• About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Saturday, June 27, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Page3News Worldwide
  • Home
  • E-Paper
  • Subscriptions
  • Countries
    • USA
    • Canada
    • India
    • Balochistan
    • Thailand
    • UK
    • Australia
  • Language Wise News
    • Thai News
    • Punjabi News
    • Hindi News
  • Other News
    • World News
    • Latest Movie Reviews
    • Culture
    • Finance
    • Hollywood
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • food
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Tech
  • Multilingual Editorial
    • English Editorials
    • Thai Editorials
    • Hindi Editorials
    • Punjabi Editorials
    • Page3News Special
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • E-Paper
  • Subscriptions
  • Countries
    • USA
    • Canada
    • India
    • Balochistan
    • Thailand
    • UK
    • Australia
  • Language Wise News
    • Thai News
    • Punjabi News
    • Hindi News
  • Other News
    • World News
    • Latest Movie Reviews
    • Culture
    • Finance
    • Hollywood
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • food
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Tech
  • Multilingual Editorial
    • English Editorials
    • Thai Editorials
    • Hindi Editorials
    • Punjabi Editorials
    • Page3News Special
No Result
View All Result
Page3News Worldwide
No Result
View All Result
Home Breaking News

A historic heat wave catches Europe’s fashion industry unprepared

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
in Breaking News, World News
0
A historic heat wave catches Europe’s fashion industry unprepared
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsappShare on TelegramShare on LineShare on Email

Across the week, designers treated heat as a hospitality problem, a staging problem and a scheduling problem – rarely as a design problem

As a historic heat wave gripped Paris this week, fashion houses tried to keep their guests cool with ice packs, mist machines and iced Evian on silver platters.

It wasn’t enough: some venues still sweltered, water ran short and air conditioning was absent or inadequate.

Then they sent their models down the runway in leather, neoprene and wool.

That was the contradiction at Paris Fashion Week Men’s, where a heat wave turned spring-summer fashion into a test of whether luxury can dress – or act – for the warming world it claims to address.

“I honestly thought I was going to pass out,” said Ben Freeman, a London-based fashion critic from Australia.

Some in the front row said Paris may have to consider moving fashion week away from the height of summer if climate change keeps bringing more frequent and intense heat waves.

“I don’t know how the models did it this week in some of the leather and knit coats,” said fashion student Thomas Levy, 24, outside one show.

“The heat rarely seems to make it into the clothes. It shows up in the sets like at waterfalls and mist machines and ice packs.” Heat as a production problem Across the week, designers treated heat as a hospitality problem, a staging problem and a scheduling problem – rarely as a design problem.

Guests got ice packs, cold towels and water. Sets got waves, fog and mist. Schedules moved earlier, and punctuality became a heat precaution.

Dior moved its show Wednesday from 2:30 pm to 9 am, but the heat pressed in. Water was limited, there was no air conditioning, and some guests appeared unwell.

Jonathan Anderson’s most elegant answer was sheer silk-chiffon tailoring – but elsewhere came heavy knits, made less for Paris in June than for a global calendar out of sync with the weather.

“The calendar does not make any sense,” Anderson told reporters. He cited fractured delivery cycles and a changing business, suggesting the fashion calendar no longer lines up with actual weather or with how luxury clothes are sold.

Runways out of season These are spring-summer shows, but not simply summer clothes.

RelatedPosts

UK man accused of drugging wife, raping her along with 13 others over 20 years

Lashkar terrorists, its deputy chief attend funeral of Shoaib Akhtar’s brother

Pakistan Earthquake: Twin Quakes Jolt Pakistan Within Hours, Causing Panic Among Residents

Luxury collections are made for global markets, staggered deliveries and customers who pass the hottest months in refrigerated air.

For many, a wool coat in June is not a seasonal contradiction; it’s a desired purchase.

At Saint Laurent, models walked through clouds of vapour from a Fujiko Nakaya fog installation inside the Bourse de Commerce, turning heat into atmosphere rather than escape.

Anthony Vaccarello stripped his tailoring to unlined jackets and soft, pale silhouettes – light, he told reporters, for the heat – then ran the temperature back up with leather briefs, choker scarves, bare legs and transparent shoes clouded with perspiration.

The result was not a surrender to summer, but a Saint Laurent version of it: cooler construction, hotter attitude.

At Louis Vuitton, Pharrell Williams’ models emerged from a giant artificial wave onto sand. Yet the wetsuits were neoprene, the coats cashmere and fur.

Issey Miyake’s IM Men offered one of the week’s clearer practical answers.

Its show, “In Praise of Bamboo Shadows,” handed out ice packs at the door, then sent out bamboo-thread fabrics woven with organic cotton, light nylon and shadowy prints.

The silhouettes moved away from the body, treating air as part of the design rather than something supplied only by the venue.

At Ami, Alexandre Mattiussi said the obvious from beside an industrial fan – “Paris is burning” – and dressed it like a Parisian living in it: loose shorts, washed trenches and “I Love Paris” T-shirts.

Rick Owens came closest to making heat the subject. He moved his Thursday show earlier because of the heat, then sent models through mist at the Palais de Tokyo in garments with fans whirring inside.

One prominent fashion critic called the show “a metaphor for climate catastrophe.” A French fight over cooling Pascal Morand, head of France’s Haute Couture and Fashion Federation, said organisers were following the French government’s heat-wave plan.

“We are conscious of the challenges and very attentive to preserving the Fashion Week experience in this context of structural change,” he told The Associated Press.

Fashion was not the only Paris institution straining. As the Louvre shortened its hours during the heat wave, the museum said its historic building “remains vulnerable and is not sufficiently adapted to climate change.” That change feeds a French argument over air conditioning, still distrusted by many in much of Europe – dismissed as wasteful or unecological.

Fashion week became a glamorous version of the problem facing France itself: how to keep public life, work and spectacle running in heat the country was not built for, without turning every room into an air-conditioned box.

President Emmanuel Macron’s government has leaned, like much of France, toward shade, insulation and trees instead.

Europe is the fastest-warming continent, its cities built of stone and short on air conditioning.

“Paris Fashion Week is the canary in the mine,” Freeman said.

From sport to tourism to construction, industries built around fixed calendars and outdoor crowds are being forced to adapt to heat that comes earlier, lasts longer and climbs higher.

Paris Fashion Week – outdoor, fixed and watched by the world – became a visible test. 

Europe’s worst heatwave on record set to spread east  

The heatwave searing much of Europe is officially the most severe ever recorded in the region, according to a study published on Friday. 

Researchers at World Weather Attribution found that temperatures were between 5°C and 12°C above seasonal averages across France, Germany, Italy, Spain and southern England. 

The heatwave is set to sweep east this weekend, with forecasts predicting searing temperatures across Germany, Poland, Austria and the Czech Republic. 

Daytime highs in Frankfurt and Berlin may top 41°C on Friday and Sunday, according to the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. 

Maximum temperatures in Warsaw, Geneva and Prague could reach 38°C on Sunday.

Get real time update about this post categories directly on your device, subscribe now.

Unsubscribe
Page 3 News International Desk

Page 3 News International Desk

The Page 3 News is a Multilingual Worldwide daily newspaper founded in 2021. It is published in Bangkok, Thailand by the Page 3 News Thai Limited Partnership. Page 3 News is available to the world in all the three formats i.e. e-Paper, digital and print. The Page 3 News is having offices in many countries like Thailand, India, Canada, USA, etc. and is currently published in English, Thai, Hindi and Punjabi languages.

Related Posts

UK man accused of drugging wife, raping her along with 13 others over 20 years

UK man accused of drugging wife, raping her along with 13 others over 20 years

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
0
10

The man, who is in his 60s, has been charged alongside 13 other men, aged between 28 and 73, with...

Lashkar terrorists, its deputy chief attend funeral of Shoaib Akhtar’s brother

Lashkar terrorists, its deputy chief attend funeral of Shoaib Akhtar’s brother

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
0
8

A viral video shows Saifullah Kasuri, deputy chief of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, and other terrorists at Shahid Akhtar's funeral in Islamabad....

Pakistan Earthquake: Twin Quakes Jolt Pakistan Within Hours, Causing Panic Among Residents

Pakistan Earthquake: Twin Quakes Jolt Pakistan Within Hours, Causing Panic Among Residents

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
0
0

Pakistan Earthquake: Two earthquakes struck Pakistan within a matter of hours on Saturday morning, sparking panic in several parts of...

Venezuela Earthquake: Death toll tops 920, over 50,000 missing as rescue efforts intensify

Venezuela Earthquake: Death toll tops 920, over 50,000 missing as rescue efforts intensify

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
0
0

A UN report estimated direct damage from the quakes at about $6.7 billion. The death toll from twin earthquakes that...

China strips military lawmakers as Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption drive deepens

China strips military lawmakers as Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption drive deepens

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
0
0

China removed six military lawmakers, Li Yunze and Ma Xingrui from the National People's Congress. The unexplained dismissals add to...

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards say it hit US positions in response to attack

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards say it hit US positions in response to attack

by Page 3 News International Desk
June 27, 2026
0
0

The Guards did not provide details on the US ‌positions it targeted in the region Iran's Revolutionary Guards on Saturday...

Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Tumblr Pinterest

Page 3 News Multilingual Worldwide

The Page 3 News is a Multilingual Worldwide daily newspaper founded in 2021. It is published in Bangkok, Thailand by the Page 3 News Thai Limited Partnership. Page 3 News is available to the world in all the three formats i.e. e-Paper, digital and print.

The Page 3 News is having offices in many countries like Thailand, India, Canada, USA, etc. and is currently published in English, Thai, Hindi and Punjabi languages.

Category

Calanderwise News

June 2026
MTWTFSS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930 
« May    

© 2024 Page 3 News - First Multilingual Worldwide Newspaper based in Thailand.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Subscriptions
  • E-Paper
  • World News
  • Balochistan
  • USA
  • India
  • Thailand
  • Canada
  • UK
  • Australia
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

© 2024 Page 3 News - First Multilingual Worldwide Newspaper based in Thailand.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.