Fashion
Radical Reduction. Gucci SS24
Sabato De Sarno‘s highly-anticipated debut at Gucci promised a lot, but in the end, felt like a plainly flavored meal. Proof: today in the morning, when I thought of the collection, I literally couldn’t remind myself of even one distinct look from the spring-summer 2024 line-up. It was just that… neutral. Yes, Gucci needed a restart: Alessandro Michele’s brought a lot of great things to the brand, but his last seasons were just too suffocating and tired. Still, in the end De Sarno’s radical reduction read more like a mediocre collection with touches of Prada, Old Céline, Valentino (the designer worked there before Gucci), Bottega Veneta and even Courrèges, than a clear new vision of the Italian brand. The designer wanted to create a random sequence of looks that would feel like outfits of people on Getty Images. But it was hard to spot the spontaneity of the paparazzi-caught celebs of the 2000s that De Sarno had in mind. The rumors were rumoring throughout months before the show that De Sarno would lean into the Tom Ford archives and turn out a super-sophisticated, sexy retort. Even the Daria Werbowy image suggested that. But that didn’t happen on yesterda’s runway. The collection wasn’t even Frida Gianini-coded: her Gucci had substance. Except for hoodies and denim pants, the new Gucci has in offer oddly-fitting pinafore dresses in sugary shades of pale green and peach – some trimmed with ostrich feathers, others covered in glittering Swarovski crystals – layered under boxy cropped jackets, while semi-see-through polo tops were tucked into high-waisted flares. The lingerie-influenced section was all about vinyl slips in black and scarlet trimmed with lace and dipping dangerously low on the back. Outerwear came trimmed with long tassels that oscillated as the models stormed through the space, while chunky platforms came high and sturdy, Jackie bags in bright sweetie-wrapper colors, and stilettos encrusted with layers of crystal. It wasn’t bad, it wasn’t great. But in today’s fashion, it’s hard to go by, doing very-whatever stuff.








Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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I See Angels. Blumarine SS24
This week, angels (and swarms of butterflies) landed on the Blumarine spring-summer 2024 runway, which itself was surprisingly a white box setting. This is minimal according to Nicola Brognano, who this season leaves behind the bold pinks and indulges in shades of neutrals and… nakedness. “I just felt it was time for more light, more lightness, more butterflies”. Butterflies, which in a previous collection were emblazoned on a skimpy top, came out in force this season, together with a parade of feathered wings. Butterflies are synonymous with frivolity. And angels, well, they’re angels. Blumarine’s were languid, lanky, handsome winged Adonises strutting down the catwalk in low-rise gold-leather trousers from which emerged smooth, naked torsos dusted with glitter. Brognano’s singular idea of purity and airy luminosity expanded into other literal translations: colors were pale, jerseys were flimsy like hosiery, ribbons and trains trailed breezily on the back of ultra-short sexy numbers. Bustiers and pencil skirts in clear PVC, studded with an abundance of rhinestones and crystals, were the pinnacle of Blumarine’s ode to very naked lightness. They didn’t leave anything to the imagination.To make the waters even murkier, models walked to the beat of The Idol’s Lily-Rose Depp’s World Class Sinner/I’m A Freak.







Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
Don’t forget to follow Design & Culture by Ed on Instagram! By the way, did you know that I’ve started a newsletter called Ed’s Dispatch? Click here to subscribe!
What’s Hot (23.9.23)
Culture About Clothing. Prada SS24
Until Prada‘s show yesterday, I feel like I’ve been in a coma this fashion month (maybe for a few very rare exceptions). Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons proved they are in their top game with the spring-summer 2024 collection, an offering charged with so much feeling, meaning and intelligence. As Miuccia said, it’s an ode to “culture about clothing“. Perhaps something that’s on verge of extinction in times of clothes made for Instagram and TikTok. This was also a very earnest line-up focused on clothes. “I got tired talking about ideas – let’s talk about clothes.” Aren’t all runway shows about clothes? Well, yes, but as Raf Simons went on to explain, “craft isn’t something that gets talked about a lot at Prada, at least not as much as at other houses. We wanted to show what we could do.” It wasn’t a matter of how many hours it took to embroider this and how many petites mains were involved in making that. “That’s irrelevant,” he said with a wave of his hand. “The figuring out if it can be done” was the part that got him and Prada going. Two techniques, in particular, got special mention from Simons. The first was the printed fringe they used on floral shirts that gave the individual blooms a shifting depth. And the second was the long skeins of metal fringe used for skirts “built like jewelry.” They’re conversation starters, for sure. But that’s just the beginning of this delightful menu.




Like the gritty men’s spring show, the foundation here was a tailored silhouette: broad-shoulder shacket (with the cuffs of a shirt and the lapels of a jacket) tucked into the belted waistband of high-rise shorts or front-pleat, tapering-to-the-ankle pants. Some of these odd suits were swathed in sheer printed scarves that the show notes described as “fragments of dresses.” Their ethereality provided a link to the collection’s other key shape, sleeveless shifts with 1960s-via-the-’90s lines made from organza and gazar of such gossamer fineness they seemed to float down the runway. A couple of other things that got people talking: the already-worn-in barn jackets (why not wear one over a Jazz Age flapper dress?) and the hand-carved mythological-man clasps adorning evening bags that reproduced a shape first designed in 1913 by Prada’s grandfather, who traveled the world picking up unique baubles like those carvings. These bags are heirlooms in the making.




This collection was charged with one more, extremely crucial factor. Fabio Zambernardi, the design director of Prada and Miu Miu and Miuccia’s closest collaborator who resigned this year after three decades at the company, joined the designers for a bow, doffing his cap, embracing them both, and inspiring a standing ovation in the process. Two questions emerge: how will Prada (and Miu Miu) look without Fabio’s input? And where is he headed next?



Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
Don’t forget to follow Design & Culture by Ed on Instagram! By the way, did you know that I’ve started a newsletter called Ed’s Dispatch? Click here to subscribe!




