Chanel’s spring-summer 2015 collection brought a surprising dose of fun to the runway. Karl Lagerfeld leaned into clunky, kooky chic, starting with an array of mixed pastels and playful silhouettes that felt like a breath of fresh air. The show gradually shifted into more serious black and white looks, but even then the designs retained a sense of wit and whimsy.
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Giambattista Valli S/S 2015 PFW
Giambattista Valli’s spring-summer 2015 collection was playful, sculpted, and lightly sporty. White dominated the runway, giving the show a crisp, clean energy. Valli focused on structure and lines, creating silhouettes that were both architectural and feminine.
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Stella McCartney S/S 2015 PFW
Stella McCartney’s spring-summer 2015 collection was effortlessly modern, blending movement with clean lines. Free-flowing full-length jumpsuits featured sleek zippers, while dresses played with bold patterns, color mixing, and subtle 3D applications. The collection felt lively, wearable, and carefully considered.
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John Galliano S/S 2015 PFW
John Galliano’s Spring/Summer 2015 collection for Paris Fashion Week was all about safari-chic with a modern twist. The palette played heavily with earthy greens, sandy beiges, and touches of muted browns, giving off an adventurous yet elegant vibe. Long flowing dresses contrasted with shorter structured pieces, creating a dynamic range of movement and style across the runway.
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Chloé S/S 2015 PFW
Chloé’s Spring/Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week was effortless elegance in motion. Think sheer, flowing fabrics with a sense of airy lightness that made each look feel like it was caught in a gentle breeze. The color palette stayed soft and neutral, with creams, beiges, and muted pastels creating a dreamy, understated sophistication.
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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.
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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
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.