing nip-waisted dresses in bright lipstick shades is lined with collection boards pinned with fabric swatches that show leopard print and polka dots were part of Dior’s repertoire from his debut collection in 1947, which famously launched the New Look.
Saillard said that if he had to pick a single dress, it would be the strapless Fête au Village model from spring 1955 with delicate floral embroidery.
“It’s so fresh, so radiant, so delicate in its treatment of flowers and light, airy fabrics,” he enthused. “It captures Dior perfectly: something that makes you smile, that is perfectly delicate. It shows real consideration for women. I think it goes beyond fashion.”
 

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