In fashion, few moments generate as much speculation as the debut of a new creative director at a legacy house. And this week, the industry turns its eyes to Paris, where Jonathan Anderson is preparing to unveil his first collection for Dior at Men’s Fashion Week. But even before a single look hits the runway, Anderson is making his message clear—through an unlikely, yet undeniably magnetic muse: Kylian Mbappé. In a move that feels both fresh and culturally attuned, Dior has released a series of teaser visuals featuring the French soccer icon dressed in Anderson’s first designs for the house. The clips, playful and refined, hint at a new Dior that nods to classic codes while rewriting them with wit, elegance, and unexpected charm.
A playful prelude with purpose
Mbappé, beaming from ear to ear, appears in two short videos posted to Dior’s Instagram account. Set to the delicate strains of Schubert’s Symphony No. 8, the first video shows the Real Madrid forward tying a red-and-blue-striped silk tie over a crisp, blue-and-white shirt beneath a gray herringbone blazer. The second sees him fumbling (with considerable charm) to knot a bow tie over a tuxedo shirt and jacket—an image that reveals the tiniest pearl replacing the traditional front button.
It’s a masterclass in coded elegance. The styling evokes old-world gentlemanliness but with a sly wink: the play on proportions, the subtle detailing, the casual looseness of the tie. This is Anderson’s Dior—familiar, but subverted with just enough quirk to spark curiosity. “Kylian Mbappé is the voice of a generation and an inspiration to many people in the world of sport and beyond,” Anderson shared in an official statement. “These films show the charm and charisma that make him the perfect ambassador for this House.”
A muse beyond fashion’s usual playbook

Mbappé’s presence isn’t simply about star power—it’s about shifting paradigms. The 25-year-old footballer has worked with Dior since 2021, but his positioning here, as the first to wear Anderson’s Dior, signals more than continuity. It’s a declaration. Gone are the expected Oscar-winning actors or classic fashion muses. In their place is a generational athlete, beloved across borders and known for his poise, humility, and performance under pressure.
This strategy isn’t new for Anderson, who has built a career out of reimagining what a brand ambassador can look like. At Loewe, he dressed octogenarian Dame Maggie Smith in campaign images that were both reverent and irreverent, and recruited Daniel Craig at a pivotal time in the actor’s career post-Bond. Anderson has a knack for seeing identity through multidimensional lenses—and this latest move suggests his Dior will embrace cultural relevance as much as couture heritage.
In choosing Mbappé, Anderson also aligns Dior with the pulse of a younger, global audience who values authenticity, athleticism, and ease as much as high fashion. It’s a signal that the house is expanding its definition of elegance—not rejecting tradition, but opening the door wider.
Redesigning Dior, one detail at a time
Though we’ve only seen glimpses of Anderson’s Dior collection so far, the clues are stacking up. The decision to capitalize only the “D” in Dior—replacing the previous all-caps logo—is subtle, but meaningful. It suggests a softer, more intimate tone, stripping away some of the monolithic branding in favor of something closer, more human.
Elsewhere, Anderson is injecting his signature wit into the house’s iconography. The Book Tote, long a staple of Dior’s accessories line, gets a tongue-in-cheek remix with covers from Dracula and Dangerous Liaisons—a literal interpretation of the “book” concept that transforms a luxury item into a literary joke. And in a nod to history and subculture, Anderson has posted archival photos of Lee Radziwill and Jean-Michel Basquiat stamped with the new logo, suggesting a Dior that’s not afraid to court contradiction: aristocratic elegance meets downtown grit.
Intriguingly, all this early content was released on Dior’s “Close Friends” Instagram story—a strategic move to foster intimacy and exclusivity while building suspense. The result? A launch that feels like a conversation, not just a campaign.
A creative clash—or creative chemistry?
With Anderson now overseeing Dior’s men’s, women’s, and couture divisions—while still helming his own namesake label—the fashion world is watching closely. The appointment is ambitious, if not unprecedented, and the stakes are high. Dior is arguably the crown jewel of the LVMH empire, and Anderson’s legacy will hinge on how he navigates the house’s long-established identity while infusing it with his own conceptual flair.
Still, early signs point to harmony rather than dissonance. Anderson’s approach—equal parts intellectual and irreverent—could be just what Dior needs to evolve without losing its soul. His respect for craft, love of narrative, and understanding of visual humor are already apparent in the Mbappé teasers. If this is how he plans to introduce the new Dior, then fashion fans have every reason to be excited.
As one sports fan put it when asked about the significance of Mbappé’s presence: “He’s arguably the best player in the world.” Anderson, for his part, is now leading one of the most powerful fashion houses in the world. If the symbolism wasn’t obvious, it should be now—game recognizes game.