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Paris Fashion Week: Chanel's garden delights, Givenchy designer debuts couture

Rose scents mingled with celebrities such as Marion Cotillard, Sofia Coppola and Rita Ora at Chanel as showman Karl Lagerfeld recreated a verdant garden to showcase his bucolic couture designs.

Elsewhere in Paris, Givenchy's new designer unveiled her highly anticipated couture debut.

Some highlights from last week's spring-summer 2018 shows:.

CHANEL'S GARDEN COUTURE

Chanel's fragrant garden featured architectural wooden arbors, white roses and a babbling water fountain.

Inspired by the geometric curves in the furniture, Lagerfeld went back to nature — and to Chanel's couture roots — for a display of pure drama constructed with geometric detail.

The stone-coloured clothes teamed with soft floral embroideries and frothy details.

Models including Cindy Crawford's daughter Kaia Gerber wore sweet pink, white and purple posies in black tulle hair-pieces.

The devil's in the detail and this season, Chanel was all about the sleeve.

A raglan style — one that extends in one piece fully to the collar — seemed to inspire the beautiful and surreal arm shapes that descended stiffly like a tapered tube.

Shoulders were wide and dramatically curved.

Full skirts flared out like giant bells in a crisp line shared this surreal quality.

Lagerfeld is an ambitious man, and elsewhere his 69 designs also channelled the tiered fashions of the swinging 1920s.

GIVENCHY DESIGNER'S COUTURE DEBUT

A spooky, floodlit chateau in Paris' historic Marais area was the venue Clare Waight Keller chose to stage her first couture show since being appointed creative director at Givenchy last year.

Guests were led up a dimly lit stairway as discordant music played to a mysterious hall with shimmering crystal chandeliers.

The edgy music and venue represented the future and the past.

The sublime couture creations harked back to the designs of house founder Count Hubert de Givenchy — but Waight Keller infused them with a fashion-forward touch.

The house's signature sharp shoulder — here, often on shoulder-draped coats — was a running style in the diverse looks that mixed hard and soft.

In the more architectural moments, Waight Keller evoked the spirit of Givenchy's mentor, Cristobal Balenciaga.

Lines — rigid bodices, cinched waists and a hard V-shaped decollete — fused with delicate materials.

Feathers flashed vermilion peeking from the inside of a coat and a softly tiered full skirt bled from purple to electric orange and cobalt blue.

It made for some sublime looks that remained highly feminine at all times.

Dark romance was at the heart of this accomplished display, which was possibly the best seen all season.

DIOR'S MASKED BALL

Masked revellers danced into the early hours of Tuesday at the soiree event of couture week: Christian Dior's surrealism-themed masked ball at the Rodin Museum.

Actress Monica Bellucci stepped onto the chequered chess board set in a vivid red lace Dior gown, while model Bella Hadid stunned in a revealing black tulle shoulder-less dress, hugging singer Courtney Love effusively.

Guests in check face masks that sometimes impaired vision negotiated around giant two-metre chess pieces, faceless dancing performers and hanging surrealist sculptures in the marquee venue that was also used to showcase the historic design house's spring and summer couture styles.

A wall of white arms, some fake and some real (belonging to hidden performers), handed out white roses to passers-by who snacked on white chocolate playing cards served on a green poker table cover.

ALEXIS MABILLE'S OLD-SCHOOL GLAMOUR

The red carpet said it all: French designer Alexis Mabille turned on the glamour for a display of classic couture gowns.

The styles were firmly set to the 1950s — the years following the austerity of the Second World War that produced long exuberant lengths of fabric, hyper-femininity and hourglass silhouettes.

A floor-length satin gown in coral sported a giant floppy bow at the waist, while one in dark cobalt saw an abbreviated take on a fifties jacket as a bustier and was paired with full-length evening gloves.

Mabille didn't forget to have fun.

A series of balloon gowns — with curved hems gathered around inside — were the strongest pieces in the show.

Each consecutive skirt sported an even bigger explosion of fabric, until the show reached a dramatic crescendo in a circular bottle green gown that spread out from the bust.

ARMANI PRIVE'S WATERCOLOUR-INSPIRED DESIGNS

Even a fashion master can have off days.

Tuesday was a mixed couture bag for Giorgio Armani, who explored the theme of watercolour in an exhaustive collection of shimmering pastel gowns that combined too many divergent ideas.

Armani's best looks kept it simple.

A minimalist satin bodice in oyster led the eye to a dramatic whoosh of silk spilling from the waist.

But elsewhere, some looks — though beautifully constructed — saw a complicated silhouette and busy patterns vying for attention.

Nevertheless, it was a hit for celebrities such as Marion Cotillard and Isabelle Huppert, who applauded vigorously from the front row.

For more infomation >> Paris Fashion Week: Chanel's garden delights, Givenchy designer debuts couture - Duration: 11:53.

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Highlights from Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week 2018 - Duration: 8:48.

Photos: Highlights from Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week 2018

One of the biggest fashion events in the world, the Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week saw curtains fall with over thirty top designers, including Chanel, Givenchy, Dior, Fendi, and Versace part of the lineup, showcasing their latest spring/summer 2018 collections.

Where Chanel and Valentino went against the austere moods of the fashion week with gusto, Viktor & Rolf also opted for a bolder palette, giving their quirky creations an extra sheen by making the complete collection in satin duchesse.

1. Bella Hadid presents a creation by Alexandre Vauthier during the 2018 spring/summer Haute Couture collection show in Paris.

2. Dior's Maria Grazia Chiuric wrote lines from Andre Breton's "Surrealist Manifesto" across her models' collar bones as part of an homage to Italian artist and proto-feminist Leonor Fini. Masks, caged corsets and A-line sequined dresses dominated the show.

3. Christian Dior went all surrealist in the first big show of the haute couture week, opening on a chequerboard set worthy of a Salvador Dali daydream, with plaster casts of ears, noses and eyes hanging from a mirrored ceiling.

4. Model Anna Cleveland presents a creation by Jean-Paul Gaultier. Psychedelic swirls, Beatles-style bobs in vibrant colours and plenty of swishing fringes filled Jean Paul Gaultier's runway in homage to Pierre Cardin.

5. Out-of-this-world is a phrase often ascribed to haute couture, and Japanese designer Yuima Nakazato took the description literally by sending out some of his models in space suits.

The Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week returned this year, drawing out fashion's highest echelon for a week long extravaganza of the most imaginative, quirky and at times outright bizarre creations from Parisian ateliers and the minds behind them.

6. Guo Pei, the designer behind Rihanna's 2015 Met Ball outfit put out confections in blue and gold. All handcrafted, from shoulder embellishments to flocks of golden flowers flying out of domed gowns.

7. Models pose at the Dior Ball at the Hotel Peyrenc de Moras in Paris. The surrealism extended to the fashion house's after party as well.

8. The couture creations by Georges Hobeika harkened to a golden-era of lightness with their use of cascading chiffon and silk charmeuse.

9. Giorgio Armani explored the theme of watercolor in an exhaustive collection of shimmering pastel gowns that led the eye to silk spilling from the waist.

10. Some during the week struck over-the-top poses as they went, like model Coco Rocha, who had spectators swooning as she took to the catwalk with her two-year-old daughter, dressed identically in an asymetric baby-blue gown.

11. Designer Rami Al Ali is seen backstage before the Rami Al Ali presentation. Al Ali drew from baroque style with his luxuriously detailed, asymmetric hemlined gowns in this year's spring/summer collection.

12. Chanel designer Karl Lagerfeld dived into the brand's archives for his pretty-in-pink haute couture Paris show Tuesday, giving its founder Coco Chanel's classics an intensely girly twist.

A tepid affair, it had celebrities such as Marion Cotillard and Isabelle Huppert cheering nonetheless.

13. Reaction to Karl Lagerfeld's (L) first major change in image in two decades was generally negative -- and almost drowned out his Chanel show.

Going back to nature, Chanel's set featured architectural wooden arbors, white roses and a water fountain.

14. Ralph & Russo, the London-based Australian house, kept a demure presence with its muted blue and beige pallette.

Vogue's legendary critic Suzy Menkes did her best to soften the blow by referring to his beard as "an exciting facial accessory".

15. Models wait backstage in a lush, tropical themed setup before the Franck Sorbier presentation.

16. Celebrating 20 years of the AF Vendervorst brand, An Vandevorst and Filip Arickx presented one freshly styled archive piece each from their every one of their past collections together.

17. French dancer and choreographer Marie-Agnès Gillot performs during Maison Rabih Kayrouzs fashion show.

18. A model walks the runway during Hyun Mi Nielsen's migration and magpie inspired spring/summer show that used large flapping straps, bits like anklets, shells and billowing coats on barefoot models.

19. Where Chanel and Valentino went against the austere moods of the fashion week with gusto, Viktor & Rolf also opted for a bolder palette, giving their quirky creations an extra sheen by making the complete collection in satin duchesse.

20. Pierpaolo Piccioli's Valentino presentation opened to a wild clash of colours with a yellow faille coat, over brown work trousers and a simple tank.

The giant aquamarine ostrich feather saucer hat gliding down the ramp as onlookers snapped away.

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