Advertisement

Milan: Armani’s all about trousers, DSquared2’s clash of civilizations

DSquared2's Autumn Winter 2015 fashion show during Milan Fashion Week on March 2, 2015 in Milan, Italy. Catwalking/Getty Images

MILAN – The final day highlights of Armani and DSquared2 always make a rather odd pairing, representing in many ways the two poles of Milan fashion.

Armani, who celebrates 40 years of his fashion brand this year, was a founding protagonist of the Milan fashion scene, and has made a name for himself by creating enduring looks, with a focus on detailing and elegance, not flash-by trends.

Dean and Dan Caten, the Canadian twins behind the DSquared2 label, are on the more extravagant end of the fashion spectrum, with audacious styles that cross the border into camp.

What they share is a vision for Milan that they are willing to invest in.

Armani is the fashion world’s ambassador to the world Expo 2015 opening May 1 in Milan, using his renown to promote the event to the fashion crowd. He is currently working on a retrospective exhibit to open on the eve of the world’s fair opening, along with a runway show of his greatest hits.

Story continues below advertisement

The Caten twins last year opened the rooftop restaurant Ceresio 7, which has quickly become one of the city’s hippest restaurants. With two swimming pools and a view of Milan’s new quarter of futuristic skyscrapers, it will be one of the places to see and be seen by the visiting Expo crowd.

Highlights from the last of six days of womenswear previews for next autumn and winter during Milan Fashion Week, which ended Monday.

TULIP TROUSERS

Sometimes Armani comes up with something so new, refreshing and inventive that not even he knows what to call it.

So it was with a new trouser silhouette that on top resembled a sweeping skirt in the shape of a pair of tulip petals, then melded seamlessly into a tight-fitting pant-leg. They were paired with pretty swing coats, some decorated crystals, or a sloping high-collar sweater that had the effect of a contemporary casual poncho.

Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images

Pants were so much on Armani’s mind that of the more than 80 looks he sent out, fewer than 10 were skirts or dresses.

Story continues below advertisement

A velvet evening version working a skirt into the trouser was paired with tops of swirling chiffon or cropped jackets, while pants with a cummerbund waistline highlighted the crystal-dotted bustier. The looks were complemented by shimmery, but not metallic, long-fringe shawls.

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

Get breaking National news

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

For Armani, the black evening pant is the season’s must-have. But when the occasion calls for a dress, there were long printed slip dresses with a diagonal band of black velvet sloping down to the hem and an eye-catching strapless chiffon dresses in red or cotton-candy pink with ruffled detailing at the bodice.

Venturelli/WireImage

CHAGALL’S SOFTNESS

Giorgio Armani’s looks for next winter were infused with a gentleness inspired by paintings by Chagall, whose work was shown in a retrospective that closed recently in Milan.

While many runways favoured dramatic geographic lines, Armani chose a softer optical effect, a bleeding of one colour into the other that the designer said was a nod to Chagall. The print of choice was a blur or colour, giving the effect nearly of an aurora borealis of red, pink, black and grey.

Story continues below advertisement

A Chagall work inspired another detail, pretty feminine collars suggestive of a French school girl. Rounded or slightly squared, the collars could also be worn alone, as in unattached to a shirt or coat, as an accessory.

“There is a painting by Chagall with one or two women with big white collars,” Armani said. “I was hit by this sense of innocence.”

Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images

OLD WORLD-NEW WORLD

The staging of DSquared2’s runway show suggested a more sober collection. That was not to be.

Models strode down an elegant zig-zag staircase lit up in shifting shades of purple to pink to grey. They did not emerge, as has been the rule, from the sort of elaborate sets illustrating the stories behind recent collections.

Story continues below advertisement

The clothes, however, clearly told a tale.

The looks were an eclectic mix of Native American dress mixed with European colonial-era attire, suggestive of conquest on many levels.

Pietro D'Aprano/Getty Images

An elaborate admiral’s short-coat was worn over a boudoir-ready ruffle blouse and big-pocket jodhpur pants, while a military coat thrown over a laced-up mini-dress suggested trophy.

And so the collision of world’s pairings continued, with cropped trousers bearing golden sailor stripes worn with a feather-bedecked vest or fur coat with Native American symbols and an oversized hood. The larger-than-life hoods were seen previously in DSquared’s menswear collection.

Many looks were laden with enough jewels to have purchased Manhattan at the going rate of the day.

Sheer graphic body-wear printed with native patterns suggested body paint or tattoos on any bare skin available. The collection, disciplined and brimming with luxury, closed with a pair of billowing evening dresses with a colonial-era lady-of-the-night sexiness.

Advertisement

Sponsored content

AdChoices