A model shows off Chinese designer Guo Pei's Autumn/Winter 2020 Couture Collection Photo: Courtesy of the Rose Studio
One very select group of fashionistas were not crying into their cocktails when the Paris fashion shows were canceled because of the coronavirus.
The tiny group of super rich women who buy the ruinously expensive handmade creations that adorn the runways of Paris haute couture week knew that meant their favorite designers would have to come to them.
"I thought they would be upset," the French courtier Julien Fournie told AFP as he prepared looks for his film for the French capital's first virtual fashion week, which started Monday.
"But it was quite the opposite," he added.
Haute couture's made-to-measure creations - which are only shown in Paris - can cost the price of a luxury sports car.
With no glitzy shows to go to this time, the jetset queens that usually patronize them expect their own personalized presentations in their palaces and penthouses.
Fournie, who trained as a doctor before turning his passion and considerable anatomical know-how to couture, said he was used to flying to the Middle East and Asia with the head of his studio, Mademoiselle Jacqueline, for fittings and adjustments.
Royal clientele
The difference between couture creations and those you buy off the rail is night and day, he insisted.
"While you have to get into ready-to-wear clothes" - adapting your body to the norm - "in haute couture, the clothes are made to wrap you," the designer said.
And Fournie only makes one-off pieces to ensure the exclusivity that his very well-heeled clients crave.
"Once a client from a royal family canceled an order after seeing a similar creation worn by Lady Gaga," said the house's director, Jean-Paul Cauvin.
"For them, exclusively is everything, and they don't want that tainted by fame or vulgarity."
For that reason, Fournie tends to avoid lending his dresses out to stars for red carpet events, except, he noted, when the singer or actress has a style that really chimes with the "DNA of the house."
Cut for 'real women'
"We are not showing too much [in Paris]" Cauvin said, to avoid any unseemly competition that might sometimes arise after shows when "clients really set their heart on a particular look and want to put an option on it" before anyone else does.
This time, without a formal show, it will be more about pampering the client, Cauvin added. "The couturier will have dresses in mind just for them."
Fournie is known for designing for "real women" with "breasts and hips and not for gamines" or the androgynous clothes-hanger models that often dominate the catwalks.
"We don't create fashion, we create personalities," he told AFP as he put the finishing touches to his "Storm dress," a silk gown entirely embroidered with goose feathers.
"Whoever wears this after the coronavirus will be like an angel returning to Earth," Fournie declared.
"I want to help my clients fulfill their destiny, support them, and help them take flight," he added with a flourish.