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Experimental beauty looks took the Paris catwalks by storm, closing out Fashion Week’s FW24 season. This included everything from Loewe’s futuristic bowl cut to Vivienne Westwood’s under-eye powder. Starface acne stickers made a return appearance on Kiko Kostadinov’s runway, and Schiaparelli joined in with hair and fashion with a braided tie to match his bleached eyebrows.
Below, find your favorite beautiful moments from Paris Fashion Week’s FW24 season.
loewe

https://www.instagram.com/p/C3-DPP2rFd0/
At Loewe, hairstylist Guido Palau drew on the boyish futurism depicted in Japanese manga. He transformed his wig into a cartoonish bowl cut dyed flame red, lagoon blue, and avatar green, thanks to colorist Antonia Cometa. Ordinary braids reminiscent of a rat’s tail tamed the experimental look, set with Palau’s new Zara hairspray, which was released just days after the collection.
For the make-up, the legendary Pat McGrath conceived the models as hyper-realistic portraits, like the 18 idyllic Albert Yorke paintings that hung on the walls of the maze-like catwalk. Just as the collection was a study in provenance, so too was the makeup a study in the natural faces of all the people in the show. To achieve this, McGrath used his Sublime Perfection System, which includes primer, foundation, and setting powder, and then divine, which he refined using his Blush and Skin Fetish: Highlighter + Balm duo. Created an eccentric beauty.
vivienne westwood


You can’t miss Vivienne Westwood.
“A sweep of white powder to lift and squint the eyes,” makeup artist Isamaya French wrote on Instagram. She also brushed on MAC Her Cosmetics powder to intensely brighten her under-eyes. She elongated and feathered her eyebrows by bypassing her thin eyebrows like the popular pencil and used a cotton swab to wipe away the excess gloss on her lips. Moving on to her hair, Sam McKnight used his Dyson Supersonic PRO hair dryer to achieve the “grunge to glam” look. He transformed the models into characters with fluffy tornado curl ponytails tied with black ribbons. This Late Renaissance collection featuring Nails by Mei Kawajiri wouldn’t be complete without “randomly carved French tips on natural nails,” she says on Instagram. Painted in light blue, rainbow colors and black, Kawajiri covered half of her nails “like a nail hat.”
Kiko Kostadinov



As seen at the Collina Strada and Lure NYFW shows, the Zitto Sticker brand’s Starface made its first catwalk appearance in Europe for Kiko Kostadinov in Paris. Makeup His artist Siddharth Simone shaded his soft gray eye wash to match his taupe star face ‘Earth Star’, an unreleased neutral, giving it a snake-like texture. The stickers were hardened and layered over the outline of the eyes.
For Kiko Kostadinov, “softness balances bold, opaque work,” according to the show notes, and the opacity is expressed in the hair through curly, wispy bang extensions by hairstylist Olivier Chawarder. There is. The hairstyles flowing over the makeup had a paper-heavy feel, while some wore textured eyelash caps that suggested a headdress, covering their hair like a mullet wig.
Comme des Garçons



In the collection titled “Anger,” hair wizard Julien Diss brings emotion to life in beautiful looks that combine braids, beehives, and pompadour hairstyles. That look was almost the opposite of last season, when Kawakubo tried to “free us from a dark present” and present a “bright and bright future.” Instead, his AW24 show featured matte red and black wigs as models stomped their feet in frustration.
Schiaparelli


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Hair was the accessory of the AW24 season. Remember Simone Rocha’s hair ribbon earrings from Jean Paul Gaultier Couture? They blurred the lines between beauty and fashion. At Schiaparelli, we woven the fabric into a tie. With a tie ponytail and similar platinum tones to her blonde hair, hair guru Guido Palau opted for statement bleached eyebrows beneath a more classic sleek middle-parted hairstyle. When it comes to makeup, Pat McGrath featured a backstage staple, Skin Fetish His Highlighter + Balm Her Duo in bronze and nude colors, slathering the product into the high points of her face.
A more subdued look than Haute Couture Week, this beautiful look brought Schiaparelli back to realism and gave us the look we wanted. actually wear. “It’s important to add a layer of legitimacy to the way people think about home,” designer Daniel Rosebery told Vogue. “So when you think about Schiaparelli, you don’t just think about celebrities and haute couture. [but] Everyday wear that you can wear right away. ”
