Michele did not attempt reinvention for shock value. Instead, he chose reverence.
Valentino will live on. The words feel inevitable, almost ceremonial. ‘The last great emperor’ passed just days ago, yet his presence still lingers—stitched into silk, embroidered in memory, and echoed across candlelit cathedrals and couture salons alike. Only five days before Paris bore witness to the House of Valentino’s latest haute couture presentation, Valentino Garavani’s clients, muses, and peers gathered in Rome dressed in his designs to farewell a man who defined modern glamour. It was not an ending, but a passage.
On Wednesday evening in Paris, Alessandro Michele, the new custodian of the 66-year-old house, paid tribute in the language Valentino himself perfected: spectacle, romance, and red-carpet fantasy.
Alessandro Michele’s couture debut leaned fully into this truth. Rather than chasing minimalism or conceptual austerity, he returned the house to its emotional core. This was couture as theatre—designed not for anonymity, but for the world’s gaze. It was a reminder that Valentino couture has always existed in dialogue with fantasy, fame, and femininity.
While haute couture exists in rarefied spaces, Valentino Garavani always understood the importance of accessories in shaping a complete world. That legacy continues. The house’s accessories, particularly Valentino women's handbags, remain integral to its identity, bridging couture fantasy with everyday luxury.





























































































