10 Of The Most Wearable Menswear Trends From Paris Fashion Week Autumn/Winter 2020

By Stephen Doig
Daily Telegraph UK
Models pose backstage before the Dior Homme menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week. Photo / Getty Images

As Paris Men's Fashion week draws to a close, Stephen Doig shares his essential style notes for autumn/winter 2020.

Officine Generale menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Officine Generale menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

Winter whites
If anyone can convince us that white trousers are acceptable attire for winter, it's Pierre Mahéo of Officine Générale  his label is a byword for laid-back Parisian refinement. Pristine trousers looked suitably Alpine alongside soft cord blazers and cosy shearling jackets. Just don't spill the vin rouge.

Hermes menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Hermes menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

Sports style grows up
The shift towards more dynamic and athletic-focused style has been one of the biggest trends in menswear in recent decades, but that doesn't mean letting standards slip. Véronique Nichanian of luxury Paris house Hermès turned traditionally outdoorsy pieces  cagoules, padded jackets, biker jackets  into items of desirability by tinkering with their make-up; a gleaming chocolate technical fabric felt like silk, while sumptuous leather was employed where practical materials would normally be.

Berluti menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Berluti menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

The British are coming
For all the flash and glamour of Kim Jones's Dior show, with the Beckhams sitting front row and glittering couture beadwork on the catwalk, the real stars were the British heritage fabrics set amid the more theatrical pieces. The designer's collection was a tribute to his late friend Judy Blame, a stylist, designer and artist who was part of the punk movement and favoured a jangling array of trinkets as his accessories  hence anarchic touches added to cable-knit sweaters. Elsewhere, Kris Van Assche at Berluti took the standard Prince of Wales check and treated it to an acid bath, rendering it in searing green and black on a double-breasted coat.

Givenchy menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Givenchy menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

Royal inspiration
A grand Parisian couture house, helmed by a British designer, invoking the raffish glamour of the last Maharaja of Indore... It was a cross-pollination from Clare Waight Keller at Givenchy that blended the opulence of Yashwant Rao Holkar II in the Thirties with a modern silhouette. Alongside the more outré bejewelled sweaters and embroidered coats, there was also a return to sartorialism with plaid and Prince of Wales checked suits paired with the kit and caboodle of shirt, sweater and lapel pin. Indian splendour by way of the mills of Berwick-upon-Tweed, then.

Louis Vuitton menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Louis Vuitton menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

The City set
When Virgil Abloh was appointed the creative director of Louis Vuitton menswear two years ago, eyebrows were raised that the streetwear-centric designer could helm a luxury house. But slowly and surely, Abloh is setting about exploring the ability of the storied Vuitton ateliers and for winter, alongside the high-octane, showman pieces that will keep his millennial fan base in Instagram likes, he explored something new  suits that a businessman would happily wear. The designer looked to the more corporate side of the Louis Vuitton man (those LV airport stores for the Geneva-hopping CEO are always busy) with suits in slate, black and caramel worn with actual shirts and ties (the very thought!), classic coats and solid, smart accessories  as opposed to the sporty rucksacks and bumbags he's done previously  for the City of London banker instead of the City of Angels skater.

Berluti menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Berluti menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

Polo players
Formality has taken a hit in recent years, and with it the need to wear a shirt. Step forward alternatives that work just as well in a formal setting. Berluti's solution was to pair a polo neck with almost every suit the house presented, in colours contrasting to the zingy bright suits. Hermès also tinkered with the format of a standard shirt, adding a jaunty Gallic neck tie sewn into the shirt as an alternative to collar and tie.

Dries Van Noten menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Dries Van Noten menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

The new hue
"Never wear brown in town" goes the adage. The Parisian designers had something to say about that: the go-to hue for country attire has been applied to sharp, city-ready tailoring. There were rich nutmeg coloured suits at Dries Van Noten and classic chocolate at Deveaux. At Lemaire, different brown tones were layered  a chestnut-shaded blazer with russet trousers, for example. Rules are made to be broken, after all.

Paul Smith menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Paul Smith menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

The 50-year suit

There’s a lot of talk among contemporary designers about how to modernise the suit; Paul Smith was doing it decades ago, elongating the cut and creating suits in vivid hues. For his 50th anniversary men’s show, he continued that theme. “The collection combines elements from the past and nods to my history,” said the designer backstage.Those suits were updated in cobalt blue, clay and sage as well as the staple of sleek greys and blacks that have seen the British man turn to Smith for his office attire for decades. Of course, tailoring has eased up in a staggering way since Smith began designing, and that was reflected in the blazers worn with denim and pin-sharp raincoats.

Ami Alexandre Mattiussi menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Ami Alexandre Mattiussi menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

Evening out

Dressing for dinner is increasingly a thing of the past, but some designers’ offerings were an excuse to dress up again. Lanvin focused on ceremonial opera coats with bow ties, while at Balmain designer Olivier Rousteing showed formal coats with contrasting satin lapels and white ties instead of standard black. There were even ruffled-fronted evening shirts at Ami, a cool Parisian label run by Alexandre Mattiussi, whose USP is normally casual ease. Expect dress code rules to be firmly implemented come cocktail hour.

Dunhill menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images
Dunhill menswear autumn/winter 2020-2021. Photo / Getty Images

Rock-star trousers
It's tricky terrain: leather trousers on a man are best suited to motorcyclists, unless you're Rod Stewart or Mick Jagger. But Dunhill has more right than most to make such a suggestion  the label, which decamped to Paris a couple of years ago, is peerless in the world of leather craft and has the skill of an artisanal leather makers in Walthamstow with decades of experience at its disposal. The trousers came in glossy patent and matte leather, but if the idea's too alarming for you, designer Mark Weston had elegant alternatives in the form of handsome, solid leather coats.

The Daily Telegraph

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