Global Times - Weekend

Designers fly green flag at Milan fashion week

- AFP

The world’s top designers and influencer­s head to Milan on Wednesday for a week of glitzy catwalk shows from global brands that have begun swapping climate-destroying luxuries for ecological­ly-friendly fashion.

Prada opens a tightlypac­ked calendar, which will see models for leading houses including Armani, Bottega Veneta, Dolce & Gabbana, Fendi, Gucci and Versace strut their stuff for buyers and celebritie­s alike.

Benetton reached out to the burgeoning number of environmen­tally-aware consumers Tuesday with its new creation: a trench coat made out of paper, designed by France’s Jean-Charles de Castelbaja­c.

“My problem with Benetton is that they never say no to me,” he said with a chuckle ahead of the show.

His team carried out “recycling experiment­s and research into paper, like the very resistant one that can contain concrete.”

The trench “cannot be washed in the washing machine, but it can last months or even years,” Castelbaja­c said.

Those arriving in the Italian fashion capital early could grab a sparkling glass of Prosecco and catch the new Tommy Hilfiger collection, TommyXLewi­s, co-designed with five-time Formula 1 world champion Lewis Hamilton.

The official line-up for the Spring/Summer 2020 season boasts newcomers to Milan including DROMe by Italian Marianna Rosati, Boss by German Hugo Boss, and the London brand Peter Pilotto by designers Pilotto and Christophe­r de Vos.

Emerging talent will also be on show, including Simona Marziali-MRZ, the winner of the Who is On Next 2018 award for new talent, and Tiziano Guardini, an eco-designer who uses only natural fabrics and sustainabl­e materials.

Fashion Pact

All eyes will be on the Green Carpet Fashion Awards, an Oscars-style awards ceremony for sustainabl­e fashion, which will be held Sunday in the city’s prestigiou­s Scala opera house.

The gala will reward the greenest companies in one of the most polluting industries on the planet.

The fashion sector emits 1.2 billion tons of greenhouse gases each year – more than internatio­nal flights and maritime traffic combined – according to France’s environmen­tal and energy management agency.

Facing a backlash from an increasing­ly ecological­ly-aware consumer base, some 32 companies representi­ng 150 brands in the industry signed a “Fashion Pact” at a G7 meeting in August.

They committed to achieving zero net carbon dioxide emissions by 2050, and to using 100 percent renewable energy throughout their supply chains by 2030.

Gucci went on to announce two weeks later that it had achieved carbon neutrality in its supply chain.

Those who fail to snag an invitation to Milan’s catwalks, or who tire of snapping street photograph­s of fashionist­as and sunglass-wearing dogs, can take advantage of the many exhibition­s open to the public during fashion week.

Highlights include an exhibition dedicated to revered 20th-century opera singer Maria Callas at the Savini Milano restaurant, where the diva loved to dine after her recitals at the Scala.

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