Milan Fashion Week Women, scheduled from February 23 to March 3, promises to be both intense and festive, with a much-renewed show calendar. A dozen labels will give the week a miss, but their absence will be offset by eight new names, like Fiorucci and K-Way, plus several emerging labels, three comebacks – Giorgio Armani, MSGM and Blumarine – as well as show-events such as Fendi’s, celebrating the Roman label’s centenary, and Dsquared2’s, celebrating the label’s 30th anniversary. Also worth mentioning, the presence of French designer Charles de Vilmorin, who will showcase his collection as part of an exchange project with the Italian Fashion Chamber (CNMI).
Fifty-five physical shows (including Emporio and Giorgio Armani both showing twice) are scheduled during the Milan womenswear week, in line with the 55 shows staged last September. In addition, on the week’s closing day, the programme includes six shows in digital format: Tokyo James, Maison Nencioni, Maxivive, Jacob Cohen, Viapiave33, and Neapolitan demi-couture label Saman Loira, for the first time on the Milan calendar. CNMI has listed 153 events in total for this womenswear week, including 65 presentations, 4 invite-only presentations, and 23 special events.
Gucci will kick off proceedings on Tuesday February 25, staging a co-ed show. A formula that many labels have adopted this season, having skipped the menswear week in January. Besides Gucci, the week’s opening day will feature Dsquared2, the label by Dean and Dan Caten, which will close the day with a show and a big party for its 30th anniversary, positioning itself, just for this once, on the womenswear calendar. Also K-Way, which used to show during the winter season’s menswear week only, has moved to the women’s week, and will stage a co-ed show celebrating its 60th anniversary, it too scheduled on the first day.
The same formula for Fendi, which will show the next day, on the evening of February 26, at its headquarters in via Solari. The show will be organised under the supervision of Silvia Venturini Fendi, creative director for the men’s ready-to-wear and accessories collections, who will also design the collection for women’s ready-to-wear, which has been without a creative director since Kim Jones left.
Among the major comebacks on the programme, that of Giorgio Armani, which showed in New York last autumn, and will be back in Milan on Sunday March 2. After skipping a season, Blumarine will make its return on Thursday February 27, under new creative director David Koma. MSGM too will return to the Milanese runways, on Saturday March 1. The label dropped out in September, having decided to show its women’s collection in June alongside menswear, to celebrate its 15th anniversary.
The week will also feature a plethora of new names. The first is Fiorucci, with Francesca Murri in charge of style, which will make its maiden appearance on the official calendar on Saturday March 1, having staged a first off-calendar show last season. Also, there will be plenty of emerging young talent, for example Francesco Murano, 27, with his structured, minimalist silhouettes and sculptural draped looks. Murano grew up near Salerno in southern Italy, alongside an embroiderer grandmother and a seamstress aunt. In 2016, he moved to Milan to study fashion design at the IED academy, and launched his first collection in 2019.
Also from southern Italy, more precisely Calabria, is Giuseppe Di Morabito, 32, who will stage his first-ever Milanese show on February 28. Di Morabito studied at the Istituto Marangoni in Milan, and founded his own label in 2014. His looks are characterised by couture lines, colours, textures, precious materials and sophisticated treatments, for a sexy, contemporary glam style that has won over many celebrities, like Lady Gaga and Zendaya. Di Morabito’s label is distributed via nearly 180 retailers, and in 2023 Italian investment fund Style Capital bought an 80% stake in it, while the eponymous designer still holds the remaining 20%.
Galib Gassanoff, 30, who partnered with Luca Lin for seven years at label Act N°1, parting ways with him in February 2023, is going solo with his new label, Institution, which will show on February 25 and defines itself as a socio-artistic project. Georgia-born Gassanoff, of Azeri language and culture, settled in Milan in 2012 through a scholarship.
On Sunday March 2, Milan will host for the first time Peruvian designer Jorge Luis Salinas, who grew up in Gamarra, home to Peru’s most important textile manufacturing hub. A graduate of the Philadelphia College of Textiles and Science, in 2016 he founded the J. Salinas label, which combines traditional expertise and technological innovation, and collaborates with craft communities in Peru. Chinese designer Susan Fang will show on the same day. She is supported by Dolce & Gabbana, and was included in the calendar last September, but decided to postpone her show to the coming winter session.
Another new feature at Milan Fashion Week will be the first collaboration between CNMI and the French Fashion and Haute Couture Federation (FHCM), aimed at giving greater visibility to one of the associations’ emerging talents. For France, Charles de Vilmorin will present his latest collection in Milan at the Fashion Hub, a space showcasing several creative projects backed by Italian fashion’s institutional bodies. For Italy, Marco Rambaldi, a knitwear specialist who regularly shows in Milan, will have the opportunity to present his work during Paris Fashion Week (scheduled on March 5-11) at Sphère, the showroom managed by FHCM and supported by French public body DEFI.
Among the notable absentees from the upcoming Milan fashion week, a prime name is Bottega Veneta, in the midst of a transition phase following the arrival of new creative director Louise Trotter, who has replaced Matthieu Blazy, now in charge of style at Chanel. She will unveil her first collection next season. Boss, which shows in Milan every other season, will be back in September. Philosophy has dropped out of the calendar, having been subsumed into Alberta Ferretti. The latter’s eponymous designer and founder has retired, ceding her place to Lorenzo Serafini, who used to be in charge of the label’s young line Philosophy, and will present his first Alberta Ferretti collection on Tuesday February 25.
Also not included in the show calendar are: Vietnamese designer Phan Dang Hoang and Chinese designer Mao Bao of the Chiccomao label, which debuted in Milan last season; Tokyo James, which has opted for a video presentation; Federico Cina, The Attico and Andreadamo, three emerging labels which showed in September; and finally, three Milan Fashion Week regulars GCDS, Del Core and Rave Review.
Milan Fashion Week will nevertheless be able to count as always on Italy’s marquee labels: on Wednesday February 26, Jil Sander, Antonio Marras, Marni and Fendi; on Thursday 27, Roberto Cavalli, Etro, Max Mara and Prada; on Friday 28, Moschino, Missoni, with new creative director Alberto Caliri, and Versace, with what is rumoured could be Donatella Versace’s last show; and on Saturday March 1, Dolce & Gabbana and Philipp Plein. Gucci will kickstart the fashion week, and Giorgio Armani will bring it to a close.
Your Turn features a bottle inspired by Eilish’s admiration for dice, with a translucent chrome finish. This design continues the brand’s tradition of turning fragrance bottles into artful home décor pieces.
The fragrance itself opens with a zesty blend of bergamot peel, cardamom pod, and fresh ginger, followed by a delicate heart of velvet peach skin, night-blooming jasmine, and coconut water. It concludes with warm base notes of Australian sandalwood, musks, and sustainably sourced Sylvamber.
Your Turn is vegan, cruelty-free, paraben-free, and crafted with clean ingredients. The packaging uses environmentally conscious materials, including Envirofoil printing and 100% renewable wind energy.
Developed in collaboration with Parlux Ltd., the new fragrance builds on the global success of Eilish, Eilish No. 2, and the limited-edition Eilish No. 3.
“Since our partnership with Billie and her team began, she has always maintained authenticity in all she does as an artist and creative, and Your Turn is a perfect example of this,” said Lori Singer, president of Parlux Ltd.
“The process was a beautiful collaboration, from the juice creation to the bottle’s design. We couldn’t be more thrilled about what we’ve accomplished with our partners, especially as we begin this next stage of Billie Eilish Fragrances as a master brand.”
Since entering the fragrance market in 2021, Billie Eilish Fragrances has achieved impressive sales milestones and secured a strong presence in the competitive fragrance industry through direct-to-consumer sales, Ulta Beauty, and global retail partners.
“Creating Your Turn with Billie was a journey of discovery,” added Frank Voelkl, principal Perfumer at Firmenich. “We worked through countless iterations to develop a scent that captures the warmth and richness of sandalwood while layering in something unexpectedly fresh. It’s a fragrance that reflects Billie vision of individuality and uniqueness.”
Former supermodel Naomi Campbell said Wednesday she will appeal against a UK watchdog ban on being a charity trustee, suggesting “fake identities” had wrongly implicated her in a funding scandal.
Naomi Campbell – AFP
The Charity Commission last year banned the 54-year-old from running any charity for five years after identifying “multiple instances of misconduct” in the running of her Fashion for Relief organisation.
It found charity money had been used to pay for Campbell to stay in a five-star hotel in the south of France, including spa treatments and room service.
The ex-supermodel at the time branded the watchdog’s findings “deeply flawed” and insisted that newly-instructed advisers were investigating what happened at the charity.
In a statement released late Wednesday, she said a tribunal had granted her permission to appeal the commission’s findings “after considering the evidence I have submitted”.
“Ever since the commission’s report, I have fought to uncover the facts. What has been unearthed so far is shocking,” Campbell stated.
“I want to shine a light on how easy it is to fake identities online and prevent anybody else going through what I have been through.”
Campbell insisted she had “never undertaken philanthropic work for personal gain, nor will I ever do so”.
The case is due to come before the tribunal on Friday, according to Britain’s domestic Press Association news agency.
Campbell’s representatives claim documents submitted to the commission gave a false impression of her involvement in running the UK charity, the agency said.
They argue there is evidence of a fake email account which was used to impersonate the former supermodel in communications with lawyers, it added.
Campbell founded the charity in 2005, aiming to harness the fashion industry to relieve poverty and advance health and education, by making grants to other organisations and giving resources towards global disasters.
But the watchdog probe published last September found that between April 2016 and July 2022, only 8.5 percent of Fashion for Relief’s overall expenditure went on grants to charities.
The charity was dissolved and removed from the register of charities last year, with two other trustees also receiving bans.
At the time, Campbell said she was “extremely concerned” by the regulator’s findings and that she was “not in control of my charity” having “put the control in the hands of a lawyer”
French sport retailer Decathlon, owned by the Mulliez group, has been accused by investigative journalism NGO Disclose and French TV programme “Cash Investigation” of having as a subcontractor in China a company exploiting Uighur labour, which Decathlon denies, and of sourcing cotton from the Xinjiang region, the AFP agency learnt on Thursday.
Mulliez-owned Decathlon has been accused by Disclose and French TV programme Cash Investigation of having as a subcontractor in China a company exploiting Uighur labour – Martin LELIEVRE / AFP/Archives
Decathlon has been accused by the two media outlets of sourcing textiles from Qingdao Jifa Group, a company that “relies on a forced labour network in China,” reported Disclose in an article published on Thursday morning.
In the Cash Investigation documentary to be broadcast Thursday evening, which AFP was able to view, a local executive stated that cotton stored at the warehouse of a company producing for Decathlon might come from Xinjiang, the region where the Muslim Uighur people are the main ethnic group.
Decathlon’s communication department confirmed it is sourcing goods from Qingdao Jifa, while also stating to AFP that “we strongly condemn all forms of forced labour. We are committed on a daily basis to ensuring integrity and respect for fundamental rights in our business operations and value chain, and we will not hesitate to react and take all the necessary measures if the facts were to be proven.”
The same source said that “100% of the cotton used by Decathlon in manufacturing its products comes from sources committed to sustainable practices, guaranteeing the absence of any form of forced labour, and including organic and recycled cotton.”
In the past, Xinjiang has been hit by bloody attacks attributed by the authorities to Islamists and separatists, and China has launched a huge security campaign in the region, labelling it as counter-terrorism. According to claims by NGOs and Western studies, which AFP wasn’t able to verify, Uighurs are being subjected to forced labour practices.
In 2020, the United Nations published an alarming report on the plight of the Muslim minority in Xinjiang. A publication that came in the wake of an alert issued in 2020 by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, and was followed the same year by a document from the Center for Global Policy denouncing a more serious involvement of fashion industry players than previously reported. Amnesty International hammered the point home in 2021, after more than 180 associations and trade unions had formed the Coalition to End Forced Labour in the Uighur Region.
Cash Investigation mentioned products bearing the logo of the US pro basketball league, the NBA, of which Decathlon has been a partner since 2021. Decathlon claims to be licensed to sell products “in the livery of the NBA and its franchises,” and to do so “in over 1,700 Decathlon stores worldwide and online,” in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Latin America.
The US Congress passed a law in December 2021 prohibiting all product imports from the Xinjiang region, unless companies in the region are able to prove that their manufacturing activity does not involve forced labour.
Cash Investigation is also interested in the legal status of the Mulliez family’s empire, which includes retailers such as Leroy Merlin, Kiabi, Flunch, Boulanger and Auchan, all controlled by the Association familiale Mulliez (AFM), a collective body that doesn’t identify as a consolidated group.
At the end of 2024, Auchan announced an extensive redundancy plan threatening 2,400 jobs in France, but other AFM-controlled retailers, like Decathlon, enjoy a more solid financial position, and the unions have called for redeploying Auchan employees in them.
Given the situation, Decathlon shocked its employee representatives by distributing €1 billion in shareholder dividends at the end of 2024.