You probably think you won’t wear these Milan fashion week trends, but you
will
Iknow what you’re thinking: you wouldn’t dress like this if I paid you. Your
dad’s 80s blazer, over a white lace nightie, with an upturned fruit basket on
your head, punk choker and square sunglasses, a la Gucci? Er, I don’t think so.
A cartoon-print Crombie coat with knee-high sport socks and winklepickers? Not
today, thanks all the same, even if it is Prada.
Don’t take this the wrong way, but you’re mistaken. You will dress like this.
Not necessarily this week, or even this year, and not, I admit, exactly like
this, because you would be bankrupt, and people would cross the street to avoid
you. But still. The clothes you see here from Milan fashion week will have a
huge effect on what all of us wear.
There is an often-repeated line about how Donald Trump shouldn’t be taken
literally but should be taken seriously. That, basically, is the best way to
think about Milan fashion week. In other words: scoff at your peril, because
this is real life. What happens on the catwalk is exaggerated and skewed for
effect, but it still directs what we all wear.
There is a knack to translating catwalk into clothes. First, don’t let the
glitz and glamour distract you from the real story. You know how Agatha Christie
set her whodunnits in exotic locations – the Orient Express, a Caribbean beach
house, an archaelogical dig in the Middle East – in order to keep the reader
from too swiftly identifying the bones of the plot? Miuccia Prada, Donatella
Versace, Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana do pretty much the exact same thing
at Milan fashion week, sprinkling supermodels (Versace), sequins (Dolce &
Gabbana) and lofty, backstage-TED-talk pronouncements about womankind (Prada)
over the catwalks like so much dry ice, so that we are caught up in the
narrative and forget that we are being sold clothes. And – remember the
suspicious-sounding Mr Owen in And Then There Were None, who you think is the
murderer but turns out to be just a pseudonym? – designers then throw red
herrings into the mix. Racy slogans, Gigi’s abs, tiaras, fake-fur bum bags. All
just misdirection.
To understand what’s really going on, make like an X-ray machine, and zero in
on the silhouette. Are the clothes tight, or loose? Where does the hemline fall?
Where can you see skin? What is happening at the neckline: is it one clean
layer, or are there multiple collars? Are the lines angular or soft? Next, look
for the pieces that link different looks together. Is there one garment that
keeps reappearing? A colour, mood or decade that threads through different
designers’ shows? These are the clues that will help you make sense of the
catwalk. Spoiler alert: I’ve gone ahead and cracked the codes for Milan fashion
week.
Don’t be fooled by all the cardigans at Gucci. Milan fashion week is never
not about how to be sexy. Last season, the hotness was all in the ab gap. The
wearing of an abbreviated top to display a slice of ab the height of a tequila
shot above the waistband of your jeans or leggings, seen on every pavement this
summer, was a look that came from these very catwalks a year ago. The new way to
be sexy, as seen in Milan, is with a sheer skirt over visible big pants. This
was seen at Roberto Cavalli and Fendi, as well as Dolce. For the non-Hadids
among us, this is likely to translate into party skirts and dresses that have an
opaque petticoat to the upper thigh, and a longer sheer layer over the top.What
goes on just under your chin is the headline of your outfit. This isn’t a
fashion fact, it’s a fact-fact: think ties, football scarves, Theresa May’s
strong and stable necklaces. So even though Miuccia Prada said backstage after
her latest show that the collection was a celebration of the female gaze and a
call to the sisterhood to embrace direct action, I would argue that it was
actually about a new collar situation incoming on the fashion horizon. The
default catwalk neckline for the past year has been a polo neck under a slip
dress or a coat. Here, by contrast, most outfits featured two sharp-collared
crew-neck tops, one on top of the other: a shirt with a collared coat, as here,
or a shirt under a boxy jacket. This catwalk is especially significant because
the Prada and Miu Miu catwalks were instrumental in making the
poloneck-under-everything trend happen, but the look happened at lots of places:
at Jil Sander, where it was a white shirt under a black jacket, and at Bottega
Veneta, where a coloured silk blouse was buttoned under a contrasting
jacket.Eleven models on the Gucci catwalk wore checked blazers. Now, I don’t
know how closely you watched the Gucci show, but you could have missed this even
if you were there. Because one checked blazer was worn over a full-length white
lace gown, with a straw spaceship hat; another over a Gucci-monogrammed skirt
with polka-dot nude hosiery, high-heeled sandals, smudged orange lipstick and a
fringe that is best described as “Farrah Fawcett sticks her hand in a plug
socket”. Smoke and mirrors, see! Because the most significant takeaway from
Gucci this season is not the Elton John tracksuit, but the checked blazer, which
is already a front-row and streetstyle favourite this fashion month, and is
hereby confirmed as a key look for next season, too.
Read more at: http://www.queeniebridesmaid.co.uk/grey-bridesmaid-dresses-uk
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