The Japan Times - Fashion set heads to Milan for live shows -- for real this time

EUR -
AED 3.806062
AFN 78.367375
ALL 99.666662
AMD 414.886103
ANG 1.869937
AOA 472.514554
ARS 1090.727365
AUD 1.6614
AWG 1.867778
AZN 1.76568
BAM 1.955734
BBD 2.09493
BDT 126.525762
BGN 1.95559
BHD 0.391187
BIF 3071.197128
BMD 1.036215
BND 1.408053
BOB 7.16976
BRL 6.053612
BSD 1.037565
BTN 89.827991
BWP 14.451516
BYN 3.395486
BYR 20309.819708
BZD 2.08413
CAD 1.506813
CDF 2956.322601
CHF 0.94437
CLF 0.037078
CLP 1023.10573
CNY 7.447076
CNH 7.585656
COP 4309.555648
CRC 523.382469
CUC 1.036215
CUP 27.459705
CVE 110.261307
CZK 25.201071
DJF 184.763811
DKK 7.462864
DOP 64.097853
DZD 140.180305
EGP 52.046257
ERN 15.543229
ETB 132.907048
FJD 2.407077
FKP 0.853413
GBP 0.836177
GEL 2.96398
GGP 0.853413
GHS 15.874468
GIP 0.853413
GMD 75.129599
GNF 8968.699587
GTQ 8.025731
GYD 217.072729
HKD 8.075117
HNL 26.431115
HRK 7.6468
HTG 135.715454
HUF 407.802929
IDR 16947.560142
ILS 3.711614
IMP 0.853413
INR 89.830903
IQD 1359.154474
IRR 43624.664125
ISK 146.687036
JEP 0.853413
JMD 163.634519
JOD 0.734888
JPY 160.828389
KES 133.845517
KGS 90.617425
KHR 4174.86016
KMF 489.974798
KPW 932.593877
KRW 1510.574324
KWD 0.319652
KYD 0.864671
KZT 537.641991
LAK 22573.243893
LBP 92912.887816
LKR 309.199643
LRD 206.473084
LSL 19.366651
LTL 3.059675
LVL 0.626797
LYD 5.093829
MAD 10.414751
MDL 19.371351
MGA 4824.838389
MKD 61.527939
MMK 3365.586846
MNT 3521.059671
MOP 8.328621
MRU 41.564608
MUR 48.339835
MVR 15.96847
MWK 1799.139737
MXN 21.427637
MYR 4.616379
MZN 66.22491
NAD 19.366651
NGN 1557.431939
NIO 38.178721
NOK 11.736734
NPR 143.725186
NZD 1.838842
OMR 0.398917
PAB 1.037565
PEN 3.859771
PGK 4.224858
PHP 60.536773
PKR 289.399406
PLN 4.213559
PYG 8183.72588
QAR 3.782073
RON 4.975288
RSD 117.126077
RUB 102.196577
RWF 1472.750669
SAR 3.886799
SBD 8.759842
SCR 14.862476
SDG 622.765742
SEK 11.502156
SGD 1.406355
SHP 0.853413
SLE 23.703464
SLL 21728.916467
SOS 592.980138
SRD 36.370643
STD 21447.564418
SVC 9.078696
SYP 13472.871201
SZL 19.354352
THB 35.018935
TJS 11.34562
TMT 3.637116
TND 3.313889
TOP 2.426924
TRY 37.136661
TTD 7.037764
TWD 34.138152
TZS 2645.71138
UAH 43.270951
UGX 3819.872051
USD 1.036215
UYU 44.898496
UZS 13462.549062
VES 60.484509
VND 25988.279504
VUV 123.02156
WST 2.90226
XAF 655.935029
XAG 0.0331
XAU 0.00037
XCD 2.800424
XDR 0.793173
XOF 655.935029
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.888119
ZAR 19.350081
ZMK 9327.184796
ZMW 29.026028
ZWL 333.660901
  • CMSD

    -0.3800

    23.84

    -1.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.47

    -0.89%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.48

    -1.39%

  • RIO

    -0.5000

    60.41

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    39.64

    -0.1%

  • RBGPF

    67.2700

    67.27

    +100%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    35.27

    -0.26%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    49.89

    -0.92%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    61.4

    -0.55%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    31.06

    -1.77%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.43

    -0.81%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.54

    -0.82%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    23.79

    -0.46%

  • BCC

    -2.5000

    126.16

    -1.98%

  • AZN

    -0.4800

    70.76

    -0.68%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

Fashion set heads to Milan for live shows -- for real this time
Fashion set heads to Milan for live shows -- for real this time

Fashion set heads to Milan for live shows -- for real this time

The who's who of Italian fashion retakes the runway with the return of Milan women's shows Wednesday, which organisers hope will boost an industry stifled by two years of coronavirus.

Text size:

Back are the leggy models, the paparazzi and the Prosecco-fuelled parties as the international jet-set ready for live shows from the likes of Fendi, Giorgio Armani and Gucci, including a debut for Ferrari.

This season, for the first time since Covid-19 erupted in Italy in February 2020, in-person shows with audiences will outnumber pre-taped shows and films streamed for homebound fashionistas.

Those proved a pale substitute for the runway extravaganzas that are a major advertising weapon for luxury brands. Now, Milan is hoping for an event worthy of the return of hundreds of buyers, journalists and fashion executives to the city.

Carlo Capasa, chairman of Italy's national fashion chamber (CNMI), acknowledged during a press conference last week the "uncertainty" that still weighed over the sector.

But the 58 physical shows and nine digital offerings for Fall/Winter 2022/2023 are "a strong sign of optimism and positivity, which infuses new momentum into the industry", he said.

"Everything is heading towards recovery in 2022."

Attracting the most attention among the ready-to-wear shows is Gucci, today's "It" label, with its green and red stripe. It returns to the Milan calendar after a two-year absence.

Designer Alessandro Michele is fresh from November's "Gucci Love Parade" show that -- replete with satin, spangles and ostrich feathers -- turned Hollywood's Walk of Fame into the flashiest of catwalks.

- Clawing back -

Two years ago this week in Milan, Moschino presented a Versailles-worthy collection of embroidered silk confections on models in towering hairdos. The carefree, "Let them eat cake" vibe was soon brought to a brutal halt by the pandemic.

Since then, after a period of factory closures, plummeting sales and a sea change in how people dress (sweatpants, anyone?), the industry has sought to claw its way back to pre-Covid levels.

"After nearly two years of disruption, the global fashion industry is once again finding its feet," wrote consultancy McKinsey in a December report.

Italy's fashion and related sectors are expected to post revenue of 83 billion euros ($95 billion) in 2021, up 20.9 percent year-on-year, according to CNMI. That is still 7.8 percent shy of 2019 levels, however.

Exports, up 16.4 percent in the first 10 months of 2021, were fuelled by a 50-percent rise in sales to China, and a 31.8-percent increase to the United States.

Chinese buyers will still be absent this week due to restricted entry into Italy, but a government measure intended to spur tourism means foreign buyers who received non-EU approved vaccines, in particular Russia's Sputnik, are welcome.

A surge of Omicron cases resulted in a scaled-down Milan men's fashion week in January, and anxiety continues to hang over the show circuit, which began this month in New York and, following shows in London and Milan, wraps up in Paris on March 8.

In New York, Tom Ford cancelled his highly anticipated runway show, blaming an unfinished collection on Omicron cases among US design staff and Italian factory workers.

- Cars and corsets -

More at home on the racetrack than the runway, Ferrari makes its Milan debut Sunday, eight months after designer Rocco Iannone presented the first fashion collection for the luxury sports car brand, using its assembly line as a catwalk.

Returning to Milan Wednesday is Diesel, marking Belgian designer Glenn Martens' second collection for the Italian denim brand.

Martens, who continues to serve as artistic director of Y/Project, presented a resplendent haute couture collection in Paris last month as Jean Paul Gaultier's guest designer, garnering rave reviews for his deconstructed take on the French designer's signature corseting.

Fashion watchers are also eager for Matthieu Blazy's debut Saturday as new creative director of Bottega Veneta, following the surprise exit of Daniel Lee in November.

S.Ogawa--JT