The Asian Age

Milan menswear designers focus shows on millennial­s

- MILLENIALS RULE ON THE RUNWAY MARTIAL ARTS AT EMPORIO ARMANI VERSACE TRIBUTE KING OF HEARTS FASHION DISSONANCE AT MARNI ORANGE DESERT AT ERMENEGILD­O ZEGNA

Designers are resizing Milan Fashion Week for menswear, condensing previews for next spring and summer into just over three days.

While New York and London’s commitment to menswear has waned, Milan remains true to the segment that fuels Italian exports. Of the $10 billion in menswear revenues last year, 64 per cent were cashed in abroad — a higher percentage than womenswear at 61 per cent of $14.5 billion.

Just the format is shifting. More designers are showing menswear alongside womenswear, with many like Gucci and Bottega Veneta waiting for the September round. And a number of fashion houses, including Missoni and Etro, have opted for presentati­ons, while yet others are in a creative transition.

Highlights from the first day of menswear previews in Milan for next spring and summer on Saturday:

Singer Shawn Mendes took a turn on the Emporio Armani runway, showing off the brand’s new smart watch line dubbed “Connected”.

Designers see their future in Millennial­s, a generation that has unpreceden­ted power to influence and be influenced, thanks to ubiquitous social media. They migrate seamlessly from platform to platform, even from brand to brand.

Mendes appeared in a video promoting the watch at the end of the show, and then appeared in life to show it off and take in the fashion crowd as much as it did him.

The touchscree­n watch is both Android and Apple compatible. Armani described Mendes as “a singer of true talent who touches the hearts of his fans.”

“Shawn embodies and conveys the values in which I believe: Profession­alism, commitment and innovation,” the designer said in a note.

Giorgio Armani’s latest collection for his Emporio Armani line proposes a dialogue with Japan, no simple cultural appropriat­ion, mixing trademark tailoring with a flourish of martial arts.

Dark blue urban suits had a long billowing under jacket, the first hint of the exotic and a clear statement that this not your salary man’s workaday wardrobe. Suits were worn with either button-down striped shirts or asymmetric­al collarless shirts, both paired with leather cords instead of ties. Notched lapel jackets were belted, or not.

A clutch of silken printed jackets, including one with a flock of silvery birds, won a round of appreciati­ve applause.

Armani has long played with volumes. For this collection he incorporat­ed martial arts-style Hakama trousers, pleated split pants that have a skirt-like appearance. To demonstrat­e its versatilit­y, a model performed a series of karatestyl­e kicks.

The Hakama-style trousers, sometimes silken, sometimes plaid, were worn with baseball jackets or short-sleeved sweaters with Koi detailing.

Hair was pushed from the face with crisscross­ing headbands, creating a cartoon Magna-style look of spiking locks.

Donatella Versace’s collection for next spring and summer is meant as a tribute to her late brother, Gianni Versace, who was the creative force behind the brand.

“In a few weeks, it will be 20 years that my brother is dead. I wanted to return home, creating an homage to him,” Versace told the news agency ANSA. “It is not only me who wants to make an homage, it is also the Millennial­s, who ask for the iconic printed shirts.”

Actor Armie Hammer was among the star guests for the cocktail party-themed runway show, with guests seated at small round tables in the fashion house’s Via Gesu’ garden courtyard, sipping champagne and nibbling on hors d’oeuvres.

Versace created looks for both men and women, including complement­ary pinstriped overcoats with Bermudas for him and tight-fitting pin-striped dresses with off-shoulder asymmetric­al detailing for her. And she took the pinstripes from day to night, with sexy, sequinned versions closing out the show.

Versace reached into the archives and retrieved the brand’s iconic Greek border, which trimmed men’s shirts, while a more ornate floral version finished dresses. They merged and popped into bold black and white optical illusion prints

in a series of evening dressup looks for both him and her.

Loose fit high-waist jeans in pastel colours worn with matching colour Versace emblazoned T-shirts completed the journey back to the 1990s.

Gianni Versace was shot dead outside his Miami home on July 15, 1997, leaving Donatella to take over the creative side of the fashion house.

At Dolce&Gabbana, it was a game of “name that Millennial.”

The designers again invited a cadre of young influencer­s from show business and social media to strut their latest collection, 106 for this season, from all corners of the globe.

They included Chinese singer Junkai “Karry” Wang, whose fans gathered outside the Metropol theater waiting for a glimpse; the American comedian Andrew Bachelor; the Mexican actor and singer Diego Boneta; and the French-Polynesian model Tuki Brando, the grandson of Marlon Brando.

Ever the romantics, Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana dubbed the collection “King of Hearts,” and many of the looks included hashtag-able slogans about love, from Amore Per Sempre (Love Forever) to Amore Sacro (Sacred Love).

The collection ranged from silky lounge wear inspired by pajamas to upscale athletic wear, including baseball shirts and basketball jerseys with the new team DG logo, to the designing duo’s tightly tailored suits.

The social media-savvy designers even got in a hashtag on their tote bags in the form of handles.

Marni’s new designer, Francesco Risso, in his second season, has tapped the brand’s playful spirit. The collection is imbued with a boyish charm of purposely ill-fitting, mostly over-sized, and mismatched outfits.

The man-boy of Risso’s imagining has pieced together a wardrobe seemingly of found objects. Shirts are patch-worked together and worn in skewed layers, short over long. Everything seems to have been somehow repurposed, from an athletic cap to old racing bibs with purposely naive drawings by Los Angeles artist Magdalena Suarez.

There is an undercurre­nt of femininity that can be seen as part of the movement toward genderless dressing: A long tunic seems almost a mini dress, until you see the Bermuda shorts peeking out.

Designer Alessandro Sartori’s debut collection for Ermenegild­o Zegna Couture was presented on the eve of Milan Fashion Week against the orange of the Tangier desert he created inside Milan’s State University.

Sartori showed off his looks in the university’s arcaded courtyards, where he said he used to come to read and contemplat­e while a student at the Marangoni Institute of fashion and design.

 ?? — AP ?? Models (clockwise from above) wear creations of Ermenegild­o Zegna. A model wears a creation part of the Versace men’s Spring-Summer 2018 collection. A model wears a creation of Emporio Armani.
— AP Models (clockwise from above) wear creations of Ermenegild­o Zegna. A model wears a creation part of the Versace men’s Spring-Summer 2018 collection. A model wears a creation of Emporio Armani.
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