MILAN (AP) 鈥 Reconciling unusually high temperatures with the looks for next summer on Milan Fashion Week runways is becoming an exercise in cognitive dissonance.
While nodding to sustainability, designers are nonetheless proposing looks that don鈥檛 jibe with longer summer heat waves, and instead seem to be focused on customers who either live in northern climates, who can count on cool evenings or air conditioning, or who just don鈥檛 care.
Some highlights from Sunday鈥檚 preview of mostly menswear for Spring-Summer 2023:
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PRADA鈥橲 GINGHAM NOSTALGIA
The Miuccia Prada-Raf Simons collaboration at Prada has been a proven success, generating recognizable pieces that grab attention and brand recognition from a distance. That is quite a feat for co-creators who joined forces just as the pandemic put the globe on lockdown, and which hasn't quite loosened its grip.
The silhouette for next spring and summer is studied and refined, another easy read. It started with lapel-less suits with hidden buttons, tapered skinny trousers down to pointy boots. The pair introduced boyish notes with striped ribbed or color-block knitwear. Oversized bags contributed to a sense of childhood, playing with grown-ups鈥 things, while models walked through a paper mock-up of an out-of-scale house.
Nostalgia came in the form of oversized gingham, recalling a kitchen tablecloth, traditionally a woman鈥檚 domain, in play against leather grunge: sleeveless short sets, and trenches, sometimes with a gingham trench layered in between.
Questions persist: How is this a summer wardrobe? Where exactly is this summer?
But judging from those in the fashion crowd in knit turtlenecks and leather coats, the question may be beside the point where Prada is concerned.
Backstage, Prada welcomed guests including Jake Gyllenhaal, Jeff Goldblum and Rami Malek, herself wearing a cashmere gray short-sleeved sweater and an organza sheath skirt.
鈥淔ashion as a manner, a way as well as a means of appearing," the designers said in show notes. 鈥淎n expression of choice.鈥
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MOSCHINO BRINGS MENSWEAR TO MILAN
Jeremy Scott set the quirky Moschino tone with a squiggle, before exploding into full trompe l鈥檕iel of graphic inspirations from the late American artist Tony Viramontes.
This was Moschino鈥檚 first menswear-only show in Milan.
Scott said he wanted to 鈥渟hine some light on this brilliant creator鈥 described in the fashion notes as 鈥渁 lively chameleon, hued in pop-bright colors.鈥
A grimacing face on a two-tone jacket set the pop art tone, followed by squiggles painted down trousers and lapels, burgeoning into graphic dot prints and photographic details that recreate the look of wrinkles and creases on garments.
The Moschino silhouette for Spring-Summer 2023 has a punk-militaristic vibe that challenges genders norms in a way that has increasingly become mainstream on luxury runways.
Pleated aprons are worn over shorts or trousers, front or back, for a skirt effect.
But there is no reason to stop there, because Scott also imagines pleated punk skirts and longer straight skirts for men. These looks are not entirely feminine, worn with military-style jackets and caps along with combat boots, not to be under-minded by made-up visages down to the coal eye.
Scott saluted the runway in a olive kilt with a T-shirt reading 鈥淢isfits鈥 on the front and 鈥淓ARTH A.D.鈥 on the back.
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鈥楻EALITY BITES鈥 BY SIMON CRACKER
Designers Filippo Biraghi and Simone Botte took a radical turn during the pandemic and devoted the Simon Cracker brand they founded in 2010 entirely to up-cycled materials.
The designers collect unclaimed garments from laundries and textile remnants from producers, to make unique creations for their growing following, known as the Cracker Crew. Source material includes old cotton and linen bedsheets, men鈥檚 shirts, old parachutes, discarded yarns for new knitwear and recycled jersey.
The collection for Spring-Summer 2023 was titled 鈥淩eality Bites,鈥 from the Gen-X 1990s film but more fittingly a reference to the state of the world, and most specifically the difficulties the up-and-coming brand has been experiencing recently.
"We are living a difficult moment," Biraghi said backstage. 鈥'Reality Bites' is a bit of our experience in this moment.鈥
They described the collection as a cross between Holly Hobby and the Sex Pistols, encapsulated by punk accents with ruffles. Looks were decorated with naive embroidery, tiny patches or childlike doodles.
鈥淚t is as if the clothes were born beautiful, and then are bitten,鈥 Botte said.
The models were people from their Cracker Crew, encapsulating different body types and attitudes.
One older male model wearing a high-waist knitwear trousers, with a red ribbon accent and a deconstructed jacket with flowing orange silk panel moved in a trance-like dance down the runway, while a woman in a corset over a layered skirt of discarded men鈥檚 shirts carried a miniature dog.
Colleen Barry, The Associated Press