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Paris Haute Couture Week day 3 round up: Elie Saab, Viktor & Rolf and Yuima Nakazato brought the drama with film-worthy period gowns, headless tuxedoed mannequins and blood red tribal necklaces

Lebanese designer Elie Saab’s creations were nothing short of spectacular at Women’s Haute-Couture Fashion Week in Paris on July 5. Photo: AFP

In the stone cloisters of the Musee des Arts Decoratifs adjoining the palatial Louvre, Elie Saab unveiled his latest collection to a rapt audience of VIPs, including Alicia Silverstone, on Wednesday.

Amid the historic venue, Saab presented a couture show that astounded attendees with its intricate detailing and magnificent silhouettes – and lived up to the venue’s grandeur.

Here are some highlights of Wednesday’s autumn-winter 2023 couture collections:

Saab’s cinematic sirens strut in silk

A model presents a creation from the autumn/winter 2023/24 haute couture collection by Lebanese designer Elie Saab during Paris Fashion Week on July 5. Photo: EPA-EFE

Staying true to his glamour-focused ethos, the fall collection saw Saab recraft history’s contours through a modern lens. Drawing inspiration from heroines of period pieces – Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth, Charlize Theron in Snow White and the Huntsman, and more – Saab reinterpreted these timeless figures.

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Lebanese designer Elie Saab’s creations oozed femininity and luxury. Photo: EPA-EFE
Complex embellishments, intricate textures and sparkling jewel tones of ruby, amethyst and emerald danced across gowns, paying homage to the regal, cinematic muses. Medieval symbolism came to life through sequinned Tudor roses and flowering branches vining their way up the gowns, melding historical reverence with Saab’s sophisticated artistry.
Historical reverence met sophisticated artistry at Elie Saab’s autumn/winter haute couture collection on Wednesday. Photo: EPA-EFE

Dramatic capes of crystallised crepe and velvet dentelle layered atop matching gowns, wrapped in an enigma of enchantment and luxury. Touches of whimsy came to life in pearl drops and gilded bees humming through embroidered foliage, and ethereal gowns with near-transparent sequins in playful fantasies.

Elie Saab’s creations at Paris’ Haute Couture Week were nothing short of enchanting. Photo: EPA-EFE

Saab has shown once more that while his inspirations may travel through time, the core of his collections – an unflinching commitment to glamour and the celebration of feminine beauty – remains the same. It is this consistency that continues to endear Saab to his clientele.

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Bikinis, bows, and mannequins: Viktor & Rolf’s surrealist spectacle

It may be an autumn/winter collection, but bikinis, swimsuits and bodices featured heavily at Viktor & Rolf’s haute couture collection on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

Couture at Viktor & Rolf is like a master class in suspense. Season after season the anticipation among fashion critics is palpable over what their latest surreal innovation and creative madness will be. Known for a history steeped in the avant-garde, Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren are unafraid to challenge norms, often framing their fashion as a commentary on society.

As usual, Viktor & Rolf used Fashion Week to make a humorous and political statement. Photo: AFP

Their fall couture show kicked off with an audacious splash. Bikinis, the epitome of summer wear, were intricately fastened with a lattice of ribbons, an allusion to the paradoxical bondage of fashion. This lattice motif exploded into a kaleidoscopic spectacle on a pale blue bikini that seemed to amplify the model into an oscillating subatomic particle, a look heightened by audacious yellow heels.

A model presents a creation by Viktor & Rolf during their women’s haute-couture autumn/winter 2023/2024 show in Paris on July 5. Photo: AFP

Bows and ruffles, traditional symbols of femininity, were deconstructed and recontextualised. A bold red swimsuit was bisected by a single, defiant bow, while another garment saw bows fluttering upwards like a flight of butterflies – a surreal moment that testified to the duo’s poetry. Their knack for placing the unexpected could not be missed.

A model presents a surreal creation by Viktor & Rolf that got cameras flashing on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

Viktor & Rolf’s coup de grâce was the Instagram-ready moment featuring a model adorned with a headless male mannequin in a tuxedo, perched on her shoulders. The mannequin made a reappearance, this time seemingly leaping into a model’s arms in a startled embrace.

Bows and ruffles, traditional symbols of femininity, were deconstructed and recontextualised at Viktor & Rolf’s haute couture show. Photo: AFP

In a world of predictability, Viktor & Rolf once again served up the unexpected, ingeniously weaving in the threads of humour, critique and surrealism. Their couture shows challenge the status quo, one garment at a time.

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Yuima Nakazato’s display of craft and illusion

A model presents a creation by Yuima Nakazato during the Women’s Haute-Couture Fashion Week in Paris on July 5. Photo: AFP

Up-and-coming designer Yuima Nakazato, hailing from Tokyo, showed a growing confidence and maturity in his latest collection presented at Wednesday’s couture show.

Cascading, coral like pieces had the wow factor at Yuima Nakazato’s show during Women’s Haute-Couture Fashion Week in Paris on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

Known for his unique blend of traditional Japanese techniques with innovative, sustainable approaches, Nakazato’s collection began with a surprising piece: a cascading tribal necklace that initially appeared to be made of red coral but was, in fact, ingeniously composed of keys.

A model presents a creation by Yuima Nakazato during the Women’s Haute-Couture Fall/Winter 2023/2024 Fashion Week in Paris on July 5, 2023. Photo: AFP

Nakazato’s visual illusions were further showcased through prominent jewellery pieces like a blood-red pendant, almost resembling scavenged carcass remains.

Slashed, draped garments moved delicately with the models at up and coming Japanese designer Yuima Nakazato’s show. Photo: AFP

The designer’s signature style – the fusion of contrasting elements – was prominent. Vivid, hard jewellery was starkly contrasted with fluid, draped garments that delicately moved with the models. A white top appeared to have been clawed by a wild animal, further reinforcing the collection’s untamed spirit.

Yuima Nakazato’s collection featured sustainable textiles throughout. Photo: AFP

Nakazato’s exploration of sustainable textiles and commitment to waste reduction are notable.

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  • Elie Saab captivated Wednesday’s Paris couture crowd with stunning pieces that drew inspiration from Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth and Charlize Theron in Snow White and the Huntsman
  • Viktor & Rolf delivered a typically surrealist show commenting on the paradoxical bondage of fashion, featuring giant bows and headless mannequins