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	<title>Armani Prive &#8211; Inside Politic</title>
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		<title>The biggest surprise at Paris couture? It got wearable</title>
		<link>https://insidepolitic.co.za/the-biggest-surprise-at-paris-couture-it-got-wearable/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Jan 2026 13:31:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Armani Prive]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Paris couture this season did something unexpected: It got lighter and down to earth.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://insidepolitic.co.za/the-biggest-surprise-at-paris-couture-it-got-wearable/">The biggest surprise at Paris couture? It got wearable</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://insidepolitic.co.za">Inside Politic</a>.</p>
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<p>Paris couture this season did something unexpected: It got lighter and down to earth.</p>



<p>Not just in fabric, but in attitude.</p>



<p>Even with major couture debuts at Chanel, Dior and Armani Privé — and a week shadowed by Valentino Garavani’s death in Rome — the strongest message on the runways was restraint with impact.</p>



<p>Clothes that looked miraculous up close, but less like museum pieces and more like something a woman could actually move in.</p>



<p><strong>Sheer, weightless.</strong><br><br>Transparency was the season’s easiest headline, but the point wasn’t nakedness: It was craft made to float.</p>



<p>Chanel opened Matthieu Blazy’s first couture collection with the powerhouse’s classic skirt suit rendered in blush organza: familiar, but ghosted.</p>



<p>In the front row, the message landed on celebrities too: Nicole Kidman arrived in black feathered Chanel with pearl accessories, proof that “lightness” doesn’t have to read fragile, while Gracie Abrams popped in a light, wispy fringed Chanel tweed in electric yellow.<br><br>The tailoring was strict; the fabric was airy.</p>



<p>At rival Dior, Jonathan Anderson pushed the same idea through contrast, pairing nearly sheer ribbed tanks with painstakingly embroidered evening skirts: a couture bottom with a real-life top.</p>



<p>Armani Privé, under Silvana Armani — who put on her first couture show since her uncle Giorgio Armani died in September — made lightness look expensive. Organza shirts and ties appeared alongside “mille-feuille” gowns that shimmered through layers of micro-crystals without turning heavy.</p>



<p>Elie Saab, the patron saint of red-carpet spectacle, chased breeziness too, making embroidery melt into tulle and fringe fall like liquid metal.</p>



<p>At Schiaparelli, Teyana Taylor amplified the season ’s see-through mood in a sheer lace dress layered with jewelry — lingerie-level exposure, couture-level intention.<br><strong><br>Couture gets wearable</strong><br><br>A second shift ran through the week: couture moving toward the daily wardrobe.</p>



<p>Blazy framed Chanel as “real-life couture” — clothes for work, for a play, for whatever — and the collection followed through with pieces that felt more relatable without losing the house’s polish.</p>



<p>Anderson argued that couture doesn’t require a corset to count. He used knit as couture structure, not comfort: spun, shaped and built into dresses and sweaters with tailoring rigor.</p>



<p>The best street-style evidence came from Dior’s own ambassador: Jennifer Lawrence showed up in a men’s Dior coat with oversized fuzzy cuffs, jeans and black shoes — a front-row look that mirrored the runway’s dressed-down direction.</p>



<p>Armani Privé led with relaxed suiting, softened tailoring and a more edited lineup. Fewer looks, more suits, calmer glamour — couture as something to live in, not merely survive.</p>



<p>Even Saab nodded to wearability with his tank-top-and-skirt silhouette, a red-carpet idea stripped down to a modern uniform.<br><br><strong>Nature, but with teeth</strong><br><br>Motifs leaned hard into nature, though designers treated it less as decoration and more as code: freedom, escape, transformation.</p>



<p>Chanel’s birds fluttered across seams and turned up in feather effects, buttons, and embroideries, giving the collection a dreamlike lift.</p>



<p>Dior’s starting point was cyclamen — oversized floral earrings that set a tone of reverence and reinvention at once.</p>



<p>But Schiaparelli refused the gentle version of nature. Designer Daniel Roseberry went full animal: wings, spikes, claws and scorpion tails that made the body look altered, almost dangerous.</p>



<p>Attending Schiaparelli, Lauren Sánchez Bezos leaned into pure signal color in a blood-red skirt suit, the kind of look that reads from the natural world like a warning sign.</p>



<p>Dakota Johnson rocked the Valentino show in a maximalist animal-print top with black lace micro shorts.</p>



<p>Dutch design duo Viktor &amp; Rolf pushed the same instinct into metaphor, building their collection around flight and staging transformation through removable, colorful, kite-inspired elements that turned grounded black into something freer, stranger, brighter.<br><br><strong>Engineered volume</strong><br><br>For all the softness, couture also snapped back into structure.</p>



<p>Anderson opened Dior with hourglass volume built by hand — ruched, stitched, and shaped in tulle — creating silhouette without the usual armor.</p>



<p>French couturier Stéphane Rolland, in a circus venue, took geometry as gospel: balloon pants, jumpsuits and coats built from circular ideas and Cubist shapes, cut in gazar and satin, then finished with stones and sharp accessories.</p>



<p>Schiaparelli treated couture like sculpture, with protrusions and rigid forms that turned fashion into performance art.</p>



<p>Lebanese favorite Zuhair Murad doubled down on control: ribbed, architectural gowns, unapologetic mermaid lines and surface work so dense it never went quiet.<br><br><strong>Soft palettes, sharp punches</strong><br><br>On color, many houses sat in quiet tones — blush, pale pink, sand, celadon — and let texture carry the drama.</p>



<p>Armani Privé’s palette was all nuance: jade and soft pastels, controlled and clean. Even the guests played along: Kate Hudson arrived for Armani Privé in a collared baby-pink sequined top with black velvet pants, turning the pastel story into a paparazzi-ready uniform.</p>



<p>Chanel’s blush transparency made romance feel modern.</p>



<p>Saab leaned into metallic gradients — gold and silver sliding across dresses like moving light — a new kind of shimmer.</p>



<p>Then came the punctures: Rolland’s cooked tones — burgundy, caramel, strong reds — against stark black and white.</p>



<p>And Valentino, in a show by designer Alessandro Michele staged like a curated act of voyeurism, delivered the clearest exclamation point of the week. The final line landed in the simplest statement possible: Valentino red.<br><br><strong>AP</strong></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://insidepolitic.co.za/the-biggest-surprise-at-paris-couture-it-got-wearable/">The biggest surprise at Paris couture? It got wearable</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://insidepolitic.co.za">Inside Politic</a>.</p>
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