Under the blooming sakura of Kyoto’s ancient Toji Temple, Maria Grazia Chiuri proved herself once again as fashion’s foremost alchemist of past and present in her latest Dior show.
The Dior Fall 2025 show saw the creative director masterfully reinterpret Christian Dior’s Japanese tastes for today’s woman, balancing archival reverence with contemporary ease.
Chiuri’s collection traced the house’s long affair with Japan, from the founder’s 1953 Japanese Garden Outfit to his pioneering use of Tatsumura textiles in 1954. Yet this wasn’t nothing over the top.
The designer distilled these references into a modern wardrobe of crisp and collected sophistication, where a kimono-inspired jacket is paired with a shirt, marrying softness with structure.
The show’s triumph lay in its authentic collaborations. Master artisan Tabata Kihachi revived the house’s cherry blossom motifs using traditional Kyo-Yuzen dyeing, while the Fukuda Craft Institute applied generations of expertise to contemporary silhouettes.
Tokyo-based milliner Sawa Vaughters added modern edge with her reinterpretation of the traditional kasa hat, its conical shape softened by a trailing black braid. The result was a dialogue across decades – the same patterns that beguiled Monsieur Dior now rendered in relaxed tailoring, wide-leg trousers and fluid skirts that moved with quiet confidence.
Chiuri’s exploration extended to cultural cross-pollination, examining the space between garment and body through pieces like the kimono jacket, giving a nod to the maison’s 1957 Diorpaletot designed specifically to layer over traditional Japanese dress.
The collection’s architectural shapes and belted coats demonstrated her continued fascination with fashion and its many forms, while sumptuous golden embroidery and deep black silks maintained the house’s luxurious DNA.
Against Toji Temple’s serene gardens, Chiuri demonstrated how true luxury evolves, honoring craft while shedding usual runway rules. Her Dior woman wears history lightly, her Parisian elegance filtered through Japanese minimalism.
In an industry obsessed with the new, this collection stood as proof that the most compelling modernity grows from deep roots.
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Images & Feature Image: Supplied