Also, how can I dress to stay cool and chic in the heat?
Open Thread

June 28, 2024

Ms. Kidman steps out of a car in a long black dress. Her daughter follows, also dressed in black. Both have long blond hair hanging loose and are wearing dark glasses.
Nicole Kidman and her daughter, Sunday Rose Kidman-Urban, at the Balenciaga couture show in Paris on Wednesday. Vanni Bassetti/Getty Images For Balenciaga

Hello, Open Thread. It’s almost Canada Day. And almost the Fourth of July. Are you getting your fireworks ready?

I’ve spent the last week in Paris, where preparations for the Olympics are well underway. Some roads and subway stations are already closed, causing logjams in the streets. There are giant billboards everywhere you look featuring various athletes advertising all manner of products (phones, sneakers and so on), and every French person I have spoken to has told me they are planning to escape the city as soon as they can. Following, some other bits and bobs from the week.

The gossip on the front rows of the couture shows has been all about who is going to get Chanel.

Short answer: Despite rampant speculation, no one has any idea, and a lot of the gossip seems like wishful thinking (or strategic whispering). It would be improbable for the Wertheimers, the family that owns Chanel, to give the job to John Galliano, given that they are Jewish and he was convicted of an antisemitic hate crime. Even though he has repented, that seems a stretch.

And though Hedi Slimane of Celine is being presented as the front-runner, he doesn’t give interviews, has done only one live show since before the pandemic (a men’s wear event held in Los Angeles), insists on photographing every ad campaign himself and has never done couture. All things that seem to matter to the powers that be at Chanel.

Word is the brand is going to take its time naming a new designer, though judging by this week’s designer-less show, it may want to act sooner rather than later.

The most entertaining audience action of the week was at Balenciaga, where it seemed to be take-your-daughter-to-shows day. Nicole Kidman came with her daughter Sunday Rose Urban; Naomi Watts with her daughter, Kai Schreiber; and Maya Rudolph with her daughter Pearl Anderson. (All the kids wore black.) Get ’em while they are young, I guess, was Balenciaga’s thinking.

And finally, the haute Disney experience that was the Vogue World tour through a century of French fashion and sport may have been more prescient than anyone realized. Daphné Bürki, the costume director for the opening ceremony performance at the Olympics, has revealed that she has enlisted Dior, Louis Vuitton and 15 emerging French designers to contribute work to the event, which will include 3,000 “unique silhouettes,” according to the France 24 network.

That’s going to be something to see.

Read more about the couture week that was here. Then meet the new Lanvin designer — finally, one of fashion’s vacancies has been filled; now there are only three more to go! — and check out the draft day fits of the new N.B.A. class. Have a happy Independence Day.

INSIDE THE COUTURE

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BEYOND THE RUNWAYS

AND DON’T FORGET

Colm Dillane poses on a darkened stage with his wrists attached by long white ropes to an oversize hand suspended above him, as if he were a giant marionette.

Center Ring at the Fashion Circus

Streetwear tyro KidSuper brings a Brooklyn indie vibe to fashion’s biggest stage, this time in a collaboration with Cirque du Soleil.

By Guy Trebay and Sam Hellmann

A group of models wearing light-colored clothing including full balaclava-like masks descends a set of stairs and toward the camera.

fashion review

When the Runways Are a Personal Playlist

Theater and dance critics can’t own the subjects they cover, but a fashion critic can — at least imaginarily — by making a hits compilation as the clothes go by.

By Guy Trebay

Your Style Questions, Answered

Every week on Open Thread, Vanessa will answer a reader’s fashion-related question, which you can send to her anytime via email or Twitter. Questions are edited and condensed.

Yannis Kolesidis/EPA, via Shutterstock

What tips are there for dressing in a way that looks put together when getting around a city on hot, humid days? I often feel like a disheveled, sweaty mess by noon during the summer, while others seem to glide by in a cloud of composed coolness. How do they do it? — Adrienne, Paris

The unpredictable weather patterns and rising temperatures that are now part of our lives are changing how we dress in more ways than one, redefining the meaning of “hot girl — or guy — summer.”

No longer can anyone put winter clothing away in summer and vice versa, and a whole cottage industry of material scientists are putting their minds and pin cushions to creating fabrics to help people stay cool in the heat. Think, for example, of AIRism from Uniqlo and Polartec Delta and NanoStitch Air.

Yet most of these advances are geared more toward performance than daily life. For that, said Marie-Hélène de Taillac, the cult French jeweler who spends half of her year in Rajasthan, India, working with the artisans of the Gem Palace jewelry emporium, the place to start is with clothes in natural fabrics like cotton, bamboo and linen, because they “breath” — i.e., let air flow between your skin and the outside environment.

Then, she said, it’s time to explode the biggest myth of hot month dressing — that less is more.

“The worst thing you can do is wear tiny clothes,” Ms. de Taillac said. “You don’t want the sun to be on your skin, because that’s what makes you hot. If you think about it, you really have to cover yourself to the maximum, but with ventilation.”

Inès de la Fressange, the famously chic model-turned-designer (and former face of France), who was about to head off to St.-Tropez, agreed. “The idea that you have to show your body because it’s warm is not a good idea,” she said.

Each of the women recommended maxi dresses and skirts, with sleeves, rather than cropped tank tops and shorts. Also, loose garments rather than clinging ones. Flat shoes that are not too tight because feet swell in the heat. And nothing that could rub against your skin, including tight armholes, too many accessories or even belts. If you are desperate for a waist, try to find something with elastic.

“My uniform in India is a cotton poplin shirt or shirtdress,” Ms. de Taillac said. If you are concerned about looking as if you’re in a muumuu or portable tent, the key to preserving a neat silhouette, she said, is choosing a dress with narrow shoulders to create a regal line. (See, for inspiration, the many elegant trapeze and tent dresses of Cristóbal Balenciaga.)

For another strategy: “Dare to be simple: simple long skirts, simple long pants,” Ms. de la Fressange added.

Then opt for “quite large things,” she said — especially her favorite garments: men’s cotton poplin shirts. If you have noticed that shirts and shirtdresses seem to be No. 1 on these women’s lists, it is not a coincidence. Button-ups have a crisp integrity and ease that stands up in the heat, not to mention longstanding associations with professionalism that push all sorts of subconscious buttons associated with the idea “pulled together.”

“Sometimes women make mistakes when they buy things in their size,” Ms. de la Fressange went on. But it’s both more comfortable and more fashionable to wear a shirt in a larger size, she said. You could even buy one and wear it as a dress.

Her favorite insider tip, no matter what the season, is to shop in the men’s department. “Don’t go where you are supposed to go in a store,” Ms. de la Fressange said. “I always go to the men’s department. Often the shirts are better quality, and cheaper.”

As to which shirt to choose, she said: “Pale blue poplin. It works for everybody, every age, every color of hair. Everybody’s beautiful with it.”

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