Italians Do It Better

Italians Do It Better

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From capacious totes and sensible(ish) shoes, Milan Fashion Week highlights the story of the modern woman

This is an excerpt from the MEGA November 2024 Fashion Feature

Milan Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2025 was a godsend for working women everywhere. There were ludicrously capacious totes, swaths of crisp poplin, body-skimming knits, and shoes made for walking dangerously into boardrooms, grocery stores, and even PTA meetings.

Milan Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2025 is a true masterclass of ready-to-wear, showcasing pieces that are functional and easily translatable to real life
Milan Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2025 is a true masterclass of ready-to-wear, showcasing pieces that are functional and easily translatable to real life

WORK WEAR

Bottega Veneta, Ferragamo, Tod’s, and Max Mara were highlights, showcasing variations of classic Italian style that still serve women today. The four brands sent out many looks that were functional and easily translatable to real life–truly ready to wear. Silhouettes were unfussy and streamlined, but it’s apparent to even the most casual of fashion observers that no one quite does oversized like Bottega Veneta creative director Matthieu Blazy, or how Max Mara’s Ian Griffiths can still excite, season after season, with variations of modern classics.

Do Italians just do fashion better? It’s no surprise that Pitti Uomo has been the center of menswear since the 1970s, these days turning Florence’s streets into a veritable fashion olympics. Traditionally, Milan has been known for its precision tailoring, statement silhouettes, and supreme leather craftsmanship–which the locals wear to a T, with equal amounts of pizzazz and ease. Sprezzatura, it’s often called, that kind of nonchalant, unstudied elegance so seen on many Milanese prowling the city streets long after the fashion week crowds have gone.

Each runway also emphasized the power of classics and how it embodies a character and a story
Each runway also emphasized the power of classics and how it embodies a character and a story

STREET STORIES

Classic can often be equated with boring, but there was nothing boring with Blazy’s most recent offerings, which were made up of suits, coords, slinky shifts and leather trenches. His show notes emphasized that each look was a character, a story, and it showed.

There were no newfangled materials or complicated stylings, instead he presented purposely rumpled and creased dress shirts, pants that looked like they’d pulled all-nighter at work; seasonless silky evening wear that could be dressed up or down depending on the occasion, and button-downs with exaggerated shoulders and sleeves–perfect for the days when we need simple, impactful dressing. I’ve got it together, it says, even if just barely.


Read more on the other things Italians do better in MEGA’s November 2024 Shopping issue now available on Readly, Magzter, Press Reader and Zinio.

Images courtesy of BOTTEGA VENETA, FERRAGAMO, TOD’S, and MAX MARA

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