Fashion goes to the dogs
MILAN, Italy — This city has long been the world’s ready-to-wear fashion leader. Now, dogs are getting in on Milan’s sartorial scene with a new line of haute couture for canines.
Dog a Porter, by the Milan brand Temellini, offers clothing custom-fit for different breeds, ranging from the tiny Chihuahua to the stately greyhound. The line includes cashmere knits, nylon bomber jackets with tiny arms, Sherlock Holmes-style capes and lined raincoats. The capes cost 170 euros ($259) and synthetically filled hooded parkas go for 210 euros ($320) to reflect the extra time it takes to get the fine stitching on the elasticized sleeves just right.
Designer Giovanna Temellini says fashionable dog clothes aren’t just an indulgence. Her luxury outerwear not only protects pooches accustomed to being indoors when they are brought outside, but take into account the builds of various types of dogs, she said.
“For me, a dog is well-dressed only when it has freedom of movement, when it is not constrained,” Temellini said. “It is OK to dress a dog when it is cold, but a dog needs to live his live as a dog. This is important.”
Speaking from personal experience, the designer notes that Ulisse, her long-haired Afghan Hound, requires five hours of grooming if he gets wet in the rain. A raincoat prevents the hassle, she said.
Temellini launched Dog a Porter a year ago alongside her 20-year-old eponymous clothing line for women. She opened a boutique in Milan’s chic Brera neighbourhood this week, selling women’s ready-to-wear and canine couture side by side.
In fact, many of the dog garments have corresponding numbers for women, such as the long, flowing black cotton skirt a pet owner could wear while walking her dog outfitted in a black chenille jacket.
The market appears ripe for such a venture in fashion-conscious Italy, where some seven million dogs are registered as pets, according to statistics from ASSALCO, an association of producers of pet food and other pet items.
The money Italians lavished on dogs and cats grew 10 per cent during 2013-2016 to nearly two billion euros ($3 billion), the association said in a 2017 report.
Temellini said the toughest part about designing for dogs was the sizing. The long bodies and stout thoraxes of dachshunds, for example, had to be taken into account. In all, the Dog a Porter line has five basic shapes.