Fashion brand’s autumn/winter collection includes drawings by children, and models on catwalk carrying babies and toddlers
Mother’s Day is in May in Italy
but it came early this year. Dolce & Gabbana’s autumn/winter
collection at Milan fashion week on Sunday afternoon was called “Viva la
mamma”. It was a celebration of mothers everywhere.
As with all shows from the brand, the clue came with the invitation,
which featured drawings by children dedicated to their mums with
messages such as “ti amo mama” (I love you, mum) scrawled in
sweet, wobbly handwriting. The theme was then underlined by the tableau
at the back of the catwalk - it featured grownup models along with
babies, toddlers and children.
All dressed in Dolce, the scene was like a live, art-directed family
portrait. This show was evolved from the menswear equivalent in January,
which was dedicated to family and had particularly photogenic ones –
from grandmothers to children – as the tableau. Both shows came with
Twitter hashtags to increase the social media presence of such snap-able
images, this time #DGmamma.
Designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana like to take a theme and
run with it. One model was six months’ pregnant, three carried babies
and a little girl walked down the catwalk – all to the applause of the
front row, accompanied by the warbling of the Spice Girls’ 1996 hit
Mama.
This theme had an effect on the actual clothes too. Sweaters and
dresses featured similar scrawled messages rendered in sequins, and a
mother-and-child print and a later section of the show used drawings the
designers did as children as prints on pretty silk dresses. Other parts
of the collection deviated from the theme and included jewelled
headphones - likely to become a highly prized accessory of the young and
rich next season.
Playing with symbols of femininity, brand classics were all present:
wiggle dresses with elbow-length sleeves and rose prints, pencil-skirt
suits, embellished doctor bags, lingerie-inspired lace and the influence
of the early-60s silhouette. The mix of the wholesomeness of family
with a healthy dollop of sexy is a trademark of this quintessentially
Italian brand that turns 20 in October.
Dolce & Gabbana are in the top 10 most successful Italian brands
according to a study last month. The research, conducted by Mediobanca,
surveyed 135 fashion companies. It suggests that a lot of this success
is down to exports – the brand is available to buy in 40 countries and
79% of sales in 2013 came from overseas. Universal themes such as family
will only help that cause – they translate into any language. Including
children in this womenswear show also translates well to social media.
It’s also smart business: a savvy way to showcase the Dolce &
Gabbana Junior line, launched in 2012. The childrenswear market is
estimated to be worth £5.6bn in the UK and is predicted to grow. The
talk on the front row on Sunday was centred around Peter Dundass’
probable exit from Pucci, where he has been creative director since
2009.
The Pucci Saturday night show was a fairly typical glamorous display
with op art prints, 70s shapes and jetset-worthy wafty dresses - all the
things Dundas has done so successfully - worn by supermodels including
Eva Herzigova, Karie Kloss, Joan Smalls and Natasha Poly.
Dundas took his bow at the end with his design team, a sign that this
was a swansong. While the rumours have yet to be confirmed, it has been
suggested that he will move to Roberto Cavalli, where Dundas began his
designing career. Marco Zanini, who quit Schiaparelli in November after
only two couture collections, has been suggested to take over at Pucci.
Milan fashion week continues on Monday when an announcement is expected.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
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