- Drought reduces Amazon River in Colombia by as much as 90%: report
- Athletics pay emotional farewell to Oakland in last home game before move
- Stay or go? Pacific Islanders face climate's grim choice
- Americans sweep four-balls to grab 5-0 lead at Presidents Cup
- Armenian PM says peace with Azerbaijan 'within reach'
- 'Stir crazy' McKeown breaks 100m backstroke short-course world record
- Ten-man Spurs cruise in Europa League opener despite Son injury scare
- Iran shows 'willingness' to re-engage on nuclear issue: IAEA chief to AFP
- Somali-Canadian rapper K'naan accused of sexual asault
- Harris slams Ukraine 'surrender' policy as Zelensky visits White House
- Florida bracing for 'unsurvivable' Hurricane Helene
- Teenager seeking to halt Ohtani 50-50 ball auction
- Poverty rises to over 52 percent in Milei's Argentina
- Packers clash awaits for 'late developer' Darnold
- Israel pours cold water on US-backed call for ceasefire with Hezbollah
- Zelensky meets Biden after US unveils Ukraine military aid surge
- Champagne houses abuzz over English sparkling wine
- Eric Adams, New York's criminally charged mayor of 'swagger'
- Ten Hag says lack of goals Manchester United's biggest problem
- Emotional Almodovar wins lifetime award at San Sebastian festival
- Putin rachets up nuclear rhetoric, but is he ready to act?
- Former MVP Derrick Rose retires from NBA
- England's Hull out of Pakistan tour
- US urges pressure on Venezuela's Maduro after disputed vote
- US announces new half billion dollars for Syria aid
- Lawson to replace Ricciardo at RB F1 team for rest of season
- New York mayor charged with years of bribery, fraud
- Hurricanes, storms, typhoons... Is September wetter than usual?
- Myanmar junta invites armed groups to stop fighting, start talks
- Argentina change seven of team that beat Springboks for rematch
- Marsh adamant Australia have 'moved on' from Lord's row
- Monet's odes to London's 'beautiful' smog appear in city
- Pakistan braces for 'transitional pain' as IMF approves $7 bn loan
- Van Gogh painting falls short of expectations in Hong Kong auction
- Potts glad to learn from England great Anderson
- Palestinian leader calls for world to stop sending Israel weapons
- Macron meets Trudeau in Canada as both face political setbacks
- Dyche says Everton takeover should bring 'stability'
- 'The last straw': gang-plagued Ecuador now fighting record fires
- Italy and Britain tied after Louis Vuitton Cup final day one
- Survivor of Mexican mass disappearance fights for truth
- Russia in weapon transfer talks with Yemen's Huthis: US envoy to AFP
- West Ham boss Lopetegui jokingly rules himself out after calf injury
- Kenya to complete full deployment to Haiti by January: president
- France's Jegou makes rugby training return despite rape allegation
- Melania Trump opens up about attempts on ex-president's life
- Family urges UK govt to secure release of Egyptian dissident
- Mallorca fan sentenced after racist abuse of Vinicius, Chukwueze
- Far-right lawmakers nominate Musk for top EU rights award
- Tired, traumatised Lebanese fear new Israel-Hezbollah war
Chloe's see-through look may not be for Kamala
Designer Chemena Kamali -- who dressed Kamala Harris for the Democratic Convention in August -- turned heads at Paris Fashion Week Thursday with a line of lacy transparent looks the US presidential hopeful may be a little more shy about trying.
The German creator has quickly made her mark at French label Chloe, with pieces from her debut collection in February selling like hot cakes.
Harris wore a prune-brown Chloe trouser suit for the opening night of the Democratic convention in Chicago where she took over from Joe Biden as the party's presidential candidate, having already sported a long, high-necked green caped gown custom-designed by Kamali in May.
For her spring-summer Chloe collection, Kamali threw open the windows to celebrate the brand's highly feminine hippy-chic aesthetic with billowing dresses, lace and sun-bleached flower prints.
And there was an admiring "Ahhh" from the front row when her lace corsair pants, tied delicately at the ankle, appeared.
All was light and airy, so light that at times it looked like her Chloe woman was going out in nothing more than lacy underwear and slips, an impression Kamali fully acknowledged in her notes.
"A feeling of lingerie drifts through the collection," she wrote, "and a sense of the playful in the iconic 70s Chloe bloomers."
"The mood is light, sensual and joyful," she added.
There were, however, plenty of more conservative pieces that Harris might easily dream of wearing, particularly as it seemed to tap into the breezy 1970s glamour of her home state of California.
Kamali began her career at Chloe under the influential Phoebe Philo before moving on to work with Anthony Vaccarello at Saint Laurent, who also has a thing for see-through blouses.
"I wanted to capture that longing for summer and the way summer makes you feel... that fantasy moment of the summer months when you reconnect with yourself," said the 42-year-old, who trained at London's Central Saint Martins art school.
A.Aguiar--PC