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Hermes unveils its Paris show, as Ukraine’s designers unite

Irina Shayk wears a creation for the Vivienne Westwood ready-to-wear Spring/Summer 2023 fashion collection presented Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022 in Paris. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)

PARIS — A giant, glowing crystal rock upon a sand-colored carpet evoked a glamorous alien planet for Hermes’ champagne-sipping VIP guests.

Earthen hues like browns, reds and yellows — colors long-associated with the heritage brand — were used at Saturday’s show to create Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski’s utilitarian, low-key yet luxuriant universe for spring.

Elsewhere, Ukraine’s top fashion designers used the platform of Paris Fashion Week to promote their war-battered industry.

Here are some highlights of the spring-summer 2023 collections in Paris on Saturday:

HERMES’ SUBTLE STRINGS

It was the lone crystal, pulsating glowing color, that brought home the Hermes collection’s key idea: Simplicity is powerful.

Utilitarian features — such as toggles and strange box platforms — were used subtly but with aplomb. The tan suede tunic minidresses sported pleated leather hems — showcased without jewelry on a makeup-less model. Vanhee-Cybulski seemed at times to be making a fashion-forward take on the 80s.

Exposed midriffs latticed with cords and toggles came on otherwise unfussy slim silhouettes.

It brought a sporty and outer-space feel to the pared down collection.

UKRAINE’S “GOOD SIX” DESIGNERS SHOW UNITED FRONT

Last season in Paris, the Ukrainian designers trade fair event took place just two days before Russia’s invasion amid stories of some artists fleeing the country so rapidly they had only their children and their collection in hand.

This season sees no improvement back home for the industry: It’s been battered by increased financial strains as designers try hard to maintain employed staff despite little money, a decrease in demand and ravished supply chains.

A collective of these designer-survivors is showing in Paris beginning Saturday until Oct.6.

Jen Sidary, the collective’s head, said “in my 30 years of working in the fashion industry, I have never witnessed the resilience of a country and its people as they began to focus on keeping their businesses alive, days into the war, from bomb shelters to designing new collections amidst constant air raid sirens.”

The six making up the Paris Fashion Week event — Frolov, Kachorovska, Chereshnivska, Litkovska, My Sleeping Gypsy and Oliz — are showcasing unisex apparel, footwear and scarves. It’s a bid to keep their ravaged industry alive, and form of resistance against the Russian bombs decimating their homeland.

Many of their colleagues back home in Ukraine have had to repurpose their…

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