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Men's Fashion Week kicks off in Paris with Louis Vuitton show
Men's Fashion Week kicked off in Paris on Tuesday with a celeb-heavy Louis Vuitton show as designers and industry leaders mourned the loss of Italian maestro Valentino.
Celebrity designer Pharrell Williams sent out models wearing long wool coats, loose-fitting suits --sometimes with Bermuda shorts -- short jackets, or fitted parkas with fur-trimmed hoods.
A guestlist heavy in US performers included Usher, John Legend, SZA and Joe Keery who took their places on the front row alongside Louis Vuitton owner and tycoon Bernard Arnault.
Arnault was one of many leading industry lights to pay tribute to Italian designer Valentino Garavani's "refined, radiant and sumptuous fashion" after his death aged 93 on Monday.
Designers, supermodels and actresses have publicly mourned the loss of another Italian style legend, just four months after the passing of Giorgio Armani.
The Fall-Winter 2026 Paris Fashion Week follows on from Milan where trend-spotters say the recent fad for large oversized tailoring appears to have peaked.
Designers seem to be reverting to more classic, regular tailoring, either as a response to geopolitical uncertainty or as a bankable commercial move at a time when the luxury clothing industry faces a slowdown.
As well as setting the trends for the end of the year, the six days of Men's Fashion Week will also feature a final farewell for Veronique Nichanian, who is stepping down at Hermes after 37 years of designing their men's collections.
The 71-year-old Parisian -- one of the few women designing in menswear -- will leave behind a brand in tremendous financial shape with an image of timeless, refined masculinity.
Her successor, London designer Grace Wales Bonner, who is of English and Jamaican heritage, represents a generational and stylistic shift for the classic family-run French house.
- Fresh faces -
On Wednesday, fashionistas have been vying for spots at the debut Christian Louboutin show by Jaden Smith -- son of US rapper-actor Will Smith -- who will present his debut collection.
The model and musician, 27, was unveiled as the creative director of the famed French brand last September by founder Louboutin, who appears to be preparing to hand over the reins to the Gen Z trendsetter.
The choice is seen as a bold bet on relatively inexperienced youth by the veteran maker of red-soled stilettos, whose ready-to-wear menswear and accessories are estimated by analysts to account for about a quarter of his sales.
Also on Wednesday, much-hyped Dior designer Jonathan Anderson will unveil his second Homme collection, having made his debut in June last year with a widely praised unisex show.
But the 41-year-old's womenswear collection in September didn't convince everyone, and some observers expect him to put a more decisive mark on Dior and cement the new identity he's begun sketching out.
"There's a lot of anticipation, a lot of pressure," Alice Feillard, men's buying director at Paris department store Galeries Lafayette, told AFP.
The luxury fashion industry has undergone a wave of changes over the last 12 months at a time of weak international growth following the bumper buying frenzy of the post-Covid period.
Slowing demand from China, US tariffs on imports and uncertainty about the global economy have all weighed on sales of European brands.
- Kenzo house -
New faces such as Anderson, Matthieu Blazy at Chanel, Demna at Gucci or Sarah Burton at Givenchy signal a new stable of couturiers who look set to dominate the major houses over the next decade.
Elsewhere over the week, Japanese brands from Yohji Yamamoto and Issey Miyake to Auralee and Mihara Yasuhiro will be out in force.
LVMH-owned Kenzo, will hold a presentation instead of a runway show on Tuesday inside the vast Parisian house of late founder Kenzo Takada in the French capital's trendy 11th district.
The four-storey modernist building, which features a Japanese garden, will host a day-long gathering of design, food and music curated by chief creative Nigo.
Outspoken US designer Willy Chavarria, who is one of a handful unafraid to express political views, also returns for his third season in Paris and might have something to say about Donald Trump's presidency on Friday.
He paid tribute to Valentino, saying in a statement reported by the WWD fashion website that "the fashion world will be quieter" with his passing.
L.Wyss--VB