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The Business of Fashion Podcast

In Paris, Hellos, Goodbyes and Waiting For Creative Change

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 11 July 2025

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The latest fashion season marked a period of significant transition with new creative leadership taking centre stage at some of luxury’s biggest houses. Highly anticipated debuts at Dior, Celine and Maison Margiela set the tone for a new direction, while designers like Rick Owens continued to redefine the emotional and aesthetic parameters of fashion. At Balenciaga, Demna bid farewell to his iconic aesthetic, setting the stage for his upcoming tenure at Gucci.

Against this backdrop, BoF’s editor-at-large Tim Blanks and editor-in-chief Imran Amed discuss the realities of a shifting luxury landscape and the growing tension around pricing, accessibility, and the future structure of the luxury market.


Key Insights: 


  • Jonathan Anderson's debut at Dior represented the start of a carefully managed transformation. "Dior is like a performance for him; J.W. Anderson is the real Jonathan," says Blanks. "I felt he was on a mission to manage expectations. He was basically saying, give me time." The conceptual collection served as an opening statement rather than a full evolution.


  • Rick Owens remains a source of creative independence and authenticity. "There is no compromise in what Rick Owens does. He is a beacon of hope," said Blanks. Amed also highlights how Owens' shows now offer a safe space that celebrates difference: "He's been talking about how he wanted to create a place where people who don't subscribe to conventional notions of beauty can find a place where they can fit in. It's always so remarkable at his shows and presentations because you can really see that all come to life."


  • Demna’s final Balenciaga show symbolised a deliberate departure from his signature aesthetic. "He said goodbye to his Balenciaga," said Blanks. Amed observed, “At Balenciaga, Demna needed to put more of his own codes into it. At Gucci, he has so much to work with.” With this pivot, Demna closes one chapter while preparing to reinterpret another legacy house.


  • Amid a challenging economic environment, luxury brands are reconsidering their pricing strategies. “Luxury always worked in this pyramid where you had very high-end customer spending at the top. That pyramid structure has been kind of bloated in the middle now,” explained Imran. Brands are being forced to reevaluate what “entry-level” really means. “They're thinking about what they can put at the bottom… the entry-level price points."

 


Additional Resources:

Couture’s Age of Experience, Experience of Age | BoF


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:07.9

Welcome to the BOF podcast. It's Friday, July 11th. Well, Tim Blanks and I don't normally get together

0:15.4

at this time of year to have a seasonal review of the collections that have just shown. But with the menswear shows and Paris Couture Week and all of the debuts in fashion,

0:26.5

including Jonathan Anderson at Dior, Michael Ryder at Celine,

0:31.1

and Glenn Martins at Maison Margella,

0:33.4

as well as some important goodbyes, Demna's final show for Balenciaga and some perennial favorites like Rick Owens.

0:41.9

Tim and I sat down for a special episode to discuss the most important collections, the standout looks,

0:47.8

and of course the designers who brought them to life, and what this means for the state of luxury fashion at a time of great change.

0:56.1

And so without further ado, here's Tim Blanks for our seasonal review on the Bof podcast.

1:03.3

Hello, Tim. Welcome back from Paris.

1:06.6

Hi, I'm Ron.

1:07.5

It was hot there. It's hot here.

1:09.8

Yep.

1:10.4

In London. And exhausting. It was hot there. It's hot here. Yep. In London.

1:11.4

And exhausting.

1:13.1

Why exhausting?

1:14.9

I don't know.

1:15.9

When I was sitting in the Dior show, I thought, you.

1:18.8

Somebody had told me that they'd gone to great expense to climate control, that environment,

1:24.9

because they had those two priceless Chardin paintings that they'd borrowed from

1:29.4

the National Gallery of Scotland and the Louvre in a stunning display of LVMH's ability to move mountains.

1:38.6

And the two quite small paintings mounted quite low on the wall, so I don't know if everybody

...

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