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>>>ANSA/ Dolce & Gabbana snap Italian selfie

>>>ANSA/ Dolce & Gabbana snap Italian selfie

Elsewhere in Milan, clogs, straps and 1980s star on catwalks

Rome, 28 September 2015, 14:48

ANSA Editorial

ANSACheck

- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

-     ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

(by Elisa Cecchi).
    'Italia is love' according to Dolce & Gabbana, whose spring-summer 2016 collection in Milan was all about showing off their Italian tradition and DNA - with a selfie.
    The duo's fashion show on Sunday was a celebration of the world of social media.
    Models were taking selfies with the show's viewers just as the public was snapping off for the benefit of their Instagram followers.
    Such social media extravaganza had an all-Italian setup around the catwalk made for Insta-perfection, including a characteristic fruit stall and a soundtrack to match with 'That's Amore' blaring during the show's grand finale.
    Yet the photogenic virtual Italian tour was just a story line to go straight to the heart of what Dolce & Gabbana is about - opulence and femininity.
    The richness was highlighted by plenty of lace, embroidery and embellishment, while 1950s silhouettes, tunics and hour-glass shapes brought femininity back on the radar for spring-summer.
    ''There isn't a trend, we just did everything we like,'' the designer duo said of the collection, highlighting that the clothes were simple but not minimalistic.
    Out of their show's 90 colourful outfits, many had hand-made embroideries and applications.
    There was a yellow satin mini-dress with 'Italia is Love' embroidered on it, a sexy brasserie in black lace, a Chantilly lace gown with Portofino written in crystals while another gown had a motif with the Leaning Tower of Pisa.
    And there were also pom-poms on shorts and skirts that evoked decorations on Sicilian carts, Michelangelo's David on a long skirt and Rome's Colosseum on a top.
    In the show's finale, each model paraded a dress dedicated to some of Italy's most beautiful cities - Capri, Pisa, Portofino and Verona - in a highly photogenic tribute to the Belpaese.
    Meanwhile, elsewhere at the Milan shows, a few recurring themes were worth noting.
    Chunky clogs, whose popularity has been on the rise ever since the revival of the 1970s, featured at Bottega Veneta, where designer Tomas Maier gave a new sporty edge to his usual polished breed of women.
    Hiking, sailing and nature in general served as inspiration for a collection that embraced leopard prints, knitted stripes and bold suits in all-over motifs, as well as military notes, also seen at Versace.
    Chunky clogs stepped on the Versace runway, along with platforms, as part of a sharp collection oozing womanly confidence, prominently featuring utility jackets and little belted dresses in animal prints and camouflage.
    Harnesses and other types of straps were also a theme, as seen at Rodolfo Paglialunga's Jil Sander and at the MSGM label of Massimo Giorgetti, who also debuted his first collection for Emilio Pucci on the first day of the Milan shows.
    Meanwhile another debuting creative director, Peter Dundas at Roberto Cavalli, had a 1980s flashback with jeans, tie-dye and stone-washed fabrics.
    Dundas mastered a smooth transition into a brand with a well-defined following.
    He carried with him the glamour factor he had formerly brought to Emilio Pucci with a new accent on denim - tie-dyed and distressed fabrics on biker jackets and vests - and an unprecedented eye on sportswear that saw the introduction of sweatshirts styled with ball skirts, alongside the classic Cavalli fare of unapologetically sexy dresses.
    It was a ''free mix of garments'', as defined by the show notes, that went straight back to the core of the house's roots.
    And another voyage straight to the core of a brand led Marni's Consuelo Castiglioni to produce a sporty version of her aesthetic in a fresh palette of primary colors.
    White, yellow, green, blue and black - with pink and red touches - gave a fresh sparkle to a collection with plenty of wide-leg trousers, pinafore dresses and tunics to be mixed in a game of dress up where the ambiguity lies on whether you are looking at one garment or at separates.
    And such a Marni signature look was completed with two other house staples - sculpted graphics and must accessories complementing the clothes, which included for next spring golden leaf earrings and angular bangles and an artsy reinterpretation of the brown paper bag.
   

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