Loewe
Loewe Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Loewe
On the day of its scheduled show, Loewe released a newspaper-style promotional, leading with a story announcing "The Loewe show has been cancelled." The pages, filled with collection imagery, were inserted as supplements into national papers around the world
Loewe
Loewe Fall-Winter 2021/22
Balmain
Balmain's Fall-Winter 2021/22 collection was inspired by travel and it's "impressive power...to open minds," according to the collection notes.
Balmain
Balmain Fall-Winter 2021/22
Inez & Vinoodh
Chanel Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Courtesy Chloé
Chloé's Fall-Winter 2021/22 at Paris Fashion Week was new creative director Gabriela Hearst's debut for the brand.
Courtesy Chloé
The collection was "informed and inspired by sustainability and a commitment to the greater good," according to the show notes.
Thomas de Cruz Media
The Courrèges Fall-Winter 2021/22 collection is "an ode to youth," the show notes state, having taken place at La Station -- a hub of Parisian counterculture.
Thomas de Cruz Media
Courrèges Fall-Winter 2021/22
Miu Miu
Miu Miu Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Miu Miu
The collection, complete with knitted balaclavas, was a voyage through the mountains.
Givenchy
Givenchy's Fall-Winter 2021/22 show was all about utility and luxury.
Givenchy
Givenchy's Fall-Winter 2021/22
Dior
Dior Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Adrien Dirand
The fashion film presented by Dior, titled "Disturbing Beauty," was shot inside the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.
Coperni
The drive-in fashion show format by Coperni meant models were lit by the headlights of a crowd of electric cars.
Coperni
Coperni Fall-Winter 2021/22.
OWENSCORP
Rick Owens' latest collection featured enormous structured outerwear, masked models and slick, sequin bodysuits.
OWENSCORP
Rick Owens Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Schiaparelli
Schiaparelli's Fall-Winter 2021/22 collection consisted of surreal and irreverent silhouettes.
Schiaparelli
With literal gold breast plates, Schiaparelli wanted to play on the idea of "bijoux that are as much armor as they are embellishment," as per the label's show notes.
Thom Browne
Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn introduced the Thom Browne Fall-Winter 2021/22 collection in a black and white fashion film, skiing down a mountain in the latest garments.
Thom Browne
Thom Browne Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Victoria/Tomas
The Victoria/Tomas Fall-Winter 2021/22 collection kept sustainability in mind by producing an entirely reversible range.
Giovanni Giannoni WOMEN'S FALL-WINTER 2021 SHOW © Louis Vuitton -- All rights reserved
Louis Vuitton Fall-Winter 2021/22 held it's show inside the Louvre.
Giovanni Giannoni WOMEN'S FALL-WINTER 2021 SHOW © Louis Vuitton -- All rights reserved
According to the show notes, the clothes drew on the Golden Age and the Age of Enlightenment for aesthetic inspiration.
Arnel dela Gente/Courtesy of Marine Serre
Marine Serre Fall-Winter 2021/22 was fun for all the family.
Arnel dela Gente/Courtesy of Marine Serre
The collection was modeled by "muses, tribes, and friends of the house" and included a range of ages.
Filippo Fior/Courtesy of Hermes
The latest Hermes collection was designed for motion and transition.
Filippo Fior/Courtesy of Hermes
Hermès Fall-Winter 2021/22.
courtesy Joshua Woods/Kenneth Ize
The Nigeria-born, Vienna-raised designer Kenneth Ize was a finalist for the LVMH Prize in 2019. His latest collection is called "the circle of birth and death."
courtesy Joshua Woods/Kenneth Ize
Kenneth Ize Fall-Winter 2021/22.
Taro Mizutani
Japanese label Undercover printed larger-than-life replicas of oil paintings by Swedish artist Markus Åkesson onto their collection.
Lana Ohrimenko
The city was a source of inspiration for Cecilie Bahnsen's Fall-Winter 2021/22 show. The colors in the collection were made to mimic the soft morning light that floods an empty metropolis.
CNN  — 

In late February last year, Paris was quietly falling into the clutches of the coronavirus pandemic as packed runway shows took place at locations around the city during Paris Fashion Week. Event attendees joked uneasily about adopting the fashion cliché of air kissing, and applied extra lashings of hand sanitizer as they compared notes about who was being allowed back into the office or had been asked too quarantine at home “as a precautionary measure.” Despite it all, the event was largely uninterrupted and most attendees went about the business of fashion in what we now recognize as careless naivety.

A year on, and the event could not be more different. As is the norm across all the fashion weeks, the Paris shows were virtual, and international editors, journalists and buyers had to forgo their usual trip, watching the season’s latest presentations from home instead.

And while the 10-day schedule of mostly videos and live streams felt overwhelming – at times relentless – there were moments of ingenuity as a number of designers clearly hit their stride in the new digital fashion show space. Read on for highlights from Paris Fashion Week.

No travel? No problem

As a designer what do you do when your guests can’t travel to Paris to see your clothes? You bring the city to them, of course.

Dior presented its collection in a haunting fairytale-inspired fashion film shot inside the Palais de Versailles. Louis Vuitton unveiled new designs incorporating drawings by the irreverent Italian modernist Piero Fornasetti in the Michelangelo and Daru galleries within the Louvre.

Grégoire Vieille
The Louvre helped set the scene for the Louis Vuitton FW21 show.

Chanel’s Virginie Viard pulled online viewers into the depths of legendary Parisian nightclub Castel. In an act that still feels painfully out of reach due to the pandemic, models ditched their coats at the door as they embarked on a night out, dressed to the nines in a number of sheer and slinky looks.

Adrien Dirand
Christian Dior shot their FW21 film in the Hall of Mirrors inside Versailles.

Meanwhile, Balmain’s creative director Olivier Rousteing staged his show of both menswear and womenswear on the wings of a grounded Air France plane (playful invitations were sent out to guests in the form of a fake passport, airline ticket and a neck cushion covered in the Balmain motif). The collection drew on the uniforms of pilots and astronauts with lace-up boots, bomber jackets and large parachute-inspired frocks.

Balmain
Balmain's new collection was inspired by the mind expanding power of travel.

Further afield, Miu Miu transported its digital audience to the mountains of Cortina d’Ampezzo in northern Italy, where a band of models wearing crochet balaclavas (also serving as face masks) and faux-fur boots cut lines through the endless white snowscape in a collection that blended padded outerwear with pretty lingerie.

In more snowy scenes, Thom Browne showcased his co-ed collection in a short film starring Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn, who agreed to hit the slopes in head-to-toe eveningwear.

Inventive formats

Jonathan Anderson, a designer who has proven to be quite comfortable working outside of the traditional runway show format, nailed it again in his role as creative director of Spanish house Loewe. On the day of its scheduled show, the brand released a newspaper-style promotional, leading with a story announcing “The Loewe show has been cancelled.” The pages, filled with collection imagery, were inserted as supplements into national papers around the world including El Mundo in Spain, The Times in London and The New York Times.

Loewe
Loewe's custom-made newspaper included shots from the campaign and details of new collection.

Anderson’s generously proportioned collection features bright colors, geometric shapes and playful tassels. It’s clothing you’d expect to see at an art gallery opening or a design fair, which makes sense given Anderson’s unwavering appreciation for arts and crafts.

Loewe
Jonathan Anderson's collection for Loewe was all about catching the eye.

The French duo designing for Coperni pulled off the most ambitious socially distanced presentation of the week, staging a drive-in fashion show at a stadium in Paris. Guests were picked up at home and driven into the 20,100-seat AccorHotels Arena at night, their cars lined up to create a runway for models who walked in new designs lit up by the headlights.

The return of joy

Fashion is often a reflection of the wider world, and so pandemic-driven upheaval, fear, and even that all-too-familiar mundanity have been the themes for a number of the collection stagings over the course of a difficult year. But this season hinted at a possible seachange; with intimations of hope, strength and even smatterings of joy all making an appearance.

Schiaparelli designer Daniel Roseberry, the man behind Lady Gaga’s much talked about get up at the US inauguration in January, has embraced the fashion house’s historical ties to Surrealism (the founding designer Elsa Schiaparelli collaborated with Salvador Dali in her time), punctuating his last few collections with off-key gold jewelry that is endlessly fun to look at. This season he added gold breast plates, less conical than Madonna’s iconic set but still evoking a sense of playfulness when presented alongside an oversized gold phone cover in the shape of an ear, or a jean jacket worn back-to-front with buttons shaped like ears, noses and door locks.

Schiaparelli
Schiaparelli's FW21 collection was an homage to the label's surrealist roots.

French designer Marine Serre launched a website dedicated to her new collection, with a series of short videos depicting light and familiar scenes. The collection, called “Core,” is made from an eclectic patchwork of textures and fabrics including deadstock leather, silks, denim and tartan, and the designer’s message was a celebration of family. Children play on the lawn in front of their apparent home; a young mother takes her baby outside for a walk, stopping to wave at her partner through the window; a father and daughter watch a sunset. Each moment planting fashion firmly in reality, or at least a version of it.