Fashion

5 things to watch out for during Milan Men's Fashion Week


On Friday the global fashion pack will head to Milan, the de facto capital
of Italian fashion, as the official men’s Spring Summer 2020 show season
begins. The menswear event not only cements the economic significance of
the country’s luxury brands and businesses, but showcases the wider craft
of the Made in Italy brand representing the country’s many designers,
manufacturers, fabric suppliers and ateliers.

In numbers, the fashion capital generates a turnover of over 20 billion
euros, and the wider Lombardy area has over 34,000 active businesses in
fashion and design, more so than any of the four major fashion capitals.
The competition and opportunities for growing businesses are unparalleled,
with a surge in exports growing double digits, up 13 percent in 2017,
thanks to the rising demand of Italian goods.

Milan is also one of just three cities that has a Fashion Technology
Accelerator (FTA) programme, founded in Silicon Valley in 2012 that later
expanded to Seoul and Milan. The FTA is exclusively dedicated to supporting
start-ups who are at the intersection of technology and fashion, helping
young enterprises accelerate their businesses with access to expertise and
resources, which are often limited without industry contacts.

The four-day event is also home to Milano Moda Uomo, a tradeshow and
catwalk platform that aims to market Italian designers to the wider
industry. This year the show is expected to receive 8000 Visitors coming to
see its 120 exhibitors. A highlight of MMU is its Graduate fashion show,
organized by the Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana, who aim to further
nurture its local talent.

Here are our top five picks of what to look out for this Milan Men’s
Fashion Week:

5 things to watch out for during Milan Men's Fashion Week

Milano Moda Graduate

Opening MFW is Milano Moda Graduate, the project designed by the Camera
Nazionale della Moda Italiana (CNMI) to bring visibility to the work and
talent of fashion’s future generations and show the work of top students in
Italian fashion schools. This season will be the platform’s fifth edition
of the project, which sees students present their collections in a wide
range of categories, from design to visual merchandising, wearable
technology, sustainability, model making and tailoring. Supported by YKK
Italy, eleven finalists were chosen to create a special zip-inspired outift
for a fashion show with a winner being selected to take home a prize for
the most representative outfit.

Designer Debuts

The SS2020 season will see a series of catwalk debuts during Milano Moda
Uomo, thanks in part to the support of the CNMI. Designers who will show
their collections for the first time on the official calendar include South
Korean streetwear brand Youser on June 16th, gender neutral label
Edithmarcel, Spanish designer David Catalan and Miguel Vieria on June 17th.
Vieria, who hails from Portugal, said “being on the official calendar of
the world’s main fashion men’s fashion week has always been a goal because
it represents an unequivocal recognition of the work I’ve developed
throughout my career. I am very happy because it will project my work in a
much broader way. I waited 15 years for this to happen,” the designer
revealed to the Lusa Agency.

Other Milan Men’s Fashion week debuts come from Fay, an Italian outfitter
owned by the Tod’s Group, Rolf Ekroth & Terinit (supported by CNMI) and
American menswear designer Brett Johnson.

5 things to watch out for during Milan Men's Fashion Week

Palm Angels

Urban skatewear brand Palm Angels has been around since 2015, but at near
cult status amongst skate aficionados it is one of the brands to watch out
for during Milano Moda Uomo. The hot ticket event is only the company’s
third fashion show, returning to Milan after a season in New York. Palm
Angels founder Francesco Ragazzi is also the Art Director at Moncler, and
last week revealed a collaboration with Moncler Genius in London, a capsule
of urban outerwear silhouettes with a punk spirit. The Palm Angels show
will take place on Sunday, 16 June at 7pm.

Stella McCartney returns to Milan

London-based designer Stella McCartney will return to Milan Men’s Fashion
Week a second time after joining the men’s schedule in January this year.
McCartney, who usually shows womenswear in Paris, will showcase her SS2020
men’s and women’s collections during a special presentation on MFW’s
opening day. So far the location has been kept under embargo,

Giorgio Armani

In the absence of some of Milan’s biggest names, notably Prada who decamped
to Shanghai to show its SS20 collection last week and Ferragamo and MSGM
who showed at Pitti Uomo, Italian stalwart Giorgio Armani will close MFW on
June 17th. Armani, who has two shows on the official calendar, will unveil
his Emporio collection at Armani/Teatro on June 15th, while the mainline
will close the week at Armani’s historic headquarters, the Palazzo Orsini
on via Borgonuovo, to which the designer is returning after an hiatus of 18
years. Last year Armani held his fashion show in an airport hangar, but
nothing beats coming home.

The importance of Italian menswear

“This edition’s calendar rises to the challenges posed by the globalised
and fluid dimension of fashion. Alongside the men’s collections at our June
Milano Fashion Week there will be many women’s collections, numerous
international brands, new names and a multitude of other events enriching
the calendar. All of which proving Milan’s central role in the world’s
fashion week system in terms of both creativity and business, thanks also
to its trade fairs and above all the 800 showrooms representing over 3,000
brands. In Italy, men’s fashion accounts for 39 percent of total fashion
exports. And considering exports to non-EU countries alone, men’s fashion
accounts for nearly 55 percent of total Italian fashion exports,” CNMI
chairman Carlo Capasa said in a statement.

To reiterate, Deloitte’s Global Powers of Luxury Goods 2018 report states
Italy has the largest number of luxury goods companies. A very good reason
indeed to head to Milan Men’s Fashion Week this season.

Photo credit: Giorgio Armani backstage AW19, © Francesco Pizzo; Stella
McCartney SS19, source Stella McCartney website; Apritimoda SS2020, source
Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana Facebook page



READ SOURCE

Leave a Reply

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.