Paris Fashion Week Trends
Look out for the best trends from the best runaway!
By Ira Sarin, Apr 26, 2017
Fashion Month has finally come to a close, bringing an end to four weeks of runway shows, presentations, street style, and Show filled inducing Instagrams.
As always, many of the best shows came last, giving the industry a reason to wake up and pay attention after the quite long exhaustion level that hit the high.

Fig.128 Paris Fashion Week (2017)
The Spring 2017 as usual were no different in offering ideas for next season that ranged from ripe for the copying to best left to the pros
The color stories, for one, were not for wallflowers: yellow and magenta were fixtures in just about every collection of the week, sometimes in small doses, other times not so much. The ’80s also came back in roaring volume.
Dynasty” 2.0
The decade fashion loves is back with a vengeance for spring, and this time, designers tapped into the biggest and brashest elements of ’80s style—think head-to-toe Spandex, space-hogging sleeves, and loads of lamé. Anthony Vaccarello, who just inherited Saint Laurent from Hedi Slimane, picked up where his predecessor left off last season (albeit with more black leather and no heart-shaped fur coat), showing ruched dresses, ultra-minis, and stilettos with heels fashioned to spell out the brand’s logo. Balenciaga’s Demna Gvasalia riffed on the silhouettes and predilections of the era, pairing ultrawide shoulders with legs encased in stretchy boot-pants.
Source : Google, Wikipedia (2017)

Fig.129 Dynasty 2.0 (2017)
Modern Bohemian
Earthy, organic, eclectic—2016’s bohemian cool-girl is about as far from the Coachella stereotype.
Depending on who you ask, she’s a staunch vegan (Stella McCartney), collects modern art and oversized jewelry (Loewe), and swaddles herself in piles of oversized knitwear picked up in far-flung locales (Acne). All three takes have their merits: McCartney’s proved that a no-fur-no-leather statement need not be totally crunchy, Loewe’s overflowed with covetable accessories, and Acne’s tapped in to the proportion play that’s becoming more mainstream by the day.

Fig.130 Modern Bohemian (2017)