Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons’s joint effort at Prada may not have been conservative in concept, but it unmistakably foreshadowed recession – economic, political, cultural. The show venue at Fondazione Prada resembled a ruined palace or temple constructed from spolia. The clothes sent down the runway – on models decidedly less hunky than those seen at other houses – bore visible signs of distress. Slender, waist-cinched jackets were deliberately creased, their worn wool appearing raw and coarse. A beige leather coat was frayed at the edges, as though it had been worn – and lived in – for decades.
There was something deeply melancholic about the collection as a whole, something distinctly 1930s in its sense that the good days were coming to an end. Prada’s runway tailoring felt resolutely anti-Bezos, anti-Vance. READ MY FULL REVIEW HERE.








ED’s SELECTION:
Prada Men’s Wool Knit Stripe Crewneck Sweater
Prada Men’s Poplin Chest Logo Full-Zip Shirt Jacket
Prada Men’s Hawaiian-Print Short-Sleeve Shirt
Prada Men’s Collapse Nylon and Suede Low-Top Sneakers
Prada Men’s Solid Short-Sleeve Sweater
Prada Men’s Re-Nylon Snap-Front Jacket
Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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