Latest news with #IrisvanHerpen


South China Morning Post
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- South China Morning Post
Collapsed bridge in India, July fourth fireworks: pictures of the week
A model wears a design from the Iris van Herpen Fall-Winter 2025/26 Haute Couture collection on... A model wears a design from the Iris van Herpen Fall-Winter 2025/26 Haute Couture collection on July 7, 2025, in... share

Straits Times
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Straits Times
Designer Iris van Herpen's Paris Haute Couture Week algae dress is actually alive
Belgian model Stella Maxwell presents the algae dress for Iris van Herpen during the Women's Haute-Couture Fall/Winter 2025-26 collection show in Paris on July 7. PARIS – Couture, the oldest and most elite of the fashion arts, the pieces made by hand for the very few, can sometimes seem like a fossil preserved in an amber corset. Which is why Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen's work, both futuristic and deliberately kinetic, has always been so mesmerising: skirts that jounce like jellyfish, extrusions that tremble like palm fronds, and sleeves (or sleeve-like appendages) that flutter like butterfly wings. Even by her standards, however, the second look in the couture collection she showed in Paris on July 7 as part of Haute Couture Week was something else. It was actually alive. Made of 125 million bioluminescent algae known as Pyrocystis lunula that glow in response to movement (think the luminescent plankton that can make the ocean seem lit from within), the dress-and-leggings combination was grown in a gelatin-like substance that was then moulded into one of van Herpen's signature sci-fi anatomical lattice frocks. Wearing it, the model resembled a very regal, otherworldly crustacean. It had an aquatic tint and a squishy, jellylike veneer. And though it didn't exactly radiate megawatt beams when the model walked, it did emanate a soft blue haze. According to van Herpen, the look feels sort of visceral when worn. And for anyone wondering, it was not smelly. More of an experiment than an actual for-sale item, the outfit was, 41-year-old van Herpen said backstage, 'the next step in not being inspired by nature, but collaborating with nature'. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore ST will have Govt's 'full confidence and support' in its mission to stay relevant: PM Wong Singapore ST will aim to become an indispensable partner to S'pore's communities: Editor Jaime Ho Singapore Heartbeats & Headlines: ST's 180-year legacy comes to life in immersive exhibition Singapore Trusted news, smarter experience with new Straits Times website and app Singapore Man who killed 5-year-old daughter gets life sentence after he appeals against 35-year jail term Singapore Judge declines to void alleged sham marriage in S'pore, says it is for Parliament to decide Business OCBC CEO Helen Wong to retire on Dec 31; Tan Teck Long named successor Singapore More than 14,300 people checked during 7-week-long anti-crime ops Designer Iris van Herpen appears at the end of her Haute Couture Fall/Winter 2025-2026 collection show in Paris on July 7. PHOTO: REUTERS In other words, forget floral prints, or rose embroideries. Think biological symbiosis. The look was created in conjunction with Chris Bellamy, a biodesigner who began working on the project with van Herpen about five months ago. The algae were nurtured in seawater baths and then placed in a protective membrane (the one that became the dress), which has its own 'house' – a kind of free-standing immersion tank – with specially monitored conditions, including humidity, temperature and light. When it was not being worn, the dress was returned to its natural habitat – though even in the unnatural environment of a fashion show, the algae held their own (colour). Still, how long they will ultimately live, and what will happen to the outfit once they expire, is not exactly clear. 'No one knows!' van Herpen chortled. 'That's the beauty of it. It's very much like a human being in that sense. It needs eight hours of sleep, it needs sunlight, it needs not too much stress.' The point of the living dress, she said, as with the rest of her collection, was to force a rethink of our relationship with the ocean – a theme that has been part of her work since 2017, when she immersed musicians in tanks of water for a show. To that end, this season's show opened with a performance involving lasers that danced across a gown made of what the show notes called Japanese 'air fabric'. A performer exhibits during the presentation of creation for Iris Van Herpen during the Women's Haute-Couture Fall/Winter 2025-26 collection show in Paris on July 7. PHOTO: AFP One look that resembled a translucent ivory Slinky trailing around the body was made of Brewed Protein, a fiber from fermented plant-based materials by the Japanese biotech company Spiber; another was formed from resin-coated silk, which resembled a wave caught in mid-froth. A model presents a creation for Iris Van Herpen during the Women's Haute-Couture Fall/Winter 2025-26 collection show in Paris on July 7. PHOTO: AFP As much as anything, however, her work, and especially the living dress, actually prompts a rethinking of our relationship with our wardrobes, and the way clothes need care in order to last. Not to mention a rethinking of the essence of couture. As the laboratory of fashion, couture is defined by experimentation and the sort of pie-in-the-sky imagination that is only possible when price and time have no limit. That's how you got a ruby crystal heart necklace that actually throbbed worn over a backward dress at Schiaparelli, the gown's torso – complete with breast plate – layered over the spine. It's how the team at Chanel, creating its final collection before the first show of new designer Matthieu Blazy, dreamed up the shaggy boucle 'skins' that resembled bison pelts but were actually made from tulle and feathers, worn over the shoulders of their barbarian bourgeoisie (the best things in an otherwise lacklustre show). Too often, however, couture seems as if it is preserving the know-how of the past – its embroideries, brocades and fairy tales – rather than trying to invent what's next. Van Herpen's work challenged all of that, simply by asking: What if a garment was not only constructed, but cultivated? NYTIMES


Reuters
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Reuters
Style, celebrities and backstage at Couture week in Paris
[5/49] A model presents a creation by designer Iris van Herpen as part of her Haute Couture Fall/Winter 2025-2026 collection show in Paris, France, July 7. REUTERS/Manon Cruz Purchase Licensing Rights , opens new tab


AsiaOne
09-07-2025
- Entertainment
- AsiaOne
Chanel shows haute couture in private salon setting at Grand Palais, Lifestyle News
PARIS — Chanel showed its latest collection of haute couture in an all-beige salon set at the Grand Palais in Paris on Tuesday (July 8), its last runway presentation by the design studio before the debut of new creative director Matthieu Blazy expected in September. Models emerged from an ornate entrance, parading long- skirted dresses in soft toned tweeds, with touches of sparkles and tufts of feathers. They wore tight buns and tall boots, which left u-shaped heel indentations in the plush carpet. Colours were muted, mostly ivory, beige and brown, but one silky dress came in a pale silvery blue, worn under a short, yellow-toned bomber jacket with a prominent, feathery collar. The show was held in the Salon d'Honneur, a smaller space of the freshly-restored Grand Palais, marking a contrast with the soaring, central exhibition hall usually favoured by the label. Facing a prolonged slump, many labels in the high end fashion industry are renewing their design approach, with Kering-owned Gucci and Balenciaga, and LVMH's Dior among labels that have recently named new designers. After the show, guests lingered, making their way slowly down grand staircases, stopping for photos of the building's elaborate ironwork and gilded wall decorations. The Paris fall-winter haute couture fashion shows run through Thursday, featuring runway outings from labels Schiaparelli, Iris van Herpen and Imane Ayissi, as well as Giorgio Armani Prive, Maison Margiela and Balenciaga. [[nid:719565]]

Straits Times
08-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Straits Times
Chanel shows haute couture in private salon setting at Grand Palais
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox PARIS - Chanel showed its latest collection of haute couture in an all-beige salon set at the Grand Palais in Paris on Tuesday, its last runway presentation by the design studio before the debut of new creative director Matthieu Blazy expected in September. Models emerged from an ornate entrance, parading long- skirted dresses in soft toned tweeds, with touches of sparkles and tufts of feathers. They wore tight buns and tall boots, which left u-shaped heel indentations in the plush carpet. Colors were muted, mostly ivory, beige and brown, but one silky dress came in a pale silvery blue, worn under a short, yellow-toned bomber jacket with a prominent, feathery collar. The show was held in the Salon d'Honneur, a smaller space of the freshly-restored Grand Palais, marking a contrast with the soaring, central exhibition hall usually favored by the label. Facing a prolonged slump, many labels in the high end fashion industry are renewing their design approach, with Kering-owned Gucci and Balenciaga, and LVMH's Dior among labels that have recently named new designers. After the show, guests lingered, making their way slowly down grand staircases, stopping for photos of the building's elaborate ironwork and gilded wall decorations. The Paris fall-winter haute couture fashion shows run through Thursday, featuring runway outings from labels Schiaparelli, Iris van Herpen and Imane Ayissi, as well as Giorgio Armani Prive, Maison Margiela and Balenciaga. REUTERS