Milan Fashion Autumn 2018 has shown us what it means to explore glorified comfort and techno-primitivism that we are sure we will hear in the coming years. Thanks to the autumn and runway shows of Missoni, Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini and Marni in autumn 2018, MFW has become a philosophical place where fashion meets sociology and innovation, reaffirming that industry can truly shape society (and vice versa) ,
Get ready for inspiration , a significant lack of animal prints (I know) That sounds great, considering how wild NYFW, LFW and MFW have evolved, and some bold moves that no one probably expected!
Missoni Fall / Winter 2018-2019 RTW Collection
With Missoni's fall collection in 2018, MFW is still associated with the NYFW, the main sources of inspiration being New in the late seventies and early eighties York careless and glamorous just before the Big Apple hit the AIDS epidemic and the looming financial crisis. According to Missoni's creative director, Angela Missoni, this was a moment of "joy, a moment of joyous positivity, an eclectic moment," which showed in every single ensemble of this new cast.
New York's Urban-approved grades, which were very tangible especially within the men's collection and the Women's Tweeds (it was a co-ed fashion show), this Missoni Fall 2018 collection portrayed two other major themes on stage. The first was the incredible hippie look worn by Woodstock. The long skirts, exaggerated scarves, headbands, and bell-shorts clearly dominated the scene, creating an appealing contrast to Missoni's standard patterns and elegant imposing aesthetics.
Second, Missoni's collection was the 65th anniversary of the fashion house in autumn 2018, which of course Angela Missoni wanted to celebrate. That's why the line-up was a well-balanced mix of innovation and legacy filled with little details like stripes and animal prints that will surely make many Missoni lovers nostalgic. Well, at least that's the case for us!
Philosophy by Lorenzo Serafini Autumn / Winter 2018-2019 RTW Collection
The 80s have been given a new shine by Lorenzo Serafini's Philosophy Fall 2018 collection r extra vagant american lens.
"It's my Italian vision of the American dream, it's the glorification of comfort," Serafini explained backstage, adding that this time he wanted to leave the politics aside and concentrate only on the carefree side of fashion. "I think it really is an instrument to give joy and ease to a sad world" (which is a kind of political statement anyway). Politics, glamor and gaiety aside, this latest philosophy falls into the 2018 collection of his was really a merry mix of flowing prairie dresses, polka dots, fur, leather pants, structured shoulders and shiny accents that inevitably everything Eighties and has brought to the stage nicely.
With the eighties actually being an extremely diverse period in terms of styles, fashions and subcultures, the contemplation of an equally diverse collection in fall 2018 was definitely clean and refreshing, largely because they were not animal prints like the other 80's inspired runway shows so far (not that there's anything wrong with leopard sprints, it's just that those who dislike them, but love the glamor of the eighties, are now probably about animal-free Options are welcome).
Confident and energetic, ma ny for Serafini Fall 2018 Woman falls (pun intended).
Here we are with one of the most anticipated runway collections in fall 2018 of the last 48 hours , Marnis (not so) new creative director Francesco Risso translated the opposing love of our human nature into technology and what he called "primitivism" to deliver the 42-piece Marni Autumn 2018 collection that looked both urban and urban.
For his recent efforts, he has created the" contrast between our irresistible love of innovation and Tec on the other hand those movements of the soul ", ie" the universal magnetism that attracts opposites, "ie the above-mentioned" techno-primitivism ". If that sounds pretty complicated, wait and see Manis on Fall 2018 pieces.
This intriguing and intricate leitmotif of his with vinyl skirts and parkas, venomous green belted coats, multi-layered neon ensembles, asymmetrical dresses and cuddly turtleneck sweaters on the stage, which are often showcased, has become fashionable yin and yang mood board with patchworks of quite different print sewn on the same garment.
As if things did not sound risky enough, he made some ensembles of recycled fabrics, which once again should not prove high fashion fear of ecology, change and bold style movements. Especially brave moves!
Photos via Vogue
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