{"id":78260,"date":"2021-03-10T15:04:00","date_gmt":"2021-03-10T15:04:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/luxsure.com\/?p=78260"},"modified":"2021-03-10T12:20:35","modified_gmt":"2021-03-10T12:20:35","slug":"fwd-dior-presents-the-autumn-winter-2021-2022-womens-readywear-collection","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/luxsure.com\/fr\/blog\/2021\/03\/10\/fwd-dior-presents-the-autumn-winter-2021-2022-womens-readywear-collection\/","title":{"rendered":"DIOR PR\u00c9SENTE LA COLLECTION DE PR\u00caT-\u00c0-PORTER F\u00c9MININ AUTOMNE-HIVER 2021-2022"},"content":{"rendered":"
In every collection, Maria Grazia Chiuri chooses a territory where the time-space dimension is erased: suggestions and intentions give form and contours to an articulated constellation of clothes and accessories. For the autumn-winter 2021-2022 ready-to-wear collection, the Creative Director explores the world of fairy tales.A network of symbols, the tale is hardly just a means of escape: it serves to challenge and revisit stereotypes and archetypes. It consists of a narrative projected into the future. Revisited by Maria Grazia Chiuri, the toy soldier\u2019s uniform thus transforms into a series of blue cashmere coats embellished with touches of red and white. Shimmering lam\u00e9 andLurex jacquards lend this stylized silhouette a metallic shine; fabrics made with gold and silver threads appear to float as if by magic. Black boldly asserts itself on a range of pieces from skirts to the Bar jacket punctuated with the cannage motif, an iconic Dior code, or with a hood that might have been worn by Angela Carter\u2019sLittle Red Riding Hood*.Red is a through line, on little coats(\u201cI think a red coat is very nice!\u201dwrote Monsieur Dior inThe Little Dictionary ofFashion): it illuminates capes and raincoats always with hoods. It permeates tartans via an archival rose motif** evoking the original tale ofBeauty and the Beast, of which Maria Grazia Chiuri is particularly fond, notably in Jean Cocteau\u2019s film adaptation, itself inspired by the fairy tales of two writers: Madame d\u2019Aulnoy, a contemporary of Perrault, and Madame Leprince de Beaumont.Evening gowns are fit for princesses, in layered tulles that seem to evaporate in a froth of marvelous colors. Then thereare white collars, plastrons inbroderie anglaise, and white bobby socks recalling the world of childhood.A new self-awareness, born of a feminine sensibility that knows how to blend memories of the past and maturity, as if by magic
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