Couture has always transformed the ordinary into the extraordinary. Here, that transformation asked us to think beyond “noble” materials, asking whether beauty resides in the material itself—or in the imagination capable of reinventing it. We paired haute couture techniques with synthetic materials: instead of the traditional silks, satins, and wools, we instead used latex, silicone, pools of paint baked into sheets and sculpted into silhouettes. 

    We also pushed back against some of the house staples, because codes—as beloved as they are—aren’t meant to be static. 

    Elsa herself strongly believed that the familiar should be made unfamiliar. Which is why, for example, the iconic Schiaparelli jacket is treated here as an accessory: embroidered and detailed and meant to enhance the overall outfit. We worked hard to develop new fabrications and materials, ones never before seen in couture. A dress’s hyper-realistic bustier isn’t molded, but instead sculpted before being cast in silicone and painted a milky blue; the skirt’s floral motif is made of hundreds of flowers rendered from hosiery stretched on metal wires and pearls—the colors ombré from cornflower blue to a caramel meant to fade into the tights worn beneath. Another dress bristles with weightless sculpted crinoline tubes. A jacket and matching pair of leggings are encrusted with real flowers, fish scales, and ribbon flowers, while from the shoulders scroll kinetic latex tentacles. And of course, none of this experimentation would have been possible without the extraordinary artisans who work in our ateliers. Their expertise is what gives us the freedom to venture into the unknown in the first place. They remind me that couture’s greatest luxury isn’t its materiality, but the hands that make it. 

    We also experimented with color this season, concentrating on tones found in flora and sea fauna: lobster pink, violet, tangerine, saffron, and pale mint—all set against a backdrop of high gloss black, raw wax ecru, and shots of our iconic Schiaparelli gold. Gold, at this house, isn’t just a finish—it’s something more akin to sculpture: a material that transforms the body into an object that’s at once ornament, armor, and art. 

    This collision of lightness and kink extends to the accessories as well: versions of our Secret bag are alive with crinoline spikes or embroidered flowers, and our new shoe, The Bubble, an alien metallic shape, is fitted with a silicone sleeve. These same themes—a love of nature; a fascination with the atypical—is found in our jewelry as well, which includes gold-plated shell earrings, their insides blush-pink porcelain; gold earrings, bracelets, and necklaces shaped like writhing octopus tentacles; and a silicone choker and cuff meant to recall sea anemones. 

    The process reminded me that while we talk about how couture is something to master, we don’t really think about what true mastery actually means. Is it about being brave enough to create in a space of not knowing? Of being able to take flight, and knowing that the net will appear beneath you? Perhaps this is Elsa’s greatest legacy: not a vocabulary of symbols, but the belief that impossibility itself can become a creative method. 

    Posted by cmaia1503

    Share.

    43 Comments

    1. Equivalent_Read on

      This is the sort of fashion that I live for. Shit I could never wear that is like art.

    2. tropebreaker on

      Slide 6 and 7 looks like uzumaki spiral into horror when the hair curls. 

    3. nobiscuitsinthesnow on

      FINALLY SOME DRAMA ON THE RUNWAY THANK YOU

      I am so sick of haute couture looking like poorly thrown on paper bags

    4. 1, 16, 18 are the most lovely in my eyes. Sooo pretty. Sadly, the whole vibes of this collection really reminded me of Hunger Games. I love it, yes, but 😭😭

      Suddenly feeling bleak & dystopian lol.

    5. Some of these are so gorgeous but I do not understand the bust/cups in most of them- it looks awkward to me, like someone unfamiliar with women’s anatomy, but idk. Some are really stunning tho.

    6. I love Schiaparelli and I love Roseberry. Good balance of conceptual and wearable. It feels a tiny bit less focused than his collections a couple years ago but there are some fantastic pieces in here and I’m enjoying the color play

    7. mamaneedsacar on

      Uughhhhhhh I loveeee Schiaparelli. I could see Dua Lipa absolutely eating up 4 & 5. I need to see Zendaya in 8 or 16.

    8. BlossomingOrchard on

      I’m sorry this is so gloriously what I would like to see from high fashion -it’s art .

    9. frostandtheboughs on

      I usually love Schiaparelli but nothing here really does it for me. Many of these look like they’re trying to force two disparate concepts into the same garment but they did a poor job of harmonizing them. Slides 15, 19, and 20 were successful but everything else….

    10. No_Produce_Nyc on

      In interviews he talks about The Void being about asking questions, not about answering them, and it truly shows.

      Glad to see him playing the Materiality Game that Jonathan Anderson picked up from Margiela.

      I love how unpleasant so much of it is, while still retaining aspects of “classical beauty”.

      I think it also Loves the Woman more than his last. Really dignified and aggressive without needing horn boobs

    11. Ssspppaaaccceeesss on

      All of these are unsettling and eye-catching (entirely complimentary). I expect to finally have something interesting to see on the red carpet as my girlies fight over who wears these first.

      “If you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss also gazes into you.” -Nietzsche

    12. InimitableMissS on

      There’s a lot here that’ll be great to see trickle down to a RTW collection- the colors and the silhouettes are really striking. But there’s some stuff that’s ready to go. 2 is ready for a premiere. 3 and 9 would just need minor styling to get into an event right now too.

    13. EveryCliche on

      I really do love everything Daniel Roseberry does at Schiaparelli. It’s interesting, it’s beautiful, it’s art.

      If you are not following the Schiaparelli Instagram page, I highly recommend. They already have videos uploaded of him talking about the collection.

    14. ashephrodite on

      they look like Polly Pocket clothes!! (in a good way, in case it isn’t clear)

    15. Flipped-Barbie-Jeep on

      15 is peak. I could stare at it for hours, wish I could see the garment in person.

    16. Helpful_Librarian_87 on

      Love it. Dramatic af, soft but punk as hell. Futuristic throwbacks. My jaw is ajar and my blood is racing.