Milan Men's Fashion Week Round-up
By FashionUnited
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Prada looked to the world of golf and sent tongue-in-cheek sportswear down the runway. Rhinestone cowboys wore two-tone denim and leather, while jackets were encrusted with crystals and gold studs. The collection also featured simple cotton suits, geek-chic cardigans and tailored shorts.
Raf Simons at Jil Sander summarised youth movements from the last decennium, but the looks on the catwalk were confusing and not commercial. Models with oil-slicked hair wore highwaisted shorts, plastic rain macs, snake-print tops and lace up boots, which all in all projected a muddled message. Especially as the house of Jil Sander once stood for purity of its craft and minimalist approach to styling, it's new creative director appears to over-style its heritage.
A rock and roll collection for Alexander McQueen saw soft velvet blazers in yellow and red tones over striped trousers. Shirts and tied shirts came in bright red circus stripes and collegiate jackets saw bold stripes peeking from its lapel. This was Sarah Burton's third collection since the death of its founder in 2010.
Miss
Calvin Klein was all about futurewear. Designer Italo Zucchelli continues to explore what it means to be designing in the 21st century using techno fabrics and backstage told the IHT: “I worked a lot of hyper 3-D dimensions, and I wanted texture — waffle pique and rubber takes on mesh,” to explain the voluminous track pants, the cropped fleeces and the extreme sport details, like running shoes on a transparent plastic sole.
Designer Neil Barrett sent looks that mixed 70s rock chic mixed with English sophistication down his catwalk. Marked by black-and-white check patterns, chunky shoes and sandals, chain wallets, not to mention his trademark leather pieces.
Images: Spring Summer 2012 Prada, Neil Barratt, Jil Sander
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Milan Fashion Week
Milan Mens Fashion Week