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The brands that went co-ed in 2017

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MONCLER has become the latest fashion brand to adopt a co-ed approach to runway shows.

The French-Italian label will kick off Milan Fashion Week on Feb 20 with a catwalk presentati­on combining its menswear and womenswear collection­s, WWD reports.

The move comes weeks after the label announced the closure of its Gamme Bleu and Gamme Rouge ready-to-wear lines, which were headed by designers Thom Browne and Giambattis­ta Valli respective­ly.

Mixed-gender catwalk shows have become one of the key fashion trends of 2017, with multiple brands opting to merge their menswear and womenswear presentati­ons. Earlier this month, it was revealed that British designer J.W. Anderson will be skipping the London menswear shows in January, opting instead for a mixed presentati­on during the city’s womenswear fashion week in February. Italian heavyweigh­ts Balenciaga and Salvatore Ferragamo have also made the leap over the past few weeks. Coach adopted the strategy back in February – the same month that Calvin Klein’s creative director Raf Simons unveiled his first co-ed show for the house.

In addition to the logistical and financial advantages of holding singular, mixed-gender shows, the movement is part of a wider trend within the fashion industry for scaling down runway activity.

British accessorie­s designer Anya Hindmarch recently announced plans to replace her catwalk shows with four yearly events as of February, while Vivienne Westwood – a brand that has been championin­g the co-ed fashion show for some time – is reportedly eschewing the catwalk altogether, and will show its Autumn/Winter 2018 collection in February via a short film and a series of photograph­s.

 ?? — AFP ?? Among the brands that also went co-ed this year was Calvin Klein.
— AFP Among the brands that also went co-ed this year was Calvin Klein.

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