• FASHION,  Runway

    Céline S/S 2015 PFW

    Phoebe Philo’s Céline spring-summer 2015 collection felt like a masterclass in effortless chic. There was no shouting, no gimmicks, just quietly commanding style that makes you want to sit up straighter and reconsider your entire wardrobe. Philo’s genius is in making simplicity feel intentional and luxurious, not boring.

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Kenzo S/S 2015 PFW

    Humberto Leon and Carol Lim’s Kenzo spring-summer 2015 collection felt like a glimpse into a chic, slightly sci-fi future. It was soft yet athletic, playful yet precise, and full of energy without ever tipping into chaos. The designers managed to make sporty feel aspirational, not just comfortable.

  • Comme des Garçons SS 2015 PFW
    FASHION,  Runway

    Comme des Garçons S/S 2015 PFW

    Rei Kawakubo’s Comme des Garçons spring-summer 2015 collection was pure high-voltage theater. It didn’t whisper. It roared. From the first look, it was clear this was a fantasy in red, a sculptural, larger-than-life exploration of form, texture, and imagination

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Acne Studios S/S 2015 PFW

    Jonny Johansson’s Acne Studios spring-summer 2015 collection was a stylish nod to the 60s and 70s, but with a distinctly modern attitude. It felt effortless, playful, and full of little surprises that kept the eye moving across the runway. This was vintage inspiration done without nostalgia getting in the way.

  • Mugler SS 2015 PFW
    FASHION,  Runway

    Mugler S/S 2015 PFW

    Mugler’s spring-summer 2015 collection was exactly what you expect from the house: confident, sleek, and unapologetically sexy. The lineup at Paris Fashion Week felt polished and precise, with each look engineered to impress. This season, solids ruled, and prints were rare, giving the collection a focused, almost architectural feel.

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Junya Watanabe S/S 2015 PFW

    Junya Watanabe’s Spring Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week felt like a future fantasy that took a hard left turn into something delightfully strange. Think Metropolis woman with a mischievous streak. The kind who does not blink first. Or maybe cannot blink at all. This was fashion built on structure, shine, and a heavy dose of theatrical attitude.

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Yohji Yamamoto S/S 2015 PFW

    Yohji Yamamoto does not do neat. He never has, and thankfully, he never will. For Spring Summer 2015 in Paris, the designer leaned fully into a windswept fantasy that felt undone on purpose and dramatic by design. This was not a collection meant to sit politely in your closet. It was meant to move, to billow, to catch air and attitude at the same time.

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Maison Martin Margiela S/S 2015 PFW

    Maison Martin Margiela for Spring Summer 2015 felt like stumbling into a damp, overgrown seventies dream and deciding to stay. Everything looked slightly moist, slightly unruly, and completely intentional. This was not nostalgia served clean and pressed. It was nostalgia that had been rained on, slept in, and styled with zero interest in being polite.

  • Dior SS 2015 PFW
    FASHION,  Runway

    Dior S/S 2015 PFW

    Dior Spring Summer 2015 was a lesson in restraint, and frankly, restraint done very right. This was not about excess, shock, or chaos. Instead, it was about confidence in simplicity. Raf Simons delivered a collection that felt calm, deliberate, and deeply luxurious without ever needing to shout.

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Talbot Runhof S/S 2015 PFW

    Talbot Runhof Spring Summer 2015 arrived with polish, attitude, and a surprisingly sharp point of view. Known for their red carpet prowess and impeccable eveningwear, Johnny Talbot and Adrian Runhof took a turn toward the political this season, and it worked beautifully. This was glamour with a backbone. Stylish, outspoken, and very aware of the moment.

  • FASHION,  Runway

    Loewe S/S 2015 PFW

    Jonathan Anderson continues to do something rare at Loewe. He makes experimentation feel calm. Spring Summer 2015 did not arrive screaming for attention or begging to be decoded. Instead, it unfolded slowly, confidently, and with a clear point of view. This was light, chic, and deeply considered fashion, the kind that rewards close looking. At this point in his tenure, Anderson was clearly comfortable pushing the house forward without losing its soul. Loewe’s heritage in leather and craftsmanship was not referenced nostalgically. It was reworked, loosened, and modernized.