The post Dior Under Jonathan Anderson, Decrypted And Unboxed appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Jonathan Anderson Dior opening look at Paris Fashion Week. Getty Images Jonathan Anderson’s Dior womenswear show opened with a short film by Adam Curtis in the documentary maker’s signature collage technique. The film was screened simultaneously on all three sides of a monumental inverted pyramid suspended from the ceiling of the show venue in Paris’ Jardin des Tuileries and set atop a small gray Dior box. Dior maison storytelling It began with proposition ‘Do you dare to enter the house of Dior?’ done ‘house of horrors style’— a question Anderson may or may not have asked himself on taking up the Dior challenge—and proceeded through an assemblage of archival storytelling from runway to atelier and cultural moments from news to movie clips running the gamut from Marlene Dietrich to Diana Princess of Wales with original soundtracks or set to music including Lana del Rey’s anthemic ‘Born to Die.’ The film climaxed with a warp speed fast forward, glitching into white noise like an old fashioned video machine before being seemingly sucked into aforementioned box and the first look, a clean, white trapeze silhouette, segued forth. Fresh start. The Bar Jacket reimagined at Jonathan Anderson’s Dior at Paris Fashion Week. Getty Images Dior, the unboxing The pyramid recalls I.M.Pei’s Inverted Pyramid of Paris Louvre Museum fame. Interpreted by the protagonist of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code as a feminine symbol or chalice with its stone pyramid below being a masculine one—taken together as representing the union of the sexes. Which is exactly what Anderson, a rare combination of the cerebral and the visual, is setting out to do at Dior. For the first time in decades both women’s and men’s lines (the designer presented his men’s debut this summer) are piloted by one creative director and, as evinced today, he… The post Dior Under Jonathan Anderson, Decrypted And Unboxed appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Jonathan Anderson Dior opening look at Paris Fashion Week. Getty Images Jonathan Anderson’s Dior womenswear show opened with a short film by Adam Curtis in the documentary maker’s signature collage technique. The film was screened simultaneously on all three sides of a monumental inverted pyramid suspended from the ceiling of the show venue in Paris’ Jardin des Tuileries and set atop a small gray Dior box. Dior maison storytelling It began with proposition ‘Do you dare to enter the house of Dior?’ done ‘house of horrors style’— a question Anderson may or may not have asked himself on taking up the Dior challenge—and proceeded through an assemblage of archival storytelling from runway to atelier and cultural moments from news to movie clips running the gamut from Marlene Dietrich to Diana Princess of Wales with original soundtracks or set to music including Lana del Rey’s anthemic ‘Born to Die.’ The film climaxed with a warp speed fast forward, glitching into white noise like an old fashioned video machine before being seemingly sucked into aforementioned box and the first look, a clean, white trapeze silhouette, segued forth. Fresh start. The Bar Jacket reimagined at Jonathan Anderson’s Dior at Paris Fashion Week. Getty Images Dior, the unboxing The pyramid recalls I.M.Pei’s Inverted Pyramid of Paris Louvre Museum fame. Interpreted by the protagonist of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code as a feminine symbol or chalice with its stone pyramid below being a masculine one—taken together as representing the union of the sexes. Which is exactly what Anderson, a rare combination of the cerebral and the visual, is setting out to do at Dior. For the first time in decades both women’s and men’s lines (the designer presented his men’s debut this summer) are piloted by one creative director and, as evinced today, he…

Dior Under Jonathan Anderson, Decrypted And Unboxed

Jonathan Anderson Dior opening look at Paris Fashion Week.

Getty Images

Jonathan Anderson’s Dior womenswear show opened with a short film by Adam Curtis in the documentary maker’s signature collage technique. The film was screened simultaneously on all three sides of a monumental inverted pyramid suspended from the ceiling of the show venue in Paris’ Jardin des Tuileries and set atop a small gray Dior box.

Dior maison storytelling

It began with proposition ‘Do you dare to enter the house of Dior?’ done ‘house of horrors style’— a question Anderson may or may not have asked himself on taking up the Dior challenge—and proceeded through an assemblage of archival storytelling from runway to atelier and cultural moments from news to movie clips running the gamut from Marlene Dietrich to Diana Princess of Wales with original soundtracks or set to music including Lana del Rey’s anthemic ‘Born to Die.’

The film climaxed with a warp speed fast forward, glitching into white noise like an old fashioned video machine before being seemingly sucked into aforementioned box and the first look, a clean, white trapeze silhouette, segued forth. Fresh start.

The Bar Jacket reimagined at Jonathan Anderson’s Dior at Paris Fashion Week.

Getty Images

Dior, the unboxing

The pyramid recalls I.M.Pei’s Inverted Pyramid of Paris Louvre Museum fame. Interpreted by the protagonist of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code as a feminine symbol or chalice with its stone pyramid below being a masculine one—taken together as representing the union of the sexes.

Which is exactly what Anderson, a rare combination of the cerebral and the visual, is setting out to do at Dior. For the first time in decades both women’s and men’s lines (the designer presented his men’s debut this summer) are piloted by one creative director and, as evinced today, he has spectacularly unified their design language, with recurring Maison codes—volumes, colors and motifs from capes and cargos (themselves drawn from the archive Delft dress) to bows, ties and his take on the signature Bar Jacket—applied to both collections creating a dialogue between the two—in addition to the leitmotif dialogue between past and present that insinuated itself throughout.

As for predominant silhouette, the trapeze, and we’re back to the triangle.

This kind of cohesive approach vastly strengthens brand identity making for increased brand equity and brand power.

Christian Dior by Jonathan Anderson, cargo skirt Jacket on the runway at Paris Fashion Week.

WWD via Getty Images

A cargo look from Jonathan Anderson’s Dior Men’s collection

Dior

Dior: Commercial successes

While shoring up the bigger picture, Anderson has also created a vast array of commercial successes, in particular, with his accessories—the main revenue drivers for any brand.

Sure fire wins include the 3D envelope bags with their asymmetric top handle sported both on the runway and front row by house ambassadors and influencers including Jisoo, Mickey Madison and the ladylike bow slippers by Rosalía and Willow Smith with their toes in the shape of the Dior D. On the subject of typography, Anderson has also made a return to the original Dior font for his logos. Another keeper from the box.

Other footwear making their runway debut and likewise destined for retail hitmaking were pumps featuring a C and a D (signifying Christian Dior) right and left respectively and dramatic sandals adorned with overblown roses fashioned from swirls of fabric.

Dior in Jonathan Anderson’s words

As Anderson wrote in his show notes, “Daring to enter the house of Dior requires an empathy with its history, a willingness to decode its language, which is part of the collective imagination, and the resoluteness to put all of it in a box.

Not to erase it, but to store it, looking ahead, coming back to bits, traces or entire silhouettes from time to time, like revisiting memories. It’s an ever-evolving sentiment and task that is both complex and instinctive.”

Sandals in the shape of a rose made from swirls of fabric at Jonathan Anderson’s Dior show in Paris.

AFP via Getty Images

Jisoo arrives at Jonathan Anderson’s Dior show in Paris wearing of the new bag silhouettes.

Getty Images

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/stephaniehirschmiller/2025/10/02/dior-under-jonathan-anderson-decrypted-and-unboxed/

Market Opportunity
LOOK Logo
LOOK Price(LOOK)
$0.00675
$0.00675$0.00675
-0.58%
USD
LOOK (LOOK) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Pressure Builds on ADA Despite Cardano’s Bold Behind-the-Scenes Push ⋆ ZyCrypto

Pressure Builds on ADA Despite Cardano’s Bold Behind-the-Scenes Push ⋆ ZyCrypto

The post Pressure Builds on ADA Despite Cardano’s Bold Behind-the-Scenes Push ⋆ ZyCrypto appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Advertisement &nbsp &nbsp Market
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/21 22:27
Pi Network Bank: Pioneering a Human-Centric Financial Revolution in Crypto

Pi Network Bank: Pioneering a Human-Centric Financial Revolution in Crypto

   In the ever-evolving world of web3 and Crypto, Pi Network is taking a bold step forward. A recent announcement shared by @Fle
Share
Hokanews2026/02/21 22:43
XRP News: DBS Taps RLUSD to Boost Liquidity for Tokenization

XRP News: DBS Taps RLUSD to Boost Liquidity for Tokenization

The post XRP News: DBS Taps RLUSD to Boost Liquidity for Tokenization appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. XRP News: Asia’s largest bank, DBS Group Holdings, announced on 18 Sep 2025 that it has partnered with asset manager Franklin Templeton and blockchain firm Ripple Labs to offer new trading and lending solutions on the XRP Ledger. DBS said the memorandum of understanding was signed in Singapore and targets accredited and institutional investors. For context, a survey cited by DBS found nearly 87% of institutional investors expect to allocate to digital assets by 2025. Under the deal, investors can swap tokenized shares of Franklin Templeton’s U.S. dollar money market fund (token symbol sgBENJI) for Ripple’s USD stablecoin RLUSD. This move aims to boost liquidity and market efficiency. The listing allows 24/7 portfolio rebalancing into stable assets with yield. For XRP News readers, the takeaway is that this bridges regulated stablecoins with tokenized fund shares. XRP News: DBS Lists Franklin Templeton’s sgBENJI Token With Ripple’s RLUSD XRP News readers can see that DBS Digital Exchange (DDEx) has listed sgBENJI – the token for Franklin Templeton’s on-chain U.S. Dollar Short-Term Money Market Fund – alongside RLUSD. This pairing lets accredited investors trade between a dollar stablecoin and a cash-equivalent fund 24/7. The underlying money market fund holds about $736 million in short-term government securities. According to DBS, trading RLUSD for sgBENJI lets investors lock in principal and earn yield during volatile periods. As per reports, listing sgBENJI and RLUSD allows 24/7 portfolio rebalancing into stable assets while still generating yield. On-chain fund transactions settle in minutes – a big change from legacy funds that trade in multi-day windows. For XRP News readers, Franklin Templeton highlighted the XRP Ledger’s speed and low transaction fees as key benefits. The sgBENJI token will be issued on the public XRP Ledger. By adding the XRPL to its blockchain platforms, Franklin Templeton increases interoperability for tokenized…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 22:20