Dior Opens The Season with Dioriviera

For 2025 Maria Grazia Chiuri revisits Dior’s summer line, Dioriviera, steering it toward turquoise seas and hidden gardens without loosening its hold on heritage.

Dior Dioriviera 2025
Dior Dioriviera 2025

At the heart of the drop is Toile de Jouy Sauvage, recast in bright turquoise and soft pink. A new partner print, Toile de Jouy Palms, swaps tigers for dense jungle leaves. Together they sweep across silk sundresses, sarongs, wrap skirts, blouses, and ponchos—pieces that fold easily into a suitcase yet stand sharp once arrived.

The accessory roster leans on signatures: Lady D-Lite and Dior Book Tote carry the prints front and center, their canvas faces framing every branch and big-cat outline. Footwear keeps pace with the breeze: Dway and Dioract mules balance ease with a solid step, while D-Sand sandals—offered in three heights—jingle with tiny charms. White satin Dior Lucky sneakers, pared back but still marked out by tone-on-tone stitching, add a flash of light to the line-up.

Headgear follows suit. The D-Bobby straw hat appears in two colorways, clean and wide-brimmed. Teddy-D, built on a two-tone raffia base, introduces a leather cord and aquatic charms that nod to seaside souvenirs. Dior Cabinet d’Été jewelry, packed with small sculpted animals, and bag charms featuring the Toile de Jouy Sauvage menagerie round off the look.

Dior Dioriviera 2025
Dior Dioriviera 2025

Chiuri extends the story to home gear under Dior Maison. Natural-fiber furniture and a cannage-pattern beach mat sit beside gifts and décor in the Palms print. Highlights include ceramic palm trees by Jean Roger, vases from the 1798-founded Manufacture des Emaux de Longwy, and hand-painted candle jars—the sort of pieces that travel back as memories once summer ends.

The range lands in April at resorts and pop-up stores from Venice to Marmaris, Bali to Malaysia. Each stop marks another waypoint on a bright route that keeps Dior’s taste for escape alive.