News

Chanel couture gets a breath of fresh air — and a star-studded audience

Chanel couture gets a breath of fresh air — and a star-studded audience

Models wear creations as part of the Chanel Spring/Summer 2026 Haute Couture collection presented in Paris, Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Aurelien Morissard) Photo: Associated Press


By THOMAS ADAMSON AP Fashion Writer
PARIS (AP) — Fashion powerhouse Chanel stacked the Paris front row like a movie premiere Tuesday: Nicole Kidman, Dua Lipa, Penélope Cruz, A$AP Rocky, Gracie Abrams, Margaret Qualley.
Then, it handed the spotlight to its new designer, Matthieu Blazy, for his much-anticipated couture debut built on one big, confident swing: joy.
Inside the Grand Palais, the house went full fantasy.
The set was a dream-garden of candy-colored trees and giant pink-and-red mushrooms: a surreal antidote to the gray January day outside, and to the even heavier mood of the world beyond the doors.
Before the first look, Blazy even teased the mood with an animation film of woodland animals at work in the Chanel ateliers, “Cinderella” style: a wink that said this would be couture, but not grim.
Then came the clothes, and the message landed fast: lightness.
Codes made weightless
Blazy took Chanel’s most famous codes — the suit, the pearls, the chain-weighted hems — and made them feel almost weightless.
A classic skirt suit arrived as a sheer, barely-there version of itself, cut so delicately it looked like air had been tailored.
In a house where tweed can be armor, this was tweed as whisper.
Birds hovered over the collection as a guiding idea: freedom, motion, travel.
Featherlike textures and flighty embroideries fluttered across silhouettes that moved like breath instead of structure.
There were flashes of plumage in color and surface — at times bright, at times raven-dark — and plenty of soft, floating chiffon that made the models look as if they were gliding rather than walking.
Not shouting — obsessing
The best trick was how the craft wasn’t obvious.
Up close, the work was meticulous: a level of handwork couture clients pay for, and ateliers live for.
But the overall effect stayed easy, almost casual; as if the clothes were beautiful without demanding applause.
Blazy played with the artistic technique trompe l’oeil, including a tank top-and-jeans idea reimagined in organza, and with textures that were romantic but also a little strange; couture that winked.
Sexy intimacy
In a brand built on total looks and strong house signatures, Blazy offered something personal: choice.
Models were invited to pick symbols and messages to stitch into the clothes — a love note, a sign, a private mark.
It pushed Chanel away from “uniform” and toward intimacy: couture as a wearable secret, not just a public statement.
The show also had a sense of casting as storytelling.
Blazy’s runways have tended to carry an open, joyful energy, and that continued here — a mix of ages, backgrounds and presences that made the clothes feel lived-in.
Model Bhavitha Mandava, fresh off her viral moment at the house’s Métiers d’Art show, returned.
Later she closed as a couture bride, shimmering and feathered, smiling as if she knew she was ending the scene exactly on the right note.
Wonder-couture, with a pop finish
The soundtrack shifted moods like a DJ set, moving from Disney sweetness to millennial nostalgia — including Moby’s “Porcelain,” and a mashup that blended Oasis’ “Wonderwall” with The Verve’s “Bitter Sweet Symphony.”
By the finale, the room was playing along.
Big sets are easy. Blazy’s debut didn’t try to overpower Chanel with noise or force a new era with aggression. Instead, he made it feel alive.

Latest Headlines

8 hours ago in Entertainment

Madonna sends good luck message to American figure skater Amber Glenn at Olympics

Just before Glenn performed her short program at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Tuesday night, which is set to Madonna's song "Like a Prayer," she received a video from the "Queen of Pop" wishing her luck in the individual competition at the Winter Games.

8 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Bruce Springsteen and E Street Band to launch ‘Land of Hope and Dreams’ US tour next month

The rock icon and the E Street Band announced Tuesday the launch of their "Land of Hope and Dreams" American tour starting March 31 in Minneapolis, kicking off a 20-date run that blends arena rock with a message centered on democracy, freedom and what Springsteen calls the defense of the American ideal.

15 hours ago in Trending, World

Lunar New Year prayers, robots and festivities usher in the Year of the Horse

Traditional prayers, fireworks and fairs marked the Lunar New Year on Tuesday — alongside 21st-century humanoid robots. The activities ushered in the Year of the Horse, one of 12 animals in the Chinese zodiac, succeeding the Year of the Snake.

15 hours ago in Lifestyle

How the rich pass on their wealth. And how you can too

Death and taxes may be inevitable. A big bill for your heirs is not. The rich have made an art of avoiding taxes and making sure their wealth passes down effortlessly to the next generation. But the tricks they use – to expedite payouts to heirs and avoid handing money to the government – can also work for people with far more modest estates.

15 hours ago in National, Trending

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who led the Civil Rights Movement for decades after King, has died at 84

The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, a protege of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and two-time presidential candidate who led the Civil Rights Movement for decades after the revered leader's assassination, died Tuesday. He was 84.