Jacquemus at Paris Fashion Week Spring Summer 2015 felt like a day spent at the beach that somehow turned into a fashion moment without ever trying too hard. Simon Porte Jacquemus leaned fully into a playful, sun drenched fantasy that was equal parts youth, ease, and charm. This was not about overworking a concept. It was about capturing a feeling. That feeling being salty skin, wet hair, and a laugh you cannot quite control.
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Anthony Vaccarello S/S 2015 PFW
Anthony Vaccarello’s Spring Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week was not interested in whispering. This was a collection that spoke clearly, boldly, and with a very sharp point of view. Words became the clothes, literally. Typography took center stage, moving across the body in stark black and white, sometimes oversized, sometimes reduced to a tease. It was graphic, clever, and unmistakably Vaccarello.
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Devastee S/S 2015 PFW
Devastee has always lived comfortably in its own slightly offbeat universe, and for Spring Summer 2015, the brand leaned all the way into that identity. Shown during Paris Fashion Week, this collection felt like a love letter to beatnik cool filtered through a playful, almost childlike lens. Black and white dominated the runway, but nothing about it felt stark or severe. Instead, it came across charming, witty, and quietly joyful.
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Pascal Millet S/S 2015 PFW
Pascal Millet showed Spring Summer 2015 in Paris with a collection that felt tuned into youth without trying too hard to chase it. This was not about gimmicks or nostalgia. Instead, it was about confidence, ease, and knowing exactly when to turn the volume up or down. The runway delivered color, skin, structure, and restraint, often all within the same look. Somehow, it worked.
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Corrie Nielsen S/S 2015 PFW
Corrie Nielsen’s Spring Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week felt like a confident step into a future that is sleek, sensual, and slightly dangerous. This was fashion with intention and attitude, not fantasy for fantasy’s sake. From the first look, the collection made its point clearly. Structure ruled, but seduction followed closely behind. The overall mood nodded to a Jetsons style vision of tomorrow, yet it avoided anything cartoonish. Instead, Nielsen delivered a sharp, grown-up interpretation of futurism that felt grounded in the body. Every piece seemed designed to frame movement, power, and presence.
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Valentino Haute Couture F/W 2014-2015
Among the most striking moments was the full-length black feather cape. It stood apart from the collection’s softness, introducing density and shadow. The feathers added a sense of gravity, transforming the look into something ceremonial and powerful. It felt less like adornment and more like armor, a quiet counterpoint to the collection’s airier elements.