McQueen: Ready-To-Wear AW25
It was his strongest collection yet for the house delivering fantastic tailoring, twisted with the kind of dark romance that McQueen fans queue up for.
Comme des Garçons: Ready-To-Wear AW25
Was she railing against Lord Business? For AW25, Rei Kawakubo took traditional businesswear and mangled and distorted it – a comment, perhaps, on how corporate agendas can distort cultures (just look at all those billionaires bending the knee to Trump).
Givenchy: Ready-To-Wear AW25
As debuts go it was a stunner. The look was simple but telegraphed that Burton’s Givenchy would be about the femininity of the body.
Rick Owens: Ready-To-Wear AW25
It was full of covetable Rick pieces – the kind that will live in your wardrobe for years.
Chloé: Ready-To-Wear AW25
She called it The Evolution Collection and AW25 marked a new era of sorts for Chemena Kamali.
Tom Ford: Ready-To-Wear AW25
“It was like finding the last piece of a jigsaw and slotting it perfectly into place,” so said one ecstatic editor as they left the Tom Ford show. That final jigsaw piece was Haider Ackermann, whose debut collection moved Tom
Stella McCartney: Ready-To-Wear AW25
“This season we’re looking at 'Laptop to Lap Dance'” said Stella McCartney of her work-hard-play-hard AW25 collection that was dedicated to working women who want to be badass in the boardroom and the bedroom.
Dior: Ready-To-Wear AW25
Maria Grazia Chiuri was in the mood for change. She switched up her approach to her show – instead of collaborating with a female artist, she asked the American theatre director and playwright Robert Wilson to create a performance in
Katie Grand On Supporting Susan Fang’s AW25 Collection Alongside Dolce & Gabbana
Katie Grand looks relaxed the day before the Susan Fang show in Milan. The young designer is showing as part of Dolce & Gabbana’s support programme for emerging fashion talents and everything is organised. Fang and her team are busy
Susan Fang: Ready-To-Wear AW25
The Chinese-born designer Susan Fang got her big moment in Milan as part of Dolce & Gabbana’s support programme for young designers.
Giorgio Armani: Ready-To-Wear AW25
Giorgio Armani, the great fashion maestro, explored his aesthetic roots for AW25.
Dolce & Gabbana: Ready-To-Wear AW25
Dolce & Gabbana changed it up. Of late, the brand has been exploring and expanding upon its instantly recognisable signature style (sexy Sicilian tailoring and corset dressing), but for AW25 it took a different approach focused on street style. The
Sportmax: Ready-To-Wear AW25
Sportmax put a woman in motion at the heart of the collection, sending out dynamic pieces that combined practicality and purpose with great sense of style.