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Nylon
28-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Nylon
Hermès unveils second chapter of women's ready-to-wear fall-winter 2025 collection
Put together by Nadège Vanhée, the Artistic director of Women's Ready-to-Wear for Hermès, the second chapter of the Fall-Winter 2025 collection evokes a protagonist of understated strength, effortless allure and subtle complexity, rooted in urban life but drawn to the natural world. Image courtesy of Hermès. At the heart of the collection is the braid, which is an enduring house signature and a timeless symbol of connection and continuity across cultures. Taking inspiration from equestrian plaits and drawn from the asymmetrical graphics of the Dressage Tressage silk carré by Virgine Jamin, this motif returns with a renewed spirit and modernist expression that weaves a joyful tale shaped by craftsmanship, imagination, and inventive engineering. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. You'll also find classical codes that have been transformed through kaleidoscopic arrangements of function, shape, colour and print with modular configurations for clothes to adapt to the movement of everyday life with a fold, turn, and zip. Building on the house's elemental equestrian blanket, poncho sweaters and enveloping coats have been reimagined in double-faced cashmere, lined with Dressage Tressage panels that can be removed depending on the occasion or climate. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Archetypes are invigorated with high craft and a sporty, outdoorsy look with its technical features enhanced by textural elements like cord embellishments on the collars, quilted leathers, contrast braiding on knits, and weaves that are reminiscent of French bistro chairs. In addition to this, a palette evoking the natural landscape balances the collection's rich, earthy tones that were inspired by the equestrian universe with its warm reds and fiery oranges tempered by soft lilac, clay white and inky blue. Availability of the Hermès Fall-Winter Collection — second chapter has yet to be announced. For more information on the collection, visit


Vogue Singapore
17-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Vogue Singapore
Vogue's best looks from the Hermès fall/winter 2025 show Vogue Singapore
Show review in a sentence: A collection on the pulse, firmly rooted in the iconography and history of Hermès, while honouring its present and future. Designer: Nadège Vanhee Location: Shanghai, China The vision: Today in Shanghai, at the North Bund Bay, Hermès presented what, to me, felt like one of Nadège Vanhee's edgiest collections yet. Dubbed Au Galop!, what stood out wasn't just the collection itself, but the way each piece was styled. There was a clear sense of direction, one that felt in step with Shanghai's energy and, more than that, its taste. The vibe: Showgoers, as vibrant as the sparkling Shanghai skyline itself, filtered into a characteristically hued set. It's no surprise that fans of the maison are truly fans—and what's so beautiful about the affinity between them is the ever-present hint of personalisation in the relationship. Constances came perched in different ways, Kellys playfully styled with scarves, trinkets and vintage keychains, and Birkins in a myriad of hues, all bearing the distinct touch of their owners. The second chapter of the fall/winter 2025 collection was shown against an orange-lit waterfront, with panels revealing Lujiazui's skyline and the Huangpu River. Hermès' glittering Jumping boots opened the show, hinting at an immediate edge applied to some of the house's most recognisable staples. Scarves layered over leather hats, black-and-red gloves, and structured outerwear followed. While the collection stayed true to Hermès' roots, it felt as though Vanhee was inviting us to reimagine pieces we've known for decades, nudging them into new territory. What to shop from this collection: The braid, a long-standing Hermès code, anchored the collection. Symbolising connection and continuity, it appeared in equestrian plaits and brought fresh energy to the Dressage Tressage silk carré. Throughout, there were strong hints at modularity—items designed to adapt, mix, and layer—reflected in jackets , equestrian blankets, poncho sweaters, and coats. Scarves sat atop baseball caps, and sweaters were slung across hips. Hermès' brand-new in-house headphones—yes, their own—also served as a striking accessory. And of course, who could forget the bags on the runway itself? This time, they were styled in a clever peekaboo way, tucked under jackets and outerwear. The deliciously compact Hermès Della Cavalleria bag was perched on hips in brilliant blues and browns; Mini Kellys were kept close to the chest under layers—some embellished, others clean and sleek; and the adorable Jypsière bag followed suit: compact and eye-catching all the same. I walked away wanting to add multiple things to cart—the sumptuous leather caps and the scarves perched atop, for one, followed by a beautifully cropped structured jacket with lime green panels underneath. What truly caught my eye, however, was the modular genius of Look 1, a dark chocolate leather coat with all the trappings of taking you throughout the four seasons and more. Filippo Fior 1 / 10 Look 1 Filippo Fior 2 / 10 Look 2 Filippo Fior 3 / 10 Look 14 Filippo Fior 4 / 10 Look 17 Filippo Fior 5 / 10 Look 27 Filippo Fior 6 / 10 Look 37 Filippo Fior 7 / 10 Look 41 Filippo Fior 8 / 10 Look 42 Filippo Fior 9 / 10 Look 47 Filippo Fior 10 / 10 Look 55


Emirates Woman
16-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Emirates Woman
From New York to Shanghai, Hermès crafts a wardrobe for the cosmopolitan explorer
Against Shanghai's Blade Runner-esque skyline, Nadège Vanhée staged the second act of her Hermès A/W 2025 womenswear collection—an ode to the modern nomad, sculpted in leather, silk, and eclecticism. A year after debuting 'The Second Chapter' in New York, the artistic director transplanted her vision to the Huangpu River, where a modular, ephemeral pavilion framed the city's neon glow behind towering shutters. The effect was deliberate – a theatrical reveal of a collection as dynamic as the metropolis itself. Vanhée's protagonist is a woman in motion—resilient, sculptural, unapologetically sensual. In Paris, she strode down a dirt-strewn spiral runway, embodying rugged independence. In Shanghai, she evolved into a cosmopolitan explorer, her layers stacked with the pragmatic poetry of travel: water bottles slung on leather straps, sweaters knotted at the waist, bags cross-body like urban armor. The styling pulsed with wit—a glittering boot refracting city lights, headphones hinting at a post-show escape—while hybrid garments, adjustable at the sleeve or seam, whispered of adaptability. Here are our favorite looks at details from the Hermès show Central to the narrative was the braid, lifted from Hermès' equestrian roots and Virginie Jamin's Dressage Tressage scarf. It twisted through coats and linings, a metaphor for Vanhée's design ethos: the slow, deliberate weaving of cultural threads. Here, Parisian rigor met Shanghai's frenetic hybridity, resulting in bold prints, modular silhouettes, and a tension between intellect and play. As the pavilion morphed into a party venue—mirroring New York's all-night energy—the collection's thesis crystallized: Hermès' woman is no longer defined by a single city. She is a citizen of the world, her wardrobe a testament to Vanhée's exacting craftsmanship and nomadic spirit. The second chapter, it seems, is boundless. – For more on luxury lifestyle, news, fashion and beauty follow Emirates Woman on Facebook and Instagram Images & Feature Image: Supplied