Milan’s men’s fashion week opens with a scaled-back schedule as top designers like Dolce & Gabbana and Prada lead the way amid a luxury sector crisis. Despite the challenges, Italy’s fashion scene remains vibrant, with new talent and creativity taking center stage.
Dolce & Gabbana, Prada, and Giorgio Armani lead a reduced schedule for men's fashion week, which kicked off on Friday, January 17, in Milan, putting a brave face on a crisis in the luxury sector. Fendi and Gucci are noticeably absent, having shown here last January, but this season, they've opted to present mixed collections during women's fashion week in Milan in February. Despite the reduction in live shows—down from 22 last January—there are still some of Italian fashion's biggest names, as well as newcomers, among the 16 live shows and dozens of other events taking place over the next five days.
French designer Pierre-Louis Mascia kicks off proceedings Friday with a mixed men and women's collection for autumn/winter 2025. The former fashion illustrator, who uses collage to create complex patterns printed onto fabric, staged his well-received first catwalk show last summer at the Pitti Uomo trade show in Florence. He has described his style as “Hermes with a funkier side”.
It is a tough time to be entering the industry, with Italian menswear sales falling 3.6 percent to 11.4 billion euros ($11.7 billion) in 2024. They had grown by 4.7 percent in 2023 and 20.3 percent in 2022, after the coronavirus pandemic. According to estimates from the Italian Fashion Chamber, the entire sector, including womenswear, ended the year with turnover down 5.3 percent, to 95.9 billion euros.
Luxury goods in general have been hit by weak domestic consumption in China, although geopolitical tensions and rising prices also play a factor. “Mainly this depends on Chinese consumers and their crisis of confidence,” Luca Solca, an analyst at Bernstein, told AFP. “The collapse of the real estate market is making them feel poorer, reducing their desire to spend.” Solca said fashion shows helped the industry by getting people talking about brands, particularly on social media. “They are a springboard which influencers can use to post comments,” he added.
For Carlo Capasa, president of the Italian Fashion Chamber, the antidote to the crisis is creativity. “We must continue to create dreams to restart consumption,” he said. “More than ever in times of crisis, we need to invest in creativity, which is our most important driver.”
With AFP
Comments