Overview
Adeline André is a Paris haute couture house founded in 1981 by Adeline André and the Hungarian interior designer István Dohár. André had trained at the École de la Chambre Syndicale and worked with Marc Bohan at Christian Dior before building an independent practice around soft construction, natural cloth and the body in motion. The house’s earliest defining invention was the three-sleeve-hole garment, registered in France in 1981 and internationally in 1982: a wrap-like structure held and transformed by the wearer’s arms instead of conventional fastenings.
The label began with ready-to-wear ambitions and presented its first public gallery show in Paris in 1983. Limited commercial infrastructure gradually pushed the work towards private commissions and the intimate Topofwear salons of the 1990s. Adeline André joined the official Paris couture calendar as an invited member in 1997 and became a permanent haute couture member in 2005. The atelier has since maintained a deliberately small scale, producing made-to-measure clothing for women and men while continuing to test folding, wrapping and modular systems.
The house’s history extends beyond seasonal couture. André has developed scent-responsive garments, created costumes for dance and opera, taught colour at the École de la Chambre Syndicale and placed work in museum collections including the Palais Galliera, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, FIT and MUDE. Its current position is unusual: a legally recognised haute couture house sustained through technical continuity, private clientele and a refusal to inflate its practice into a conventional luxury business.
Philosophy
Adeline André reduces a garment to fabric, gravity and the movement of the wearer. Shoulder pads, rigid interfacing, visible closures and heavy internal architecture are usually removed. Bias cutting, rolled edges and carefully resolved interiors allow silk, cashmere, wool, linen and cotton to establish their own line around the body.
The patented three-sleeve-hole system is the clearest expression of this method. Three openings let the arms close, redirect and reshape the same piece, making the body part of the construction. Later works extend the principle through free-leg openings, folded epidermal layers, twenty-one sleeves and the Robe Book’s interlocking organza envelopes. Transformation is achieved through cut and handling, not detachable spectacle.
This restraint is technically demanding. André’s minimalism depends on exact grain, weight, colour and finish, and on an understanding of how a material changes when wrapped, wetted, folded or placed under stage light. The resulting clothes can appear quiet, but their simplicity records an intensive study of movement and textile behaviour.
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Creative timeline
Button TextA 2024 exhibition at Can in Vienna focused on two garments that condense André’s construction research: the layered Robe Repliable and the modular Robe Book. Presented outside the fashion-week cycle, the works were treated as systems of fold, connection and bodily movement rather than seasonal looks.
From 2017, André’s stage work became a continuing extension of the couture practice. Costumes for Set and Reset/Reset and later projects with Angelin Preljocaj used loose construction, rotation and fabric response to register choreography in real time. The theatre made visible the same relationship between cut, gravity and motion that governs her private-client clothes.
In 2012, André was appointed Chevalier of the Légion d’honneur. The distinction followed more than three decades of independent fashion work, permanent haute couture membership, teaching and performance costume.
In January 2005, Adeline André was elevated from invited status to permanent membership of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture. The designation recognised the atelier’s made-to-measure practice and granted the house the protected haute couture appellation. It remains listed by the FHCM as a Haute Couture Member.
SmartSecondSkin connected André’s idea of clothing as a responsive membrane to scent technology developed with Jenny Tillotson. Micro-tubing integrated into cloth was designed to circulate aromatic liquids around the body in response to emotional or physiological cues, extending couture construction into sensory and medical research.
ADELINE ANDRE SA formalised the operating company behind the couture house in 2005. Registered in Paris, the structure supports the atelier, private-client work and official calendar activity while leaving creative leadership with André. Its formation coincided with the house’s elevation to permanent haute couture membership.
From the late 1990s, André developed a continuing group of garments built through folding, repeated openings and detachable sections. The Robe Repliable layered metres of bias-cut organza into a compact epidermis; the twenty-one-sleeve performance exposed the same logic through progressive unwinding; Robe Book later connected organza envelopes through flaps and buttonholes. Together, the projects extended the original patent into an open-ended construction programme.
In May 1997, the Chambre Syndicale admitted Adeline André as an invited member. Her first official couture-calendar collection followed at the Fondation Cartier for Autumn/Winter 1997–98. A dress from the season entered the French national collection, joining calendar recognition to an early institutional acquisition.
Adeline André received ANDAM recognition in 1995. The award acknowledged an independent practice that had survived outside the conventional wholesale system and was consolidating its bespoke identity before joining the official couture calendar.
From the late 1980s, limited commercial infrastructure made conventional wholesale difficult to sustain. André concentrated increasingly on made-to-measure work and direct client relationships. Between roughly 1992 and 1996, the Topofwear salons formalised this model through small private presentations, fittings and orders outside the standard runway cycle.
Beginning with the 16 March 1983 presentation at Galerie Daniel Templon, André showed clothes inside art spaces with models moving among guests. The format continued through the 1980s and removed the raised catwalk, allowing viewers to examine cut, interior finish and movement at close range.
André registered the three-sleeve-hole garment with the INPI in 1981 and extended protection through WIPO in 1982. Three arm openings allow cloth to wrap and secure itself around the body without ordinary buttons or zips. The construction made the wearer’s movement part of the fastening system and became the clearest technical signature of the house.
Hungarian interior designer István Dohár co-founded Adeline André in Paris in 1981. His involvement joined the house’s business structure to a spatial approach to presentation, helping frame clothing through galleries, salons and carefully controlled encounters instead of conventional runway spectacle.
Adeline André co-founded her Paris house in 1981 and remains its artistic director. She guided the practice from experimental ready-to-wear and gallery presentations towards a small, made-to-measure couture atelier. The house is defined by soft construction, natural fibres, minimal internal structure and garments whose form changes through the wearer’s movement.
Adeline André divisions and working structures
The house operates as a concentrated couture atelier. Its activities are organised around made-to-measure clothing, technical garment research, performance costume and teaching; no diffusion labels are maintained.
Haute couture and made-to-measure
- Adeline André Haute Couture
- Official invited house from 1997; permanent member from 2005
- Seasonal collections are made in Paris for private clients, women and men. Natural fabrics, bias construction and transformable wrapping systems remain central to the atelier.
Technical garment systems
- Three-sleeve-hole garments and related constructions
- Developed from 1981
- The patented three-armhole method, free-leg dresses, foldable epidermal structures and the Robe Book form a continuing archive of body-led construction within the main house.
Costume and performance
- Dance, theatre and opera costume
- André applies the same attention to movement and fabric response to stage work, including projects with Trisha Brown’s repertory, Angelin Preljocaj and European opera and ballet institutions.
Teaching and research
- Colour, textile and wearable research
- Her teaching at the École de la Chambre Syndicale and projects such as SmartSecondSkin extend the atelier’s investigations into colour, sensory response and clothing as a second skin.
Adeline André collaborations and institutional projects
External work has concentrated on spatial presentation, sensory research, performance and museum interpretation.
István Dohár
- House co-founder and spatial collaborator
- From 1981
- The Hungarian interior designer co-founded the house and helped shape its early identity, ateliers and presentation environments, supporting a practice in which clothing was often shown through exhibition-led formats outside the conventional runway model.
Jenny Tillotson and SmartSecondSkin
- Wearable scent research
- Mid-2000s
- The project explored micro-tubing embedded in clothing to release scent around the body in response to emotional and physiological cues.
Dance and opera institutions
- Lyon Opera, Bayerische Staatsoper, Vienna State Opera and choreographic projects
- Costume commissions test the house’s fluid construction under movement, light and repeated performance, extending couture technique into the temporal conditions of the stage.
Museums and exhibitions
- Palais Galliera, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, FIT, MUDE and Can Vienna
- Museum acquisitions and exhibitions preserve the three-sleeve-hole system, foldable dresses and later modular garments as design research as well as fashion objects.
