Dior shows flower-shaped dresses and ruffled jackets for autumn/winter womenswear collection

PARIS (Reuters) — Dior creative director Jonathan Anderson showed floating flower-shaped dresses and heels decorated with water lilies ​for his first autumn/winter womenswear collection at the Parisian ‌fashion house on Tuesday, as luxury conglomerate LVMH tries to breathe new life into the brand and revive sales.

Staged above an octagonal pond ​in Paris’ Tuileries gardens on a sunny spring day, ​the collection continued Anderson’s nature theme with ostrich feather ⁠trims on coats and the hem of one dress ​evoking a bunch of arum lilies. Jeans covered in silver sequins ​were paired with intricately ruffled shirts and jackets.

“This marks Jonathan Anderson’s fifth show for the house and his second for women’s ready-to-wear, and, for ​me, it is his strongest collection to date,” said ​Simon Longland, director of fashion buying at Harrods.

Alongside Louis Vuitton, Dior is a ‌key ⁠pillar of LVMH’s fashion and leather goods business, and Bernstein analyst Luca Solca estimates the brand’s sales declined 6-8% last year.

Anderson, who previously led LVMH-owned Loewe for 11 years, has ​already made his ​mark on ⁠Dior, releasing a new take on Dior’s classic cotton canvas tote bags featuring stylized book titles, ​such as Bram Stoker’s Dracula and French ​classics Madame ⁠Bovary, Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Bonjour Tristesse.

Top fashion brands presenting their new collections at Paris Fashion Week must balance luxury consumers’ demand for ⁠innovative, ​high-end designs with the need to ​win back stretched middle-class shoppers as the sector faces its worst slowdown in ​years, following steep price hikes.

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