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Background:
This fashion month, models walked the tightrope between fantasy and function. On the runway, spectacle was dialled up to 100: Alaïaâs armless âstraitjacketâ dress, Margielaâs metal mouthpieces, and Jean Paul Gaultierâs naked male body prints were among the pieces to spark a wider debate.
Some critics have asked what feels like an obvious question: do designers actually understand â or even care â how women dress in their real lives?
The Business of Fashionâs Diana Pearl and Cat Chen join senior editor Sheena Butler-Young to examine why criticism is intensifying now, the role of authorship and how brands can balance showmanship with wearability.
Key Insights:
- Designers face backlash when spectacle eclipses womenâs realities. As Pearl observes, âdesigners werenât really designing for actual women â or at worst, designing clothes that felt almost disrespectful.â To Pearl, many runway moments âfelt either like it was erasing the woman or immobilising them⦠like fashion is a form of torture.â Even if looks are âdramatized for the runway,â she says, âthereâs still a message being sentâ that can be interpreted as designers not respecting women.
- Chen doesnât see this season as uniquely outrageous in a vacuum, but says context matters. She adds that criticism hits harder now amid other external circumstances, one of which is that many brands are struggling financially. âThe fact that these designers had a commercial incentive to be more resonant with consumers and then created these collections that didnât hit at that level, I think that made these collections so much more perceptible to be criticised in this way,â says Chen.
- Body diversity is the more urgent gap to fix. Pearl says the ultra-thin casting âadds insult to injury⦠a parade of models that are all extremely thin and⦠unattainable,â compounding the sense that runways arenât made with real women in mind. Chen goes further: âthe lack of body diversity on the runway is a huge problem,â noting data that shows representation âfalling straight down from 2023 to 2025.â
- Pearl notes perception shifts with whoâs in charge: âWomen arenât represented at the top, so it makes us more primed to look at a mouthpiece and feel itâs sexist because itâs coming from a male designer.â Still, she points to shows that balance both: Chanelâs debut âfelt very wearableâ while staging delivered âotherworldlyâ theatre, and Khaiteâs runways pair mood with pieces that, also, âfeel very wearable.â Chen adds that smaller, women-led brands win by staying close to their customer: âItâs really not about spectacle, itâs about being in the same room as their customers.â