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Loewe presents the future of dystopia at Paris Fashion Week

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The Associated Press

Associated Press

Thomas Adamson

Paris (AP) — Loewe pushed Paris Fashion Week into the vision of the dark future of Gistopia on Saturday — making the runway a dead space The changed nature and animal life existed only for humanity to use and use. As the model walked on the robot in the foggy white light, a disinfected white wall came down to the bare deck.

The highlights of the Spring / Summer 2023 menswear collection are:

LOEWE'S NATURE MORTE

The model wore a TV screen and plasma screen plate showing deep-sea fish. The visor released a growing chrysanthemum. The only place where designer Jonathan Anderson's fashion dystopia grew grass was literally outside the shoes. There, as the automaton submitted, the green blade quivered and fluttered.

British designers pay attention not only as a starting point for the most complete design seen this season, but also to make thoughtful comments on ecology and humanity's contempt. I used a set and a concept that deserves. Natural world. As we continue, Anderson warned, the world would be destroyed and the only way to see bees would be video.

An organic vs. robot was investigated in Anderson's conceptual design, which was deliberately off-quilted. The white minimalist sweater had extra sleeves flapping lithely on the sides of the model, over white sports leggings and a loafer that sprouted a 10 cm (4 inch) mass of grass.

Bare chest and legs exposed fragility, and a bag of stiff square straps hung on the shoulders added contrasting intensity. But the piece of resistance, which looked like a horse's hoof, must have been a giant mustard toggle shoe that could have come from a set of planetary villages in "Star Wars." Tour deforce!

Invitation art

Chic invitation art is still a staple of Paris' luxury industry.

Homes are the most eye-catching, original and glamorous, delivered to each guest's personal or professional address by a gas-intensive courier with little consideration of climate. Compete to create invitations for your show.

Small works of art may provide hints on what is stored in the collection. At other times, they are just wacky.

Louis Vuitton has sent out a giant board game that resembles a trendy snake and ladder, inviting guests to a show that draws guests into the creative world of the late designer Virgil Abloh.

For a show inspired by Dior's Bloom, the house sent out flower seeds planted by a fashion reporter and had already sprouted.

But Loewe was certainly the strangest thing. A loose box of real watercress growing in the soil.

CRAIG GREEN IMPRESSES

This year, Queen Elizabeth II has appointed Queen Elizabeth II as a member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for her contributions to fashion. It is one. A designer who continues to be impressed.

On Saturday, he brought a practical edgy product back from London to the runway in Paris, wearing a creative and hipster uniform.

Green developed his cutting-edge aesthetics after internships with names such as Walter Van Beirendonck and Henrik Bibskov, leading to collaboration with Moncler.

Hanging stirrups, straps, pockets and accessories have broken down pastel-colored riding and fencing wear with transcendental or aggressive edges.

Green skillfully blurs the line between art and fashion. A DIY look (a top that looks like an upside-down sink with a builder's ladder on the back) is also reminiscent of an armor breastplate.

Is Green steadily taking the cloak of the late Alexander McQueen?