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Chanel shows a sugary version of femininity at couture fashion week - and veils to rival Photoshop

A look from the Chanel Haute Couture show in Paris - WireImage
A look from the Chanel Haute Couture show in Paris - WireImage

Six weeks ago in Hamburg, Karl Lagerfeld designed a monochromatic collection for Chanel’s Metiers d’Art line, which will reach the shops in May.

That was then. This newest collection, couture spring/summer 2018, ready to be ordered by clients now and delivered to them in six to eight weeks (so around the same time as Metiers d’Art but at an even higher price point since it’s all individually made to measure and made by hand), couldn’t have been more contrasting.

If Metiers d’Art tapped into an ultra-chic distillation of Hamburg tropes including Beatles caps, fishermen’s jumpers, Bretons and sailor style pea-coats (the results looked like a raid on Jane Birkin’s wardrobe), this show was firmly the Paris of Leslie Caron, back when she was a ballerina.

Chanel Haute Couture Spring Summer 2018  - Credit: Gonxzalo Fuentes/Reuters
The set at the Chanel show at the Grand Palais in Paris Credit: Gonxzalo Fuentes/Reuters

Even the setting was 'Paree, The 1950s Movie'. The Grand Palais had been transformed into an idealised Parisian Park, one where roses clamber up green trellises and park keepers don’t yell at you for disturbing the gravel.

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The spring/summer 18 couture Chanel suit comes in almond-pinks, violet creams, lemon meringues… you name the bon-bon, Chanel’s tweed suppliers had recreated it in wool or silk or Lurex threads. This, in itself, is an art.

The eveningwear was just as sugary, but with an extra glaze of teeny hand-sewn beads. Shin-length boots with sculpted, perspex wedge-heels matched the clothes and were either beaded or tweed.

Chanel Haute Couture Spring Summer 2018 - Credit: Dominique Charriau/WireImage
Chanel's classic tweed was recreated in sugary-sweet hues Credit: Dominique Charriau/WireImage

Sheer silk chiffon skirts fluttered beneath slim tweed coat-jackets or frothed over embroidered mini sheath dresses, seemingly held in place with a single magenta satin ribbon.

Other notable accessories included flower top-knots with teeny mesh veils - not hats exactly, not even fascinators, but a nostalgic reminder that in the days before everyone could photoshop their own pictures via dozens of phone apps, a sliver of strategically positioned net performed a similar light-diffusing service.

Apart from some oversized, curved shoulders, this was a straightforwardly pretty, feminine reading of women, so intensely sweet that merely looking at it made you anxious for your next diabetes test.  Even Karl Lagerfeld’s new hipster-esque beard, perfect in its even silveriness, appeared to have been dusted with icing sugar.

Chanel Spring Summer 2018 Haute Couture - Credit: Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images 
Floral fascinators-come-hats worn with veils as shown on model-of-the-moment Kaia Gerber Credit: Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images

There will be endless debates this year and beyond about what femininity looks like now: for some women, this pastel mille-feuille of ruffles and silk won’t be the answer.

There were signs that even Lagerfeld needed to take a rain check every so often: occasionally, amidst the twinkling, shimmering sweeties, an all black outfit appeared – the equivalent of coffee beans on a crowded perfume counter. (Those shin boots, somewhat tricky in tufty tweeds, looked infinitely sharper in black patent).

But couture clients are not most women. Seeing them at a 10am show on a cold, grey day in January, draped in diamonds and cream mink jackets and (in one case) bare legs bound in gladiator sandals, it’s clear that this iteration of Chanel will solve their sartorial dilemmas.

The most fabulous couture gowns from the season so far
The most fabulous couture gowns from the season so far

And for those who prefer a darker, sportier, more androgynous rendering of Chanel there’s always that Metiers d’Art, Hamburg collection.

In many ways, that seems truer to the gamine, pared-back aesthetic of Coco herself. But the power of Chanel is its seemingly infinite ability to regenerate itself between the myriad collections it now produces each year – and its indefatigable Creative Director, who, aged 84, continues to oversee them all.