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  • Karl Lagerfeld seems to have endless ideas of how to...

    Karl Lagerfeld seems to have endless ideas of how to drape and adorn the female body, and that's as true of his latest Chanel collection - for cruise - as it is for his recent couture and ready-to-wear efforts. Among the looks presented was a full-skirted sleeveless dress with embroidered front, above.

  • Karl Lagerfeld.

    Karl Lagerfeld.

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VERSAILLES, France  —As some of the world’s most glamorous women gather for the Cannes Film Festival this week, Karl Lagerfeld has shown again that he’s a step ahead of the game on the Riviera’s red carpet.

The celebrated designer rolled out a baroque-tinged cruise collection on Monday at the seat of French opulence, Versailles Palace, with film stars and other celebrities such as actress Tilda Swinton and singer Vanessa Paradis in appearance.

“The palace is the perfect place for Chanel; you couldn’t imagine anything better,” said Paradis, who watched as models filed by with ruffled 18th-century tulle sleeves.

Eclectic gold platform sneakers were among the touches that broke up the historic feel, making this one of the funkier Chanel shows in some time.

Cruise or resort collections were created to target wealthy women who traveled on cruise ships in winter.

Nowadays, they’re used as a lucrative means of re-stimulating fashions in the midseason lull, in an industry that’s increasingly buoyant and bucking the global financial downturn.

Model of the moment Cara Delavigne opened the show in a velvety, pale blue denim dress, with a crisp A-line skirt.

But the rest of show felt more like Chanel’s answer to a baroque history lesson.

Beauty spots, bottom-heavy skirts, and floral chokers infused spectators with a feeling of Marie Antoinette’s heyday.

Baroque-tinged wigs and ruffled, courtly hair bows in silk, meanwhile, added a splash of androgyny.

It’s well known that Karl Lagerfeld is a workaholic, but in this show he seemed to have studied every reference under the sun.

One ornately knitted cotton top in white had a jacquard swag with decorative catkins hanging on either side — a strong nod to the Rococo period.

Was the opulence a bit too much in a country that just elected a Socialist president, who has vowed to tax the uber-rich more?

“Oh no, lightness is what France is known for. I don’t delve into politics here,” said German-born Lagerfeld, after the show. “Besides, I can’t vote.”