Gigi Hadid wears sheer top at Paris fashion week
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Gigi Hadid walks during Paris Fashion Week (Getty)
It was a case of "free the nipple" for supermodel Gigi Hadid, who has turned heads in Paris without a bra.
Wearing a high-neck sheer lace top under a long winter coat, Hadid, 23, made quite an impression on the catwalk for French luxury brand, Lanvin.
The New York-based model — who recently split from former One Direction singer Zayn Malik — sported a vanilla-colored outfit complete with power shoulders and buckles from the brand’s fall/winter 2019 collection at The Musée Cluny.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Not one to shy away from showing some skin, Hadid flashed her nipples under a see-through lace top during the runway presentation.
The show marked the first collection by Lanvin’s new creative director, Bruno Sialelli, with sheer lace, neutral tones and dark-lensed statement sunnies also trending.
Gigi on the Lanvin runway in Paris (ABC)
Hadid recently opened up to Elle about her relationship with her younger sister, Bella Hadid.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}“Bella and I have very different styles,” Hadid told the magazine.
“A job that wants Bella is not a job that I’m the right look for, so I never took that personally.
“In a lot of ways, she inspires me. We learn from each other.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}“I feel very lucky to be able to have a piece of home in my work environment.
“We are each other’s biggest fans. It has been a huge joy of my life to watch my little sister flourish, and to help when I can!”
Gigi dons a sheer top and light pink coat (ABC)
Casting Hadid and rising star Kaia Gerber, 17, for the runway was sure to add a fresher look to the 130-year-old brand, for which Sialelli, 31, is the fourth designer in as many years.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}“We know Lanvin is an eveningwear house where you find beautiful flou and colors,” Sialelli said pre-show, according to Women’s Wear Daily.
“But Jeanne (Lanvin) was also one of the first to do a wide proposition of women’s wear, menswear, and sportswear, curtains, and furniture.”
The new season collection had — at times — an androgynous style, which Sialelli said was representative of the changing face of retail.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}“This is how we shop today; women go to the men’s department to get a shirt, men go to women’s for a beautiful pink sweater,” Sialelli told WWD.
“I buy Celine jumpers. They don’t want to hear it’s men’s or women’s.
“They don’t really care. It’s not about gender fluidity, it’s just a fact. It’s how people are shopping now.”
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}This article originally appeared in News.com.au.