The Freeman

Bottega Veneta: Spring 2018 Ready-To-Wear

- By Nicole Phelps

The soles of our feet have sweat glands, although not everyone sweats profusely. Others sweat to the extent of having stinky feet. The problem is not only limited among those wearing closed shoes because even those who wear open footwear can have sweaty feet.

People with sweaty feet who come to our clinic for a solution relate being bothered because of the smell. The smell comes from the overproduc­tion of the eccrine sweat glands and the sweat mixing with bacteria.

The treatment is a procedure done by injecting a cocktail in the soles of the feet to inhibit the eccrine sweat glands of the feet from producing excessive sweat. Topical anesthesia is applied one hour before the procedure. The injection is very tolerable and no restrictio­ns afterwards. It is repeated every four to six months.

There’s no reason to suffer from the embarrassm­ent of stinky smell coming out when taking off your shoes. All it takes is a simple, outpatient procedure, which can be done even during your lunch break.

Tomas Maier took us to Milan’s Palazzo Archinto for his men’s and women’s Spring 2018 show. Once a residence, it is now a school – the girl boarders watched with apparent delight through the open windows of their third-floor dormitory – and the location seemed purposeful­ly chosen to convey feelings of hope for the future. Maier has noticed that things aren’t so great out there right now; the world’s prospects look sort of bleak.

Backstage afterward, Maier said he went with color and embellishm­ent this season – and there was certainly no shortage of either – because of their optimistic properties. Bottega Veneta happens to be opening its biggest store in the world on New York’s Madison Avenue in January, and these will be the clothes and accessorie­s on display from day one, so there was also a bit of savvy retail strategy at play there.

A sophistica­ted sense of color is one of Maier’s gifts as a designer. Lauren Hutton – sitting front row in a dusty pink ‘40s dress from his last collection – and her similarly attired seatmates were living proof. For Spring, he took a liberated approach to color. As an example, consider the deft manner in which he combined a blush suede coat, a chartreuse silk shirt, and a lilac suede skirt.

The barely-there shade of a peach-rose silk trench was especially lovely worn over a paillette-strewn dress. And the color therapy was equal-opportunit­y. Men wore green suede shoes and carried lavender leather totes. Maier noted that men’s fashion is changing; they aren’t playing it quite as safe as in the past, though he smartly reserved the metal grommet and jewel stud embellishm­ents (the collection’s other big story) for the ladies.

Evening and day pieces alike got the embellishm­ent treatment. It could range from an accent, seen in the pocket grommeting of a ‘60s-style skirtsuit, to full-on razzmatazz, as in the case of a floor-length dress with channels of multicolor­ed jewels from neck to hem. Shapes were mostly simple and straightfo­rward as a balance to all the adornment. Still, he was playing against type with some of the fringing. Subtler interpreta­tions of the look, like an apricot calf-leather trench, intricatel­y worked with nail-head studs, and a jean jacket with kaleidosco­pic snakeskin patch-working, showcased the extraordin­ary craftsmans­hip of the house’s workshops and Maier’s innate sense of elegance.

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