PARIS, FRANCE - Sonia Rykiel and H&M rained 2,000 black-velvet cushions and striped women’s underpants on guests who attended one of the biggest and most extravagant parties held on the Paris circuit in recent years.
A giant, if smaller than life-size, Eiffel Tower, a ferris wheel, a merry-go-round, buckets of champagne and a host of mouth-watering gourmet delights were laid on inside a Paris exhibition hall for the launch of a collection from the iconic Parisian designer for the Swedish low-budget fashion group on Tuesday.
As droves of waiters and chefs poured drinks and dished up goodies from smoked salmon to fairy floss and toffee apples to the rhythm of rock, a gaggle of geese and a band of marching girls paved the way for a parade of Rykiel’s 67-item collection of sexy underwear for H&M.
The lingerie is being launched on Saturday in 1,500 H&M stores, the vast majority of its shops worldwide, and is also to be sold in stores owned by the red-haired 79-year-old French designer, who last year marked her 40 years in fashion.
“Sonia Rykiel is a true fashion icon who invented a signature style combining femininity, Parisian chic and modernity, as well as clothing that is practical, comfortable and wearable,” said Ms Margareta van den Bosch, responsible for design at H&M.
Among celebrities at the bash were French fashion supremo Jean-Paul Gaultier, designer Philippe Starck and model Eva Herzigova.
More than 300 technicians and waiters were on hand for the Paris-inspired evening, estimated to have cost more than 2 million euros (S$4.2 million).
The Swedish clothing chain has for several years teamed up with renowned fashion designers such as Karl Lagerfeld and Stella McCartney or popular artists like Madonna and Kylie Minogue, who design or give their names to collections.
Rykiel, who opened her first store in 1968 in Paris, became known especially for her line of tight-fitting knitwear.
Her line for H&M starts at 9.95 euros for a pair of undies to a silk kimono for 59.95 euros. “I love the notion of making my fashion accessible to as many people as possible,” she said.