
Fashion mixes with politics at Paris Men's Fashion Week
Yet throughout the week, designers demonstrated their ability to engage with a larger societal landscape; by addressing concerns about inclusivity, protection and freedom, the Fall-Winter 2025 season provided a stage to escape as well as ideas to navigate the current climate.
From Willy Chavarria to EgonLab or Comme des Garçons Homme Plus, messages of unity and acceptance were sent down the runways.
When the 'French population feels increasingly powerless in the face of the government, fashion's soft power, as an industry and an art, lies in its capacity to produce new discourses, images and impact other industries,' Carole Boinet, director of French cultural publication Les Inrockuptibles, told CNN.
On the runways, workwear came back with a bang, reimagined and fused with contemporary wardrobes.
As bearded models in plaid shirts, raw denim and lumberjack-inspired lines walked the Junya Watanabe runway, the figure of the hipster seemed to hail back to 2010, when the aesthetic permeated youth subcultures and became a global phenomenon.
But it was 'good old workwear originally crafted for forestry workers,' as outlined in the show notes, that was on the Japanese designer's mind. With that, the collection reflected the season's running themes: the great outdoors and function in outerwear.
At Louis Vuitton, men's creative director Pharrell Williams teamed up with Nigo, the designer of LVMH fashion stablemate Kenzo and founder of Japanese fashion brand A Bathing Ape, to co-design a collection that merged workwear and sportswear. Inspired by the practical wardrobes of engineers, chefs and gardeners, the clothing — including a double-breasted indigo blue denim jacket, a striped box-cut ensemble and a baby pink sleeveless blouson — were both elevated and practical.
Inspired by Maurice Sendak's 1963 children's book, 'Where the Wild Things are,' Sacai founder and designer Chitose Abe, who has built a global business with her penchant for hybrid materials and oversized silhouettes, played with 'ideas of living in nature, untamed and unrestricted by convention.' She showed a collection of cocoon-shaped furry knitwear, some with exaggerated pockets, and also continued to create co-branded pieces with US workwear company Carhartt, which took the form of leather and puffer jackets in shades of dark brown and green.
Throughout the week, designers used their platforms to make overt political and social statements. New York-based designer Willy Chavarria, a recent winner of the CFDA's Menswear Designer of the Year Award, brought his collection to Paris for the first time, to mark the tenth anniversary of his eponymous label. Shown in the baroque setting of the American Cathedral, his sculpted, reworked tailoring once again took inspiration from his Mexican-American background; they came in a palette of gold, plum and burgundy.
As Chavarria explained to CNN, resilience and resistance was at the heart of his collection, as he sought to put forward a 'message of human dignity and equality.' He emphasized 'the importance of us coming together to preserve our rights as citizens, as immigrants, as LGBTQ people, as women, all of us who are very much under attack right now.'
Florentin Glémarec and Kevin Nompeix, the creative duo behind the Paris-based gender-fluid label EgonLab, incorporated playful Victorian nods as they presented garments that challenged traditional masculinity. Backstage, the designers explained their focus on disenfranchised communities.
'Minorities are systematically attacked by new politics around the world,' they said, adding that amid what felt like 'a modern witch hunt,' they called for 'minorities to unite and fight inequality.'
At Comme des Garçons Homme Plus, war was on the mind of Japanese fashion designer Rei Kawakubo, whose collection, named 'To Hell With War,' showcased deconstructed army staples, disheveled khaki uniforms and army boots. Models wore reimagined helmets adorned with flowers, reminiscent of the flower power movement of the 1960s and '70s, when protesters focused on positive values, such as peace and love, in their fight for freedom.
Charles Jeffrey, founder and designer of London fashion label Charles Jeffrey Loverboy, drew inspiration from Berlin's Weimar Cabarets.
With exaggerated stage makeup, homoerotic banana-shaped accessories and a peel-like effect on garments, deconstructed kilts and disheveled knitwear, the designer — who opened the show in heels and spoke to spectators via a microphone — sought to echo the label's roots in nightlife. For designer Jeffrey, it was 'an opportunity to make people come together… when we have right-wing governments saying, 'you are only two genders'…we are a multitude of things,' he told CNN ahead of the show.
Some designers took a more introspective approach, focusing on the narratives embedded in clothing and tailoring details that might go amiss on camera. Dior's collection referenced the H-line created by its founder Christian Dior for Fall-Winter 1954-1955 – a controversial silhouette at the time as its flattened shape appeared, for some, unfeminine. In a cinematic setting, models descended with dramatic covered eyes, à la Stanley Kubrick's 1999 erotic psychological drama 'Eyes Wide Shut.' The collection also played with contrasting volumes from baggy male skirts to opera coats and dusted pink bows.
Bianca Saunders, the first Black British designer to win the prestigious ANDAM fashion prize, looked at the tension between constraint and movement, and suppleness and rigor, Shirts were creased, trousers' seams were twisted and their ankles were knotted. .
Citing Robert Longo's photography, which captures men and women in exaggerated, contorted movements, she said that she took inspiration from 'how very structural menswear is pushed and pulled, all that subtlety of twisting things… capturing movement and slowness in the garment.'
Craftsmanship and experimentation also took center stage at Rick Owens' show at the Palais de Tokyo. True to form, Owens distorted and exaggerated body shapes while radically playing with techniques and textures — see the 'dracucollar' jackets in wax-drummed leather, 'megacrust' jeans, a crusted effect achieved by pressing bronze foil and wax onto denim, and even kemp fibers – an eco-friendly and subversive material also known as 'dead hair'. As it often is with Owens, fashion knows no bounds.
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36 minutes ago
Lebanon mourns iconic composer Ziad Rahbani as mother Fayrouz makes rare appearance
BEIRUT -- Hundreds of people in Lebanon paid tribute Monday to iconic composer, pianist and playwright Ziad Rahbani, who died over the weekend. His mother, Fayrouz, one of the Arab world's most esteemed singers, made a rare public appearance. Rahbani, also known as a political provocateur, died Saturday at age 69. The cause of death was not immediately known. His passing shocked much of the Arab world, which appreciated his satire, unapologetic political critique and avante-garde, jazz-inspired compositions that mirrored the chaos and contradictions of Lebanon throughout its civil war from 1975 until 1990. He also composed some of his mother's most famous songs. The Rahbani family was a cornerstone in Lebanon's golden era of music theater that today is steeped in idealism and nostalgia in a troubled country. Top Lebanese political officials and artists paid tribute after the death was announced. Rahbani, a leftist Greek Orthodox, often mocked Lebanon's sectarian divisions in his work. Hundreds of people holding roses and photos gathered by Khoury Hospital near Beirut's busy Hamra district, solemnly singing some of his most famous songs and applauding as a vehicle carrying his body left its garage. Reem Haidar, who grew up during the civil war, said Rahbani's songs and their messages were what she and others associated with at a time when there was 'no nation to belong to.' The vehicle made its way to a church in the mountainous town of Bikfaya before burial in the family cemetery. Fayrouz, 90, had spent many years away from the public eye. Wearing black sunglasses and a black veil, she greeted visitors who came to pay respects. She had not been seen publicly since photos surfaced of her meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron, who visited her residence in 2020 to award her France's highest medal of honor. In recent years, Rahbani also appeared less in the public eye, yet his influence never waned. Younger generations rediscovered his plays online and sampled his music in protest movements. He continued to compose and write, speaking often of his frustration with Lebanon's political stagnation and decaying public life.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Lebanon mourns iconic composer Ziad Rahbani as mother Fayrouz makes rare appearance
BEIRUT (AP) — Hundreds of people in Lebanon paid tribute Monday to iconic composer, pianist and playwright Ziad Rahbani, who died over the weekend. His mother, Fayrouz, one of the Arab world's most esteemed singers, made a rare public appearance. Rahbani, also known as a political provocateur, died Saturday at age 69. The cause of death was not immediately known. His passing shocked much of the Arab world, which appreciated his satire, unapologetic political critique and avante-garde, jazz-inspired compositions that mirrored the chaos and contradictions of Lebanon throughout its civil war from 1975 until 1990. He also composed some of his mother's most famous songs. The Rahbani family was a cornerstone in Lebanon's golden era of music theater that today is steeped in idealism and nostalgia in a troubled country. Top Lebanese political officials and artists paid tribute after the death was announced. Rahbani, a leftist Greek Orthodox, often mocked Lebanon's sectarian divisions in his work. Hundreds of people holding roses and photos gathered by Khoury Hospital near Beirut's busy Hamra district, solemnly singing some of his most famous songs and applauding as a vehicle carrying his body left its garage. Reem Haidar, who grew up during the civil war, said Rahbani's songs and their messages were what she and others associated with at a time when there was 'no nation to belong to.' The vehicle made its way to a church in the mountainous town of Bikfaya before burial in the family cemetery. Fayrouz, 90, had spent many years away from the public eye. Wearing black sunglasses and a black veil, she greeted visitors who came to pay respects. She had not been seen publicly since photos surfaced of her meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron, who visited her residence in 2020 to award her France's highest medal of honor. In recent years, Rahbani also appeared less in the public eye, yet his influence never waned. Younger generations rediscovered his plays online and sampled his music in protest movements. He continued to compose and write, speaking often of his frustration with Lebanon's political stagnation and decaying public life.


Cosmopolitan
an hour ago
- Cosmopolitan
30 Iconic Bob Hairstyles Defining 2025
It's minimizing to call what's happening with bobs this year a trend. I'd sooner deem it a complete cultural takeover. I'm faced with cunty fresh cuts on my commute, in prestige television shows, at my grocery store, and swaying sophisticatedly in workout classes. It feels like every day on my Instagram feed, there's a new bob reveal, treated with the reverence and celebration of a pregnancy or engagement announcement. And I participate in the comment section revelry wholeheartedly. Because in every form they take, bobs devour, and I've become 100 percent convinced this cut is the chicest and most practical possible way to wear your hair. 'It's clean and intentional, and it can completely transform the way someone carries themselves,' says Kazu Katahira, a celebrity hairstylist with Forward Artists in New York, NY. 'And what I love most is how customizable it is. No two bobs are the same when you are doing it right. You can play with the length, the angle, the texture, and it becomes this little signature for the person wearing it.' I witnessed this wide variety of bob possibilities during Cosmo's photo shoot, dedicated to documenting the hairstyle's takeover. We invited 30 women with New York City's greatest bobs to come in, show them off, and share what makes the bob lifestyle a preferred one. From the French bobs to the graduated ones, these 30 New Yorkers have all braved the big chop and are better off for it. They're also proof that there's no one fixed way to rock this haircut. So ahead, find some inspiration and the reference pictures you'll be showing your hairstylist—along with guidance from the greats on how to live your best bobbed life. Occupation: Artist/DJ Social handle: @ Hair type: Just found out I'm 2B. The most unexpected thing about having a bob? How many people remember me from DJ sets as 'the one with the bob.' Best bob styling tip: Let it live. Occupation: Attorney + Mom!!! [Editor's note: Mom to Cosmo's creative director, Samantha Adler] Hair type: Wavy/curly The ultimate famous bob inspiration: Meg Ryan Best bob styling tip: Pray for low humidity and the mercy of the hair gods. Occupation: Dancer/actor Social handle: @AvaNoble Describe your bob without using the word bob: Chic as fu*k The most unexpected thing about having a bob: I cut my hair to a bob the day after a breakup….Happy to report that single men love a bob. The pickup lines always stem from the bob. Life hack for a single girl in NYC. Best bob styling tip: Bob blindness is real—you will keep going shorter until your friends tell you to stop. Don't let the trim get out of control! Shout-out Li at Cutler Soho. Occupation: Model/artist Social handle: @madisonjohnston Hair type: Curly (but she has a mind of her own...) Ultimate famous bob inspo: Nadia Lee Cohen (I want to be her) The most unexpected thing about having a bob: You can look like a million different things at once. Young, old, cute, hot, or sometimes a little like Lord Farquaad. Occupation: Artist and founder of Beepy Bella Social handle: @isabellelalonde Hair type: Curly Describe your bob without using the word bob: Pungent Ultimate famous bob inspo: Me at 5 years old, Edna from The Incredibles, and Kiki's Delivery Service. Occupation: VIP Relations at Gucci Social handle: @madelisey Hair type: Cantonese Describe your bob without using the word bob: F*ckass The most unexpected thing about having a bob: Feeling the breeze on your neck. Occupation: Broadway Actor/Singer Social handle: @jadeamberlitaker Hair type: 4 A/B Ultimate famous bob inspo: I think Rihanna was the first with a bob who made me really want one. Best bob styling tip: Having locs and a bob?! Honestly, water. Just spraying some water makes all the difference. Occupation: Photographer Social handle: @ambejphotography Hair type: Kinky curly 4 A/B Ultimate famous bob inspo: Velma Kelly Best bob styling tip: For the curly girls—the Doux mousse, water, and a dream! Occupation: Actor Social handle: @huisterry Hair type: 1.5 B Describe your bob without using the word bob: Wolf cut… Ultimate famous bob inspo: Traditional bob → Rose Byrne in US Weekly 'Celebs w/ bob hairstyles'...My cut bob→ Hyunjin from Stray Kids Occupation: Comedian Social handle: @chloe_troast Hair type: Brown :( Ultimate famous bob inspo: Will Byers Season 1 of Stranger Things The most unexpected thing about having a bob: Getting a cold neck. Also I have a long neck, so sometimes my silhouette looks like a penis/mushroom. Occupation: Model, writer, superstar extraordinaire Social handle: @ellasnyder Hair type: Fine and wavy Ultimate famous bob inspo: Anna Wintour, duh, but also Gracie Abrams <3 Best bob styling tip: See Jaz Shepard in NYC for the best cut of your life. Occupation: Actor/educator Social handle: @jessiehookerbailey Hair type: Curly Ultimate famous bob inspo: The curly Whitney Houston bob Best bob styling tip: Moisturize!! Occupation: Actor Social handle(s): @JuliaKnitel Hair type: Pretty wavy Ultimate famous bob inspo: Diane Keaton…obvi Best bob maintenance/styling tip: Just…don't do anything. A great haircut will do so much of the work when it's short!! Occupation: Model/Actor/DJ Social handle: @KelseyHealey Hair type: Thick, semi-wave The most unexpected thing about having a bob: How much more confident I feel! Best bob styling tip: I never used much product…until I had a bob…or else it just feels like a helmet. Occupation: Fashion critic, The Washington Post Social handle: @theprophetpizza Hair type: Insanely thick and bleached Describe your bob without using the word bob: Crisp Ultimate famous bob inspo: Bernice from F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'Bernice Bobs Her Hair' Occupation: Model/beauty influencer Social handle: @daniellemareka Hair type: 4C Describe your bob without using the word bob: Eclectic Best bob maintenance/styling tip: Mini flatiron!! Best life hack. Occupation: Director, Fashion & Lifestyle in retail Social handle: @chloe4dayz Hair type: Linguine straight Ultimate famous bob inspo: The Supremes The most unexpected thing about having a bob: The bob community Best bob styling tip: Get as blunt a cut as you can bear! And Oribe Dry Texturizing Spray Occupation: Retired from the federal government, now on IG, volunteer for NY Senior Medicare Patrol Social handle: @idiosyncraticfashionistas Hair type: 1B/1C Describe your bob without using the word bob: Signature look—low-maintenance between haircuts. The most unexpected thing about having a bob: I can never start a life of crime—the police would find me so fast! Occupation: Media personality/creator Social handle: @stehfuhnee_ Hair type: 4C, heat-treated Describe your bob without using the word bob: The essence of my mother. Best bob styling tip: Bobs look best when they're a little old. Dry shampoo is your best friend. Occupation: Textile artist, content creator Social handles: @ellaemhoff, Substack: softcraftsclub Hair type: 3B. Used to be 3A, but your hair texture changes every seven years. Ultimate famous bob inspo: Ilana Glazer. Great bob. Best bob styling tip: Mousse will make it super voluminous. Oil is great in the summer for a nice, messy look. Occupation: Writer Social handle: @mackenzie Hair type: Thin as fuck. Light as air. I blame my dad. Describe your bob without using the word bob: Evocative Best bob styling tip: Your hair is gonna look like shit for a whole calendar year, but that's actually really important for your bob education. Occupation: Fashion stylist and content creator Social handle: @sierrarenas Hair type: 3B/3C Ultimate famous bob inspo: Edna Mode Best bob styling tip: Don't be afraid to use heat. Occupation: Musician/model Social handle: @ Hair type: Unnatural, my hair has been through it all. Ultimate famous bob inspo: Hari Nef Best bob styling tip: A Dyson, unfortunately ($$$) Occupation: Model Social handle: @josephine__dupont Hair type: Curly, but I won't blow it out. Describe your bob without using the word bob: Cunty. Ultimate famous bob inspo: Linda/Shalome/Whitney Best bob styling tip: Keep the scissors in your purse. Occupation: Content creator Social handle: @tinyjewishgirl Hair type: 3A if I'm lazy; 3B if I'm taking care of myself Describe your bob without using the word bob: What season 5 Carrie Bradshaw should've given. Ultimate famous bob inspo: Not season 5 Carrie Bradshaw. TBH, my 19-year-old self and, lowkey, Owen Wilson as Hansel but without the bangs. Occupation: Beauty editor and expert Social handle: @mayaalenaa Hair type: Naturally 4C Describe your bob without using the word bob: A power cut. It's like a power suit for my hair. It makes me feel fierce and effortlessly chic without ever having to try too hard. Best bob styling tip: Dry shampoo. Imperfect is perfect. Embrace the texture—it just works! Occupation: Stylist Social handle: @chanelncrocs Hair type: Curly Describe your bob without using the word bob: Cunt. The most unexpected thing about having a bob: The less hair I have, the more powerful I feel. Occupation: Artist Social handle: @sashaarijanto Hair type: Jew-Asian Describe your bob without using the word bob: Comic book character. The most unexpected thing about having a bob: Number one 'They always come back' catalyst. Also, it's the best haircut if you hate washing your hair. Occupation: Photo Director, Vogue Social handle: @pkv15 Hair type: Short, blonde, cut straight (but I'm not) Ultimate famous bob inspo: Probably Leo [DiCaprio]? Or River [Phoenix]. Best bob styling tip: Starlina, my hairstylist Occupation: Actor and filmmaker Social handle: @vournalist Describe your bob without using the word bob: French Ultimate famous bob inspo: Amélie from Amélie Hair and makeup: William Scott at The Wall Group. Creative director: Samantha Adler. Senior entertainment director: Maxwell Losgar. Visual director: Scott M. Lacey. Associate visual editor: Sabrina Toto. Motion graphics designer: Ying Chen. Annabel Iwegbue is an associate editor at Cosmopolitan where she primarily covers entertainment and lifestyle. Before joining Cosmo, she covered entertainment at Harper's Bazaar, The Knockturnal, and Black Film. She's originally from Charleston, South Carolina, and is currently based in Brooklyn, New York. She holds a B.A. in Journalism and Cinema Studies from New York University. You can check out some of Annabel's work here and also find her on Instagram and Twitter.