STARS like Jennifer Lawrence, Rosamund Pike and Anya Taylor-Joy watched on as Dior presented its latest show at a Scottish castle on Monday night.
The fashion brand took inspiration from period dressing for a stunning show in the gardens of Drummond Castle in Perthshire.
Hollywood actress Jennifer Lawrence.
Anya Taylor-Joy was among those in attendance.
With an imposing backdrop of the castle and its perfectly manicured gardens, Dior creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri needed to present something special for the Cruise 2025 collection.
Stars descended on Drummond Castle for the show, with brand ambassador Lawrence setting a trend for leopard print on the front row, which featured in Dior’s autumn/winter 2024 show at Paris Fashion Week in February.
Lily Collins was at Drummond Castle.
She wore a belted printed coat over a white top and flared jeans, leaning into the more casual aesthetic that Chiuri experimented with in her last collection.
Maisie Williams was also at the show.
Game Of Thrones star Maisie Williams, who played Christian Dior’s sister, Catherine, in the recent Apple TV+ show The New Look, also wore leopard print from the last collection.
Emily In Paris star Lily Collins also got the all-black memo for the front row, wearing a turtleneck paired with a utility jacket and matching skirt.
Rosamund Pike attended the Dior Show.
The Wheel Of Time actor Rosamund Pike chose a more timeless look, donning a slouchy belted trench coat over a black turtleneck and white wide-legged trousers.
Meanwhile, former Spice Girl Geri Horner was elegant in all white, wearing a boxy jacket with an embellished neckline over a turtleneck and a long A-line skirt.
Actress Minnie Driver was also among those at the Dior show.
As always, Chiuri was inspired by her location for the Cruise 2025 location, opening the show with plenty of tartan looks.
But models were not wearing classic kilts – there was a punk sensibility imbued throughout.
Tennis star Emma Raducanu at the show.
Think jagged hems, flashes of skin, bedazzling, tartan hotpants and heavy black boots which proved handy for models, as part of the lengthy runway through the gardens required them to walk on a gentle grassed slope.
Chiuri often collaborates with female creatives on her shows, and for this collection she enlisted the help of Samantha McCoach, Scottish designer of brand Le Kilt.
Spice Girls singer Geri Horner.
McCoach weaved her own thread to create a few of the kilts on show, with Chiuri telling Vogue of McCoach: “Her goal was to move this tradition for a new generation, and I think she did it very well – it’s cute and young, fresh and very elegant too.”
Chiuri took her historical inspirations one step further for this collection.
Before the show, Dior’s Instagram listed a series of late-medieval tapestries known as La Dame A la Licorne and needlework by Mary, Queen of Scots as key jumping off points for the clothes.
This manifested itself as hints of period dressing throughout the collection, perhaps in more literal ways than we have seen Chiuri do before.
Models wore flouncy white shirts with stiff, tight corsets over the top, reminiscent of the Bridgerton-inspired Regency dressing that has become so popular thanks to the Netflix show, as well a selection of outfits featuring heavy medieval-inspired chainmail in various forms.
Alexa Chung attended the show.
While this was a collection heavily inspired by its Scottish location, there were still plenty of Dior signatures.
There were tartan interpretations of the New Look, a two-piece featuring a blazer with a cinched waist paired with a full skirt, first shown by Christian Dior in 1947.
Feminist messages often permeate Dior’s shows, and this was no different, some of the outfits were emblazoned with words like “fierce,” “nag,” “emotional” and “bossy”, likely referring to names that women are often negatively pigeonholed with.
There were also plenty of impeccably tailored trench coats (which is fast becoming a Dior calling card), as well as ethereal gowns that celebrities will no doubt be eyeing up for their next red carpet.
The show ended with a procession of bagpipe players lining the runway, as the stream of model gave showgoers one last look at their outfits.
Did you know Mary Queen of Scots used embroidery as a form of rebellion and communication? 🤔 Clare Hunter (@sewingmatters) explains the importance of this work ahead of Dior's first Scottish show in 70 years, streaming live on The National from 8pm. pic.twitter.com/vlYugLH9AE
— The National (@ScotNational) June 3, 2024
This was not the first time Dior had touched down in Scotland.
Back in 1955, Christian Dior held two fashion shows in the country: one at the Gleneagles hotel in Perthshire, and the other at the Central Hotel in Glasgow.
And it is not like fashion fans will have to wait long for another show: the next opportunity to see Dior in action will come on June 24, when the French fashion house will present its latest couture collection.