Overview
- Her Boston stop, on Friday, revealed four custom Dior looks — an ivory organza tutu, a black jersey dress with a satin tricorne hat, a blue satin‑ribbon pannier dress, and an angel‑wing cape — used to mark distinct sections of the concert.
- Rosalía confirmed she worked directly with Jonathan Anderson and the Dior team to create the U.S. leg wardrobe, saying the collaboration felt natural because both emphasize craft and tradition.
- The costumes blend ballet references such as pointe shoes and tutus with Dior signatures like the tricorne top hat and pannier silhouette to create a hybrid ‘balletcore’ stage language.
- Dior artisans added couture touches for performance use, including personalized labels, custom boots with gold hardware, intricate embroidery and feathered organza capes that were designed for movement under stage lights.
- The choice to foreground couture as production design follows a wider trend of luxury houses making bespoke tour wardrobes and could push more artists to use high fashion as a narrative and technical part of live shows.