Louis Vuitton Ends Paris Fashion Week With a Retro Mix of Color and PrintHarper's BazaarTue, October 1, 2019 at 1:35 PM UTCFor Spring, Maria Grazia Chiuri kept it in the family—taking inspiration from the house's founder's sister, Catherine Dior. It's not a great leap, looking at the show, to realize she was an avid gardner and fiercely independent before it was fashionable to be so. Charming floral prints, feathered jackets, and houndstooth mini dresses, paired with little gardening hats, served as a reminder from Chiuri to create our own "inclusive garden" and re-establish a balance between humans and the planet. Anthony Vaccarello is staying within the codes of Rive Gauche and its particular melding of masculine-feminine, making it just a little modern, but also embracing that '70s realness. It may sound like a mouthful, but it's really quite simple—short shorts, high boots, gilded party dresses, Le Smoking tuxes and jumpsuits. It's the things girls want to wear, with some great uses of that well-known logo. Thank god it hasn't been redone in upper case Didot. In a true fashion nerd dream, each seat at today's Dries van Noten show came with a rose with a small label DVN*XCLX. Two design power houses—van Noten and Christian Lacroix—have reportedly been working together on the Spring 2020 collection for the past five months. The results were like a Dries meets Lacroix fever dream—polka dots, cropped jackets, feathers, more feathers, bold shoulders, prints, color, black and white. There's a lot to unpack here, but the collection is exuberant, it's maximalist yet polished, it's joyful—and we can all use a little bit of that right now. Lanvin1 of 17Lanvin1 of 17Lanvin2 of 17Christian Dior3 of 17For Spring, Maria Grazia Chiuri kept it in the family—taking inspiration from the house's founder's sister, Catherine Dior. It's not a great leap, looking at the show, to realize she was an avid gardner and fiercely independent before it was fashionable to be so. Charming floral prints, feathered jackets, and houndstooth mini dresses, paired with little gardening hats, served as a reminder from Chiuri to create our own "inclusive garden" and re-establish a balance between humans and the planet. Christian Dior4 of 17Christian Dior5 of 17Christian Dior6 of 17Christian Dior7 of 17Saint Laurent8 of 17Anthony Vaccarello is staying within the codes of Rive Gauche and its particular melding of masculine-feminine, making it just a little modern, but also embracing that '70s realness. It may sound like a mouthful, but it's really quite simple—short shorts, high boots, gilded party dresses, Le Smoking tuxes and jumpsuits. It's the things girls want to wear, with some great uses of that well-known logo. Thank god it hasn't been redone in upper case Didot. Saint Laurent9 of 17Saint Laurent10 of 17Saint Laurent11 of 17Saint Laurent12 of 17Dries van Noten13 of 17In a true fashion nerd dream, each seat at today's Dries van Noten show came with a rose with a small label DVN*XCLX. Two design power houses—van Noten and Christian Lacroix—have reportedly been working together on the Spring 2020 collection for the past five months. The results were like a Dries meets Lacroix fever dream—polka dots, cropped jackets, feathers, more feathers, bold shoulders, prints, color, black and white. There's a lot to unpack here, but the collection is exuberant, it's maximalist yet polished, it's joyful—and we can all use a little bit of that right now. Dries van Noten14 of 17Dries van Noten15 of 17Dries van Noten16 of 17Dries van Noten17 of 17Tracking all the best runway looks from Paris Fashion Week.From Harper's BAZAARAbout Our Ads