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.
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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.
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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.
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Rick Owens S/S 2015 PFW
Rick Owens Spring Summer 2015 at Paris Fashion Week unfolded like a transformation rather than a presentation. This was not about immediate beauty. It was about evolution. The kind that feels raw at first, almost uncomfortable, before slowly sharpening into something intentional and powerful.
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Nina Ricci S/S 2015 PFW
For the most part very clean, modest and daytime. which light colors and nothing too distracting. Furthering into the gowns things got more exciting and body hugging. Beatiful lace work and sheer paneling.
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Balmain S/S 2015 PFW
Balmain Spring Summer 2015 at Paris Fashion Week arrived with zero interest in subtlety. This was a collection built on precision, severity, and control, where every line felt calculated and every cutout felt intentional. From the first look, the geometry was unmistakable. Sharp angles, sculpted silhouettes, and architectural shapes dominated the runway. The clothes did not drape. They held their ground. This was fashion designed to command space.
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Manish Arora S/S 2015 PFW
Manish Arora does not do subtle, and Spring Summer 2015 at Paris Fashion Week proved that once again. This collection felt like stepping directly into a technicolor fantasy where every surface sparkles, every color competes for attention, and restraint simply does not exist. From the opening look, it was clear that Arora was in full celebration mode. Think Lisa Frank energy, pastel overload, and the visual chaos of an Eye Spy book, all filtered through high fashion. This was not a collection you quietly appreciate. It demanded attention. Loudly.
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Carven S/S 2015 PFW
Carven has always lived comfortably in that sweet spot between playful and precise, and the Spring Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week leaned confidently into that identity. This season felt like a stylish nod to the seventies, but not the dusty or overly nostalgic version. Instead, it was sharp, graphic, and refreshingly modern. Think Parisian cool with a retro wink.
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Balenciaga S/S 2015 PFW
Balenciaga Spring Summer 2015 hit the Paris runways on September 25, 2014, and immediately felt plugged into a different frequency. This was not nostalgia. This was futurism filtered through discomfort, irony, and a very specific kind of cool. The collection leaned hard into a Matrix inspired energy. Think glamour with a glitch. Punk, but polished. Softness appeared occasionally, but it was styled like it belonged to someone who lives on their laptop and never logs off. The vibe was techie, slightly cold, and very intentional.
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Aganovich S/S 2015 PFW
Aganovich does not do subtle, and thank god for that. The S/S 2015 collection shown in Paris felt like couture goth filtered through humor, intellect, and a deep love of the strange. From the first look, it was clear this was not a collection meant to fade quietly into the background of Fashion Week. Instead, it demanded attention with exaggerated proportions, dramatic silhouettes, and styling that leaned unapologetically freaky chic.
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Dries Van Noten S/S 2015 PFW
Dries Van Noten’s S/S 2015 collection in Paris felt like a band of cool, worldly women who know exactly who they are and dress accordingly. Hippie huntresses might sound dramatic, but with fur bags slung casually over shoulders, it feels like a fair assumption. There was an effortless toughness paired with softness that made the collection quietly powerful.