Regal meets glamour

Givenchy's haute couture show in Paris featured a largely monochromatic palette, but there were also capes of myriad lengths and sequins

The haute couture show by Givenchy (above and below) was held in the gardens of the National Archives in Paris' Marais district.
The haute couture show by Givenchy was held in the gardens of the National Archives in Paris' Marais district. PHOTOS: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

PARIS • The boat-necked, sculpted dress that Meghan Markle wore for her wedding to Prince Harry on May 19 featured a 5m train embroidered with flowers that paid homage to all 53 Commonwealth countries.

On Sunday, Clare Waight Keller, the Givenchy stylist who designed that dress, paid tribute again - this time to the storied house's late founder - in her latest haute couture collection.

On the first day of Paris couture week, the Givenchy show, held in the gardens of the National Archives in the city's Marais district, was shrouded in mystery and old-school Hollywood glamour.

It was Waight Keller's first show since the house's founder Hubert de Givenchy died in March at the age of 91.

To the sound of Givenchy's muse Audrey Hepburn singing Moon River, the models strutted down a catwalk that shimmered like a river.

Draped dresses, voluminous jewels and feathers dotted the collection - 47-year-old Waight Keller's second haute couture offering since she succeeded Riccardo Tisci at Givenchy in March last year, shortly after leaving rival label Chloe following six years at the helm.

The palette was essentially black and white.

The haute couture show by Givenchy (above and below) was held in the gardens of the National Archives in Paris' Marais district.

Regal capes abounded - sometimes short, sometimes sweeping, sometimes hooded. Gem-coloured sequins covered some dresses, evoking mermaid scales. Even the masculine silhouettes also sparkled with sequins.

The official haute couture programme includes 35 shows, running through tomorrow, with collections from 11 nations: Belgium, China, France, Israel, Italy, Japan, Lebanon, Morocco, the Netherlands, Russia and the United States.

Unlike ready-to-wear shows, haute couture rollouts in January and July are a solely Parisian affair.

The prestigious "haute couture" label is accorded by the French industry ministry to acknowledge traditional craftsmanship in hand-sewn, custom-made garments using strict criteria.

Only 14 fashion houses currently boast the recognition, including Chanel, Christian Dior, Giambattista Valli, Givenchy, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Maison Margiela, Schiaparelli, Alexis Mabille and Stephane Rolland.

The catwalk displays of some of the world's most expensive clothes will be followed on Thursday by high-end jewellery collections by the likes of Anna Hu, Bulgari, Chanel, Chopard, De Beers, Dior, Louis Vuitton and Mikimoto.

Off the official programme, fashionistas on Sunday were treated to a show of exclusive creations by Sonia Rykiel, the fashion house founded by the influential French designer who died in 2016.

Although the house develops ready-to-wear lines, it worked up handmade, limited-edition items to mark its 50th anniversary for the show in the elegant courtyard of the Ecole des Beaux Arts.

Artistic director Julie de Libran paid tribute to some of the label's classics, with trademark mesh, black contrasted with bright colours, and lots of sequins and embroidery.

See-through black tulle skirts were paired with big coats or wool pullovers while a wedding dress was worn with jeans.

The pioneering Rykiel was a fixture in the industry for half a century, buoyed by the Swinging Sixties craze in London and the emerging feminist movement across the globe.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on July 03, 2018, with the headline Regal meets glamour. Subscribe