Celine's Rider finds his thread in Paris with flower power and foulards

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

PARIS (AP) — Michael Rider’s second collection for Celine, shown Sunday in the Parc de Saint-Cloud, confirmed that his reset of the house is less rupture than weaving together its many pasts.

Where his July debut toyed with former Celine designer Phoebe Philo’s minimalism and Hedi Slimane’s bourgeois tailoring, at Paris Fashion Week Rider took a single motif — the foulard — and spun it into the season’s grammar.

Scarves were no longer accessories. They became structure: stitched into long, fluid dresses as if pieced from a dozen vintage squares; reshaped as silky tops; or peeking from the lining of an otherwise plain trench. Even handbags carried scarf fragments as decoration.

Around that anchor, Rider played with contrasts. Seventies flower power re-emerged in psychedelic A-line minis with clean silhouettes, their retro exuberance tempered by modern restraint. Oversize men’s suiting — black, double-breasted, cut with assurance — grounded the collection in sharp tailoring. A maxi skirt, buttoned and unbuttoned to reveal another layer beneath, nodded to both history and invention, elegant and forward at once.

Quirks gave the show its edge: a multicolored banded arm sock, color-blocked panels that signaled the return of a once-maligned trend. These touches recalled the “compellingly unsettling” play with proportion in his debut, suggesting that Rider’s strategy is less about imposing a total new look than about debating inheritance — a generational stance visible across fashion’s current musical-chairs season.

Paris Fashion Week has been marked by an unprecedented number of debuts — Jonathan Anderson at Dior, Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez at Loewe, Miguel Castro Freitas at Mugler, and Matthieu Blazy at Chanel coming on Monday.

For some, the lack of a radical break at LVMH's third biggest fashion house may still frustrate. Rider’s fondness for collage can read as hesitation. Yet Sunday’s show suggested confidence rather than doubt: a designer willing to fold Philo’s female-first minimalism, Slimane’s bourgeois drama and his own preppy past into a coherent new language — one scarf at a time.

 

Salem News Channel Today

Sponsored Links

On Air & Up Next

  • The Larry Elder Show
    7:00PM - 10:00PM
     
    Larry Elder personifies the phrase “We’ve Got a Country to Save” The “Sage from   >>
     
  • Shaun Thompson Show
    10:00PM - 12:00AM
     
    Shaun Thompson refuses to allow corrupt politicians to infringe on his personal   >>
     
  • The Mike Gallagher Show
    12:00AM - 1:00AM
     
    AG Pam Bondi Turns Senate Hearing Into Masterclass on Nuking Democrats The FBI,   >>
     
  • The Charlie Kirk Show
    1:00AM - 2:00AM
     
    Charlie Kirk is the next big thing in conservative talk radio and he's now   >>
     
  • The Steve Gruber Show
    2:00AM - 4:00AM
     
    Steve Gruber is a syndicated conservative radio talk show host with 25   >>
     

See the Full Program Guide