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Louis Vuitton quits Paris to show in China and Japan

Louis Vuitton is taking its men's fashion collections on the road for the first time, with shows in China and Japan rather than Paris.

  (Agence France-Presse)
Paris, France
Sun, July 12, 2020

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Louis Vuitton quits Paris to show in China and Japan A model presents a creation by Louis Vuitton during the men's Fall/Winter 2020/2021 collection fashion show in Paris on January 16, 2020. (AFP/Anne-Christine Poujoulat)

L

ouis Vuitton is taking its men's fashion collections on the road for the first time, the luxury brand said Friday, with shows in China and Japan rather than Paris.

The label's American designer Virgil Abloh said the spring 2021 collection will be unveiled in Shanghai on August 6 and in Japan afterwards.

Both will be open to the general public and will be livestreamed, he added.

The announcement came after Abloh made a mixed live action and animated film for Paris men's fashion week, which is being held online for the first time because of the coronavirus pandemic.

"Message in a Bottle", the first in a series of teaser films, shows a character called "Zoooom" and his friends packing up crates at Vuitton's headquarters on the edge of the French capital and putting them on a barge on the River Seine before waving them off on their journey to the Far East.

Asia is becoming luxury brands' most important market, with China alone likely to account for nearly half of sales by 2025, according to some estimates.

Read also: Louis Vuitton designer apologizes for comments on US protests

Abloh, the first black American creative director of a top French fashion house, also revealed that he was making a push toward greater sustainability in Vuitton's collections.

Abloh, who also founded the streetwear label Off-White, said this would involve both recycling, upcycling and even "recycling of existing ideas for new creations".

"This next show is probably the biggest leap that I've made in terms of proposing a new system, how it lives and operates," he told the industry bible, Women's Wear Daily.

The fashion industry has been thrown into turmoil by the coronavirus, with designers questioning how it operates, the frenetic calendar of seasonal collections and even catwalk shows themselves.

Paris men's fashion week ends Monday, with the avant-garde Chinese designer Sean Suen showing Friday alongside big hitters Dries Van Noten and the American Rick Owens.

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