On Tuesday, a fashion world still in mourning will be gathering in Milan for the start of womenswear fashion week. Giorgio Armani, who passed away on September 4, will be in everyone’s hearts. Especially on the evening of Sunday September 28, when the iconic Italian label will stage its runway show, the final event of the fashion week dedicated to the Spring/Summer 2026 women’s ready-to-wear collections. The show will be held in the main courtyard of Palazzo Brera and will feature the last creations by ‘King Giorgio’. It will also fête the 50th anniversary of Armani’s eponymous label, and is clearly set to be the crowning event of this emotion-filled week.
The Italian luxury label has confirmed that the week’s closing show will go ahead, as will the double show scheduled for its young line Emporio Armani on Thursday September 25, and the exhibition dedicated to Armani at the Pinacoteca di Brera gallery, featuring 150 looks from the Armani archives. “We will celebrate [Milan] Fashion Week by paying tribute to one of its founders, Giorgio Armani, and to his creative, entrepreneurial and personal legacy, so valuable in this transformation period the fashion industry is going through,” said Carlo Capasa, president of the Italian Fashion Chamber (CNMI), presenting what promises to be an intense Milan Fashion Week programme.
Between September 23 and 29, Milan will host 171 events, including 54 in-person shows, the same number as in February. In addition, four digital shows are scheduled at the end of the week, on Monday 29, by Maxivive and by rookie labels Mein Corp by Italian designer Lorenzo Sala, Nadya Dyzak, a Ukrainian label launched in 2008, and Zenam, the label by Cameroonian designer Paul Tanonkou, which previously featured on the menswear calendar.
The calendar includes 10 new names, between emerging labels and previous participants (like Milano Moda Graduate, the collective show by the city’s fashion academies), compensating for 10 absentees. While Giorgio Armani is no longer with us, after dominating the fashion scene for half a century, this week Milan is welcoming his successors, between emerging talents, several comebacks, and new creative directors who have taken charge at some major labels.
The first is Demna (Gvasalia) at Gucci, who will unveil his first looks for the Kering group’s premier label in a presentation scheduled on Tuesday September 23. Dario Vitale, taking his first steps at Versace after the latter was recently acquired by the Prada group, will adopt the same understated format on September 26.
On Wednesday September 24, it will be Simone Bellotti’s turn to debut for Jil Sander, while Louise Trotter will unveil her first collection for Bottega Veneta on Saturday 27 – the label is back on the Milan Fashion Week calendar after skipping the February edition. Another highlight will be Fendi’s co-ed show on Wednesday 24, overseen by Silvia Venturini Fendi, celebrating the Roman house’s centenary one last time. FashionNetwork.com has learnt that one of the show’s surprise guests may be French mezzo-soprano Axelle Saint-Cirel, singing six arias with harp accompaniment.
An event worth keeping an eye on will be the maiden Milanese show by British ready-to-wear label Knwls, scheduled on Wednesday September 24. The London-based label, a favourite among celebrities, has gone from strength to strength in recent years, thanks to its sensual Y2K silhouettes and its focus on female empowerment. Knwls was launched in 2017 by British designer Charlotte Knowles with her partner, Canadian Alexandre Arsenault. In 2022, Knwls was an LVMH Prize finalist, and it is available at over 50 leading multibrand retailers worldwide.
A major debut is scheduled on Friday September 26, with the first runway show by Sa Su Phi, a womenswear label set up in 2021, during the pandemic, by Sara Ferrero, an experienced finance executive, and Susanna Cucco, design expert and creative consultant, whose eponymous agency has been collaborating with many top labels in the course of over 25 years. Having begun with luxury knitwear, they have developed a minimalist, sophisticated and timeless style, winning over some 70 top retailers worldwide.
Milan Fashion Week will also welcome comebacks by the likes of Boss, Calcaterra, The Attico and Stella Jean, which have all given Milan a miss in recent seasons, as well as Anglo-Nigerian designer Ineye Tokyo James. After staging his rookie show in Milan in February 2022, James dropped below the radar before coming back in March with a digital show. Also back is Vietnamese designer Phan Dang Hoang, who debuted in Milan in September 2024, and then failed to return. Indian designer Dhruv Kapoor and Pierre-Louis Mascia, who had both featured on the men’s calendar until January, are now included in the womenswear programme.
Another 14 new names will feature on the presentation calendar, including young French designer Henri Paris with his sophisticated creations, Davii, Daizy Shely, Forte_Forte, Îacaré, Kasai, Moja Rowa, Nissa, Pé de Chumpo, Saman Loira, Seafarer, Simon Cracker, which usually shows in the menswear week, Vespa and JW Anderson, which has also scheduled an event at its newly renovated store. Trussardi too is making a comeback, releasing a short film starring Eva Herzigova and Fernando Lindez at the Anteo cinema on September 28.
Milan Fashion Week will feature 171 events this season- CNMI
Versace and Gucci are among the dropouts from this edition’s runway show calendar, having opted instead for a presentation, as mentioned above. Also off the show calendar are Marni and Bally, both going through a transition phase in terms of style, with Marni’s new creative director Meryll Rogge set to show in Milan next February – while Fiorucci has moved to a slot in the menswear week in June. The other absentees are Swedish label Avavav, which had been showing in Milan since September 2023, Susan Fang, which showed in March supported by Dolce & Gabbana, Philipp Plein, K-Way and Dsquared2.
Milan Fashion Week will, as always, be able to count on several top Italian names, among others Prada, Moschino, Roberto Cavalli, Ferragamo, Dolce & Gabbana, Etro and Max Mara, as well as on a plethora of off-calendar events. The first is the Maestri d’Eccellenza Prize, recognising Italy’s top artisans, sponsored by Thélios and LVMH with CNMI and Confartigianato, Italy’s national artisanal association. The award ceremony is scheduled on September 23.
Kering will play its part with Cinemoda Club, a fashion-related film festival sponsored by the French luxury group with Vogue Italy and scheduled on September 25-27, and S|Style, a focus on sustainable emerging labels, including Jeanne Friot from France, on September 26-28. Also on the programme, the third edition of the Black Carpet Awards on September 24, the CNMI Sustainable Fashion Awards (the sustainable fashion prize set up by CNMI in 2017) on September 27, as well as several new store openings within Milan’s luxury shopping district, with cocktail parties and gala evenings galore.
Columbia Sportswear unveiled on Monday USA Olympic curling team uniforms and fan gear, renewing its role as the official uniform sponsor for the USA Curling National Team for the upcoming 2026 Winter Olympic games.
USA Curling athletes Korey Dropkin and Cory Thiesse wearing Columbia’s USA 2026 Down Puffer and USA 2026 Fleece. – Columbia Sportswear
Under the agreement, Columbia will outfit athletes and coaches across the Men’s, Women’s, Mixed Doubles, and Wheelchair National Teams, and for the first time, provide replica versions for fans to purchase.
“Outfitting the United States Curling Team for the Olympic stage is an incredible honor and our teams have worked closely with USA Curling over the past several years to help propel them to the podium in Italy,” said Joe Boyle, president of Columbia Sportswear.
“The uniforms are a testament to our commitment to these ambassadors – and we’re proud to support these athletes as they compete at the highest level.”
The competition uniforms are designed to reflect both American heritage and the country’s natural landscapes. The dark jerseys feature eight cascading stars in red, white and blue, symbolizing the curling stones used in competition. Each jersey is also adorned with at least 250 stars, a nod to the upcoming 250th anniversary of American independence.
In addition to competition jerseys, pants and hats, Columbia will provide village wear for athletes, including USA-branded parkas. The parkas are insulated with Columbia’s Omni-Heat Infinity technology, and reimagined in a gold star pattern to honor the historic games.
Fans can shop the USA 2026 collection, which includes a patriotic down jacket, fleece styles, short-sleeve T-shirts, beanies and ball caps, priced from $40 to $300. The collection is now available on Columbia’s website and at select Dick’s Sporting Goods locations, with replica jerseys set to launch online in January.
Iconix’s entire brand portfolio and related royalty revenue will once again be fully consolidated within its operating structure, creating a unified brand platform representing approximately $6 billion in global retail sales.
Iconix to reunite North American brand portfolio. – London Fog
The company announced on Monday that it has completed an upsizing of its existing credit facility with affiliates of Apollo to discharge the company’s securitization financing facility, which has been outstanding since 2012. Iconix expects to complete the transaction by January 2026.
The securitization financing facility was secured by a pledge of North American brand intellectual property and licensing royalties for several of Iconix’s brands, including Ed Hardy, Starter, Danskin, Ocean Pacific, London Fog, Mossimo, Zoo York, Rocawear, and Iconix’s portfolio of home brands.
The retirement of the securitization facility marks a significant milestone in Iconix’s turnaround and resurgence following its take-private transaction in 2021. The company will now be able to pursue strategic alternatives involving the North American rights of its brands, including targeted investments and partnerships that were previously restricted.
“We have always believed that it is extremely important to reunite the North American brand rights under a cohesive operating structure in the US, which is obviously an incredibly influential market for our brands globally,” said Bob Galvin, chief executive officer, Iconix International Inc.
“For the first time in nearly a decade, and since we took over the business with our partners at Lancer Capital, we will have the opportunity to fully exploit all of our brand rights in the most optimal way.”
Since management changes in late 2018, Iconix has executed a significant turnaround, including improving its cost structure, deleveraging its balance sheet, repositioning its global brand portfolio, including acquisitions such as Hoodrich in 2023 and Salt Life in 2024. These efforts have been carried out in partnership with Apollo over the past three years.
“This expanded commitment to Iconix reflects the strong performance of the business and its brands. We’ve worked closely with the management team for several years and are pleased to support this transaction, helping to position Iconix to fully leverage its unified global brand platform,” added Kurt Hoffman, managing director, Apollo.
Japanese footwear and sportswear brand Onitsuka Tiger is entering the fragrance world with its first collection of four scents, simply named ‘One,’ ‘Two,’ ‘Three,’ and ‘Four.’
Onitsuka Tiger “One”
Named ‘Wearing Quiet Radiance,’ the eau de parfum line symbolises the beauty of contrast and was conceived by world-renowned perfumer Mark Buxton. The fragrances draw inspiration from the fusion of tradition and modern innovation, combining craftsmanship with contemporary design- elements that have defined Onitsuka Tiger’s heritage, according to a statement.
The entire process of creating the fragrance line, from the selection and extraction of materials to blending and bottling, takes place exclusively in Grasse, in Provence, the world’s perfume capital.
The four fragrances, designed to evoke a sense of stillness that allows one to reconnect with one’s essence, are encased in elegant, bright-yellow bottles that reflect the brand’s distinctive colour, and are available in Onitsuka Tiger stores and on the Japanese brand’s official website.
Onitsuka Tiger One is built around green and mint notes, followed by lemon and mandarin. White florals and jasmine form the heart, while patchouli, leather, and guaiac wood add depth and resonance to the fragrance. Onitsuka Tiger Two opens with bergamot and lemon, joined by geranium and frankincense. Finally, velvety musk and sandalwood envelop the skin.
Onitsuka Tiger Three showcases the spicy, citrus nuances of angelica, followed by violet and marine notes. Smoky and spicy nuances then gently unfurl. In Onitsuka Tiger Four, peppermint and bergamot make an immediate impression, while absinthe and nutmeg add a bold accent. As the fragrance evolves, vanilla and vetiver add depth, and the scent ends with the crystalline clarity of citrus notes.
Founded in Kobe in 1949 by Kihachiro Onitsuka, the Japanese label originally produced only basketball shoes before becoming a lifestyle brand within the Asics group following a 1977 merger.
Europe is gaining momentum in Onitsuka Tiger’s business, as is the US, but the brand continues to rely mainly on its Asian operations, particularly in China and Japan. According to company president Ryoji Shoda, the brand generated revenue of 120 billion yen last year (705 million euros), almost double the figure from six years ago, with sales of its heritage range still accounting for the bulk of its revenue and generating substantial profitability.
This article is an automatic translation. Click here to read the original article.