The root of the collection leans on funky pairings meant to elicit personal responses. Highlighting different variations of travel attire and the characters who would potentially wear them signals the importance of offering audiences clothing created from real-life experiences. Ghesquière succeeds at chasing this ideal.
Louis Vuitton designer Nicolas Ghesquiere brought his Paris audience to the Gare du Nord for his fall-winter runway presentation on Monday night, showing an eclectic and futuristic mix of styles that featured 1980s-flavored shoulders and scrunched boots along with a wide array of handbags.
Just days after an unexploded World War II bomb near Paris’ Gare du Nord briefly stole headlines, a different kind of spectacle unfolded across the street: Louis Vuitton’s fashion show extravaganza Monday evening.
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Ghesquière wrote in his show notes that he was specifically inspired by station platforms and the people standing at them, coming from and going on their journeys. He was also, of course, inspired by the house’s beginnings as a luggage maker—the first practical flat-top travel trunk was invented by Louis Vuitton in 1858.
Nicolas Ghesquière settled on train stations and platforms as his seasonal theme, yielding an eclectic collection for characters on all kinds of journeys.
Drawing in A-listers, fashionistas, and industry insiders, the Louis Vuitton presentations have always dominated Paris Fashion Week.
K-Pop star Felix Lee has walked the Louis Vuitton runway twice. On Monday, he modeled new pieces from LV's artistic director, Nicolas Ghesquière.
The 24-year-old rapper, a member of K-pop supergroup Stray Kids, made his runway debut during last year’s Louis Vuitton womenswear Fall Winter show.
At Paris Fashion Week, Nicolas Ghesquière recreates a “the bustling ambience of a Parisian train station.”
Louis Vuitton’s latest show transformed a Parisian station into a theatrical runway, channelling vintage travel aesthetics. While the vision was striking, some experimental designs risked overshadowing the collection’s narrative.
Smith’s Petite Malle debuted as part of the same collection, designed by creative director Nicolas Ghesquière. A miniature version of Vuitton’s signature trunks, the new model features a trompe-l’oeil design made to look like three trunks in one.