Christian Dior [2026 Release]
Dior spent the late 1930s selling fashion sketches on the street for pennies. He survived the war designing dresses for Nazi officers’ wives and the wives of French collaborators—a moral grey area that he rarely spoke of. By 1946, backed by textile magnate Marcel Boussac, the shy, superstitious, and portly man from Normandy was ready to conquer the world. Dior was famously superstitious. He consulted tarot cards, carried a sprig of dried lily of the valley in his hem, and believed his success was tied to the stars. Before every collection, he would visit a fortune teller.
Today, under Chiuri, the house has pivoted toward feminist slogans ( We Should All Be Feminists ) and functional luxury. Yet, walking through the halls of 30 Avenue Montaigne, you still feel it: the ghost of a shy, superstitious man who believed that beauty was a necessity, not a luxury. Christian Dior
The name stuck.
The world mourned. The New York Times wrote: “The man who brought back elegance has left us.” Dior’s death could have ended the house, but his protégé—a shy 21-year-old named Yves Saint Laurent—took the helm. Later, designers like Gianfranco Ferré (the “architect of couture”), John Galliano (the “pirate of the runway”), Raf Simons (the “minimalist”), and Maria Grazia Chiuri (the first female creative director) would all bend the Dior code to their will. Dior spent the late 1930s selling fashion sketches