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Paris men's Fashion Week shows five trends in rebuilt tailoring and lasting clothes
Summary
Paris men's Fashion Week closed with a focus on long coats, reworked tailoring and construction meant to extend a garment's life, highlighted by shows from Hermès, Sacai, Junya Watanabe and others.
Content
Paris men's Fashion Week concluded Sunday with a repeated pair of messages: dress sharply, and build clothes to last. Shows emphasized long coats, reshaped tailoring and attention to construction. Several major houses — including Hermès, Sacai, Junya Watanabe and Comme des Garçons — presented variations on those themes. Hermès staged an emotional farewell for longtime designer Véronique Nichanian, who referenced earlier designs and urged a slower approach to fashion.
Key points:
- Long, tailored coats were a key item across shows, with examples at Hermès and Junya Watanabe.
- Designers altered how suits and jackets sit on the body by adding panels, cutting lapels and changing hems, as seen at Sacai and Comme des Garçons Homme Plus.
- Some collections favored restrained surfaces that highlight construction, notably at Kiko Kostadinov where details were hidden and shapes carried the effect.
- A dressier direction with a harder edge appeared in certain shows, combining sharp tailoring with provocative or utilitarian elements in presentations by Junya Watanabe and Louis Gabriel Nouchi.
- Several designers framed their collections as long-view statements about longevity, and Hermès's Nichanian explicitly offered the message "Slow down."
Summary:
Paris shows signalled a move toward sharper, longer-lasting wardrobe pieces centered on coats, reconstructed tailoring and subtle construction techniques. That perspective was presented across several houses and included moments framed as long-term statements rather than quick trends. Undetermined at this time.
