Visitors at Schiaparelli’s Place Vendôme salons today will be greeted by a lavish wedding gown. Typically, couture shows end with the bride, but Daniel Roseberry gave pride of place to the dress constructed from 70 meters of white cartridge pleated taffeta. “We’ve had so many requests from clients who come looking for this irreverent grandeur that we’ve been doing,” he said.

Roseberry’s Schiaparelli debut was two Julys ago, in the halcyon summer before the pandemic wreaked its damage on fashion, and much else besides. That the American newcomer has been able to achieve so much in these straitened times—dressing Lady Gaga at Joe Biden’s Inauguration and Beyoncé at the Grammys, for starters—is a tribute to the boldness of his vision. Roseberry’s bride is not the shy, retiring type, but she is representative of what the designer described as the “new kind of prettiness” he was after this season. If this collection is as intense as his past outings, it’s a shade or two less irreverent. There are none of the molded leather six-pack abs corsets that were the defining—and maybe a bit divisive—looks of his last couture, for example.

This season, I felt the freedom to make something fiercely, undeniably, unapologetically pretty—because sometimes you have to rebel against beauty in order to return to it.

Daniel Roseberry, Creative Director of Schiaparelli

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He came at prettiness in several different ways. Following on from that entrance-making bride is a salon devoted to embroidered jackets. These borrow as much from Lacroix and Jean Paul Gaultier as they do from Schiaparelli, with their curvaceous shapes, Versailles colors, and cone bra references. (The milliner Stephen Jones provided the out-of-this-world chapeaux.) One black jacket blooms with pink silk roses, an ode to a collaboration between Schiap and Jean Cocteau circa 1937. Others are embellished with decades-old gold Schiaparelli threads that the embroiderer Lesage had saved in its stockpiles. All of them are trophies, perhaps especially the denim jacket that’s patch-worked from 11 pairs of used Levi’s sourced at a local vintage store—the very essence of haute friperie.

Roseberry’s explorations into body bijoux are showcased in a second room. Where this season’s jackets have a delicious propriety, a sculpted gold flower corset worn with a skirt barely clinging to the hips, and a scoop-front dress with a breastplate made of gold-dipped bronchi—the lungs being a locus of our attention in the pandemic—are more provocative. A silver bustier is accessorized by a fringed stole made from shredded black garbage bags, of all things. That’s couture heresy—and fabulously so.

The final room is alight with color: a cocktail dress punctuated by a shocking pink rose, a strapless black gown featuring a bust-line shaped like fiery orange lips with a matching train (it’ll be a surprise if that one isn’t on a jet down to the Cannes Film Festival by the end of the day), and a voluminous infanta gown in a shade of lavender Roseberry said that he’s never used before. In his two years at Schiaparelli, he’s only doubled-down on the surreal glamour this historic house is known for. Turns out, he’s very good at pretty, too.