Louis Vuitton S/S 25 Is Rethinking What It Means to Be "Soft" in Fashion

Louis Vuitton S/S 25 Is Rethinking What It Means to Be "Soft" in Fashion


For Nicolas Ghesquière’s 10th anniversary at Louis Vuitton, the designer presented a story that wove past and present. By placing a large reflective tent in the Cour Carrée, one of the main courtyards of the Louvre, he highlighted the surrounding French Renaissance columns and sculptures. The runway itself, which was a mosaic of vibrant monogrammed trunks, highlighted his constant dedication to blending the brand’s traditional craftsmanship with contemporary aesthetics.

It wouldn’t be a Ghesquière design without taking risks, which was evident in the looks that opened the collection—18th-century silhouettes like strong shoulders, pulled-in waists, and peplum hems were styled with biker shorts and chunky sandals that brought them back to the present. Despite pulling inspiration from the Renaissance, he didn’t let that box him in, also adding ’80s-inspired skater skirts and ruffled dresses to the offering. The five final looks featured a collaboration with French artist Laurent Grasso from his series Studies Into the Past, in which modern and celestial phenomena are inserted into Renaissance paintings, proving there was no shortage of historical and futuristic references at Louis Vuitton S/S 25.