Review: Imagination Park in Riyadh Season

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Updated 22 January 2023
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Review: Imagination Park in Riyadh Season

  • The zone features an art shop, where enthusiasts have the chance to meet the creatives behind the innovative and eye-catching artwork

Imagination Park, one of Riyadh Season’s many zones, offers visitors an unprecedented experience, with products and activities that are not readily available elsewhere.

The zone’s shops feature souvenirs and rare collectibles inspired by popular international films and series on Netflix, as well as antiques, making Imagination Park a lively entertainment destination that combines the joy of shopping with a host of activities and performances.

At an Imagination Park store dedicated to French and Spanish leather, you can browse leather goods, including shoes and handbags, crafted by well-known international brands and get a glimpse of the process involved in making them.

The zone also features an art shop, where enthusiasts have the chance to meet the creatives behind the innovative and eye-catching artwork.

Perfume lovers will find their senses invigorated by luxurious and beautifully bottled fragrances from France and around the world.

The zone receives visitors from 4 p.m. to 1 a.m. on weekdays and from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Entry tickets can be booked via riyadhseason.sa/event-details-en.html?id=955/en_Imagination_Park

Riyadh Season offers a range of entertainment options in its 15 zones, each of which is characterized by unique themed activities and events at stores, cafes, restaurants and theaters.

 


Mona Tougaard wears bridal look at Dior’s Paris show

Updated 27 January 2026
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Mona Tougaard wears bridal look at Dior’s Paris show

  • Rihanna and Brigitte Macron among attendees at show
  • Design part of new director Jonathan Anderson’s vision

DUBAI/ PARIS: Model Mona Tougaard reportedly turned heads in a bridal-inspired look on the Christian Dior runway during the recent Paris Haute Couture Week.

The runway star, who has Danish, Turkish, Somali and Ethiopian ancestry, wore a sculptural white gown with a one-shoulder silhouette and layered petal-like appliques cascading from the bodice to the full skirt.

The asymmetrical bodice featured draped detailing across the torso, while the skirt flared into a voluminous, floor-length shape.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Dior Official (@dior)

The look was finished with oversized floral statement earrings that echoed the dress’s petal motif.

The floral elements echoed the wider vision of Dior’s new creative director Jonathan Anderson, who drew inspiration from nature and his love of ceramics for his first Haute Couture collection since being appointed to the role.

The 41-year-old faces the rare challenge of overseeing all three fashion lines at the house — women’s and men’s ready-to-wear and Haute Couture — becoming the first designer to do so since Christian Dior himself.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Dior Official (@dior)

Just days after presenting his latest men’s collection during Paris Men’s Fashion Week, the Northern Irish designer returned with his first couture offering.

The collection featured floral motifs on fabrics or as accessories, while sculptural bulbous dresses were inspired by the work of Kenya-born ceramicist Magdelene Odundo.

“When you copy nature, you always learn something,” Anderson declared in his show notes, which compared Haute Couture to a living ecosystem that is “evolving, adapting, enduring.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Dior Official (@dior)

Other noteworthy pieces included dresses with spherical birdcage-inspired silhouettes, while other models wore vest tops with their dresses gathered around their waists.

The front row at the Rodin Museum reflected the scale of anticipation surrounding Anderson’s couture debut. France’s first lady Brigitte Macron arrived early, while Lauren Sanchez Bezos swept in shortly after.

Actor Parker Posey twirled briefly in a trench-style dress, playing to the room before settling in.

Then the space fell into a collective pause as celebrities and editors alike waited for Rihanna. When the pop star finally took her seat, the lights dropped and the show began.

Before the show, Anderson admitted in an interview with the Business of Fashion website that he previously thought couture was “irrelevant,” adding that he never really “understood the glamour behind it.”

“Now, I feel like I’m doing a Ph.D. in couture,” he explained.