From Miu Miu to Saint Laurent, here are the standout shows from Paris Fashion Week

If there’s one takeaway from Paris Fashion Week 2025, it’s that designers aren’t just reinterpreting their house codes-they’re rewriting them. Silhouettes were sharper, colours more daring, and contrasts more striking, as heritage codes were twisted, reworked, and redefined. From Miu Miu to Lacoste, Remix reviews four standout shows from Paris Fashion Week.

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Chloé

As the brand that defined—and arguably ignited—the recent boho revival, Chloé's return to its romantic, free-spirited roots under Creative Director Chemena Kamali was met with critical acclaim. For Autumn/Winter 2025, fluid femininity, ethereal silhouettes, and a wistful softness took centre stage, rekindling the essence of the Chloé woman that longtime admirers had longed for. Echoing the brand's early 2000s golden era, when Stella McCartney epitomised cool-girl nonchalance through languid tailoring and effortless separates, Kamali's vision for 2025 felt equally nostalgic and fresh. Pussy-bow blouses paired with mini skirts, flared denim layered under sweeping trench coats, and faux-fur accents evoked bohemian ease—a wardrobe made for the free-spirited Chloé girl who never gave up hope.

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Saint Laurent
Forget your A, B, Cs—at Saint Laurent, it's all about the C, C, Cs: cut, construction, and colour. In a Paris Fashion Week season brimming with history-book-worthy moments, Saint Laurent faced the formidable task of closing the schedule. The French fashion house rose confidently to the challenge, setting the City of Love ablaze with a vibrant palette too hard to ignore. At its core, the iconic Saint Laurent woman is still commanding, still sultry, but now, she's bathed in vibrancy. For Autumn/Winter 2025, she emerged in sharp, architectural silhouettes, her presence defined by sculptural precision and fabrics that moved with intention. Anthony Vaccarello, the master of form over frivolity, kept his canvas pure—stripping away embellishment in favour of exacting cuts and striking proportions. Shoulders were razor-sharp, waists cinched to perfection, skirts sculpted into powerfully poised shapes—a masterclass in power dressing. And then, there was the colour. Gone were YSL's iconic, moody blacks; in their place, a fever dream of saturated hues—marigold, fuchsia, and teal—a nod to the house's 1990s haute couture era. 

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Lacoste
Athleisure you're proud to wear on and off the court—that was on the menu at Lacoste's Fall 2025 show, and boy, did we leave feeling full of refreshing styling cues. For more than a century, Lacoste has owned the tennis-meets-fashion space. Pelagia Koloouros leaned heavily into its stereotypes for the season ahead, celebrating the sport that started it all. On the court of Roland-Garros, with Venus Williams watching from the sidelines, Lacoste transformed iconic sports silhouettes— tennis blazers, windbreakers, cricket-esque knits—through unexpected textures and sharp tailoring. A grounded palette of camel tones, delivered in monochrome layers, pushed Lacoste into fresh territory—more Donna Karan New York meets Max Mara workwear than the courtside staples of seasons past. Monochrome remained a key player, with head-to-toe fuchsia and Lacoste's signature deep green, spanning special-occasion pieces and streetwear-infused styles.

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Miu Miu
Miuccia Prada is no stranger to challenging femininity's rulebook—only weeks ago at Prada, she masterfully deconstructed rigid ideals with her signature subversive touch. Now, at Miu Miu, the rebellion continues. In what many call the standout show of Paris Fashion Week, Miu Miu leaned into a deliberately off-kilter aesthetic—unexpected, undeniably chic, and imbued with its ladylike charm. As a star-studded runway cast (Gigi Hadid, Sarah Paulson) took to the runway, Miuccia took a walk down memory lane. Vintage nuances—brooches, spectacles, '50s knee-length satin dresses, faux fur stoles—propelled Hitchcock heroines into the modern day, while the bullet bra, peeking through slouchy sweaters and sharply tailored blazers, was an unmistakable conversation starter—a knowing nod to past "free the nipple" provocations. True to form, colour play and unexpected pairings were front and centre—no doubt the catalyst of future trend cycles. Mustard and lavender, peach and taupe, red and tangerine; shearling jackets over nightgowns, heeled pumps with knee-high Miu Miu-crest sports socks—a masterclass in Miu Miu-isms.

 

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