Jonathan Anderson’s New Dior Book Totes Have a Secret Meaning

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Jonathan Anderson’s New Dior Book Totes Have a Secret Meaning


Fashion Week Men’s has just come to a close, with highlights from Dolce & Gabbana, Tod’s, Emporio Armani, Louis Vuitton and more. But all eyes turned sharply to Dior, where Jonathan Anderson presented his debut collection as creative director of the luxury French fashion house. And before a single model stepped foot on the runway, it was quite clear that Anderson was writing his own rulebook—quite literally.

Rather than sending a traditional printed invite and keeping everything under wraps until showtime, Dior teased snippets of inspiration, moodboards, and pieces from the new collection to a select group of fashion insiders via its Instagram ‘close friends’ stories. The most talked-about reveal? Three book-cover Dior Book Totes—a very literal take on rewriting the rulebook. And more were unveiled come showtime.

“It’s pretty clever for Jonathan to obviously do a literal Book Tote with a book on it, it’s a little bit of irony which Jonathan is a fan of,” says writer, brand founder and OG influencer Susie Lau (aka SusieBubble, to her 700,000+ Instagram followers). As one of the few privy to Dior’s inner circle, she was among the first to see the designs.

Celine Song at Dior ss26 menswear with Les Fleurs du Mal Book Tote

(Image credit: Getty Images)

“The fact that they are all first edition artworks being used on the book totes makes them feel really special. They feel like kind of collector pieces in the same way that first editions are,” she says, noting the bags are part of a wider trend: literature and bookishness are increasingly being woven into fashion marketing. Think: Miu Miu Reads pop-ups, Valentino sponsoring the 2024 Booker Prize, Saint Laurent’s Parisian bookstore, and Loewe’s reissues of branded literary classics—also under Anderson’s own creative direction.





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