Lorenzo Bertelli, 37, the eldest son of fashion designer Miuccia Prada and industrialist Patrizio Bertelli, is set to take up his new post as executive chairman of Versace once the deal with Prada is finalised on December 2. In April, Prada agreed to acquire Versace from US-based Capri Holdings Ltd. for about €1.25 billion ($1.45 billion), the largest acquisition in the Prada Group’s 112-year history. The brand brings a distinct aesthetic to Prada’s portfolio and paves the way for the creation of a larger Italian player, potentially better placed to compete globally with rival luxury groups.
Lorenzo Bertelli – Camera della Moda
Meanwhile, from 2019 to the end of 2024, the Prada Group has invested a total of more than €200 million to enhance the company’s industrial infrastructure. In 2024 alone, the Milan-based company invested about €40 million in vertical integration, progressively bringing certain stages of the production process in-house and building strategic capabilities.
FashionNetwork.com discussed all this, as well as supply chain compliance and Made in Italy, with Lorenzo Bertelli himself and Andrea Guerra, CEO of the Prada Group, during a meeting in Scandicci in Florence, Italy, at the state-of-the-art facility dedicated to the full-cycle production of bags and leather goods for Prada’s Women’s and Men’s lines, which also produces items in fine leathers and carries out certain special processes at customers’ requests.
FashionNetwork.com: What new investments in the production chain does the Prada Group have in the pipeline for 2025? Andrea Guerra: We have never stopped investing, and we will continue. In the near term, in Milan we will expand and deepen our work on fine leathers. The workshop will become far more sophisticated. The second major investment, planned over the next 12 months, is a new leather-goods plant in Piancastagnaio [in Siena], which will be cutting-edge in terms of sustainability and will bring together a number of our workshops in the area. In Umbria, we will create a new knitwear production hub in Gubbio, which will complement the site we already have in the region at Torgiano (Perugia), where there is also an Academy project. Torgiano houses at least seven or eight highly specialised production processes, and wherever we have a similar kind of production, we have established an Academy. And that’s not all: we will invest to increase the production capacity of the Northampton plant in England, we will expand the Foiano della Chiana (Arezzo) plant, and we are preparing other developments in the Marche region related to footwear. Acquiring new suppliers, however, is not on the agenda.
FN: What checks have you implemented over the years to minimise the risk of problems such as those some fashion players are having with their subcontractors? Lorenzo Bertelli: First of all, aside from our group- and very few others in our industry- from day one the fashion show goes hand in hand with the factory. When you meet managers who come from other companies, factories and industrial matters are often unfamiliar; they don’t even see them as part of their remit, because they don’t consider them within the scope of their responsibilities. And this has led to many of the difficulties you read about in the newspapers. I say this because from day one my father believed in owning factories. In fact, my parents’ story is: one person more dedicated to design (Miuccia Prada, ed.), and one more dedicated to factories (Patrizio Bertelli, ed.). It’s our story- culturally embedded and in our blood. In our Milan offices, we don’t talk about business without talking about factories and their impact on production. I can assure you that many managers working in other companies simply don’t concern themselves with factories. Along our growth journey, we fought many of the battles that may be creating problems for other players in the sector today- not because we were better, but because we tackled them earlier- and therefore we have more experience in trying to keep the supply chain as clean as possible. We were almost frowned upon at the time, because people didn’t understand why we would embark on something laborious and costly when the work could easily be delegated to others with higher value added and greater margins. And it is a constant battle: you have to carry out inspections and audits of suppliers continuously.
FN: Is only about 50% of your supplier list shown on your site? Why not 100%? LB: In terms of compliance, we are not legally required to disclose all levels of the production chain. Until recently, disclosure was required only for tier 1 of the supply chain, not tier 2 or tier 3; so, depending on how one builds the production architecture, it’s easy to appear ‘cleaner’ if you have a few very green tier‑1 suppliers who then have many subcontractors that are not… We work almost exclusively with tier‑1 suppliers and very few tier‑2s. One, because no minimum percentage is required in today’s sustainability reports; if the reporting rules change one day, we’ll be happy to disclose 100%. Two, because there is also a competitiveness issue: why should we give an advantage to competitors who might go and gather information on our supply chain? Three, because, although all our suppliers are fully compliant, we chose to disclose only those we are particularly proud of.
FN: How much of the Prada Group’s production is internalised? AG: We don’t disclose that information. From our point of view, production is totally internalised, in the sense that we have the ability to steer our entire supply chain from A to Z, and we have shortened it dramatically. I believe our level of in-house production is the highest in the industry.
FN: In your opinion, are prices in the fashion and luxury industry too high? AG: In the post‑Covid period, some of our competitors thought it was possible to raise price levels continuously without, in some cases, delivering the necessary value in the product. I believe that was one of the contributing factors to this industry’s recent downturn. I think many companies and brands are reflecting on this today.
FN: How can Made in Italy be conveyed and protected? AG: We have been, are, and will remain very strong on Made in Italy. Italy’s problem is not the ‘Made in,’ manufacturing or innovation, but sales: the ability to tell the story, to do marketing, to have a role with the consumer, to know how to run stores everywhere in the world. Italian companies have always been extraordinary at making, but unfortunately not equally good at selling. Companies like Prada, which decided to move into the end‑consumer world more than 30 years ago, are an exception compared to the majority of Italian businesses. I always give this example: if I go to a French or Anglo‑Saxon entrepreneur and ask ‘Tell me about your business,’ they will take me to one of their stores, one of their restaurants, one of their hotels. If I go to an Italian entrepreneur and ask ‘Tell me about your business,’ he will take me to a factory. That’s the difference. Here, the tradition of the store, the restaurant, and the hotel has always been family‑based, but we haven’t taught the new generations- or we have done so only very little, or perhaps we have only just started- how to manage the consumer as the landscape evolves. Today in Italy we probably produce 80% of luxury, but Italian companies account for not even 20% of this sector’s revenue. That’s where we have lost out and need to improve, considering this sector as a linchpin of Italian industry.
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British footwear brand Clarks is celebrating its 200th anniversary this year. In Italy, the brand is marking the bicentennial by opening a pop-up space within the Candiani Denim Store, in piazza Mentana 3 in Milan, where customers are able to personalise their Clarks shoes throughout December.
Clarks shoes can be personalised at the Candiani Denim Store in Milan – Clarks
From December 2 to 9, the Milanese store by Candiani, a premium Italian denim producer with its own jeans line, is hosting a Clarks pop-up shop. Visitors will have the opportunity to explore the British footwear brand’s history, its signature models, and learn about some of the leading figures who have worn Clarks and helped define its identity, influencing generations. A documentary about Clarks’s 200 years in business, entitled From Somerset to the World, will be screened inside the pop-up shop. The shop will showcase a selection of Clarks Originals models, including the Wallabee, Desert Boot and Desert Trek, as well as several items from the Fall/Winter 2025-26 collection, reinterpreting materials, shapes and colours with a contemporary feel.
In parallel with the pop-up shop (where a special event was staged on Thursday December 4), throughout December the Candiani Denim Store is giving Clarks customers the chance to create a personalised version of their shoes, choosing from two Clarks Originals models, the Wallabee and the Desert Boot. The limited-edition shoes will feature a personalised denim fob, and customers will be able to choose from an extensive library of patterns and designs. The motif chosen will be lasered directly on to the shoes at Candiani Custom, the denim brand’s urban micro-factory for bespoke jeans located next to the store.
FashionNetwork.com has had the opportunity to talk about Clarks’s distribution plans in Italy with Fabio Antonini, CEO of 3A, the company that has been distributing the British brand’s men’s and women’s lines since the Fall/Winter 2025-26 season.
FashionNetwork.com: Clarks has been busy overhauling its retail presence in Italy. What are the implementation steps, and what have the initial results been?
Fabio Antonini: Unlike the previous distributor, whose strategy was chiefly aimed at monobrand stores, we have rejigged Clarks’s distribution model by focusing on the wholesale channel and on a strong presence in multibrand stores. This is enabling us to rapidly extend our territorial footprint, making the brand more accessible and better integrated within the Italian market.
Fabio Antonini, CEO of 3A
FN: How many more Clarks corners are you planning to open in 2026 in Italy? And what about Clarks’s monobrand presence? Are you considering other initiatives like the one with Candiani?
FA: We currently don’t have any plans for new corners or monobrand stores. Our strategy is focused on the wholesale channel and multibrand retailers. The initiative with Candiani was developed as a special project to celebrate Clarks’s 200th anniversary. Over the next few years, we will assess new collaborations and special projects, in line with the brand’s future requirements. FN: In how many multibrand stores is Clarks currently distributed, and how many more are you planning to reach?
FA: In 2025, we have made Clarks available at 433 clients for a total of 619 doors [in Italy]. Next year, we’re expecting to grow the number of clients served by approximately 10%. FN: Clarks recently announced and deployed a strategy designed to boost its position in global e-marketplaces, is it also being implemented in Italy?
FA: Clarks’s new global strategy is set to make the brand even more accessible and reachable by online consumers. Its expanded presence on new global marketplaces is making Clarks easier to access in Italy too, strengthening its online presence and making it easier for consumers to buy. FN: What revenue result did 3A reach in fiscal 2024, how much did it grow by, and what is your forecast for 2025?
FA: In 2024, 3A generated a revenue of approximately €110.3 million, up 4.84% over the €105.2 million recorded in 2023. We’re expecting to grow at a similar rate in 2025.
Clarks
FN: Have there been new entries or other changes within 3A’s brand portfolio?
FA: Yes, there have been changes. Our portfolio includes underwear by Nike, Jordan, Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger, as well as footwear and other products by Clarks, Converse Shoes, Nike Swim, Nike, Jordan, Converse Apparel Kids, Lacoste Kids, Huggies Apparel and Crep Protect.
We’re pursuing a strategy aimed at introducing new lines with a distribution exclusive, to further enrich our portfolio also in terms of brand quality. Some new lines will feature as early as spring 2026.
Brand background
Clarks was founded in Street, Somerset, in 1825, when Cyrus Clark opened a tannery with his brother James. It began shoemaking by using leather offcuts to create slippers. In 1950, Clarks created the revolutionary Desert Boot shoes. Since then, Clarks has built an archive of over 22,000 models that have been worn across generations all over the world.
In fiscal 2024, Clarks’s parent company C&J Clark Ltd reported a revenue drop of 9.4%, to £901.3 million (approximately €1.07 billion), and a pre-tax loss of £39.3 million. This led the company to overhaul the Clarks brand, cutting overheads, modifying the marketing approach, and repositioning the range. The brand’s retail strategy too has been reappraised, streamlining the store fleet and developing initiatives like the Milanese pop-up store.
Clarks, in typically innovative fashion, is also expanding its online presence with several new launches on global e-tailers like Shein, Walmart, Target, Secret Sales and TikTok Shop. In the UK, Clarks has recently been introduced on Shein and Secret Sales, while in Europe it will be available at Secret Sales Netherlands and Dress for Less later this year. In the Americas, it has been featured on eBay for the last five years, and has recently reached Shop Simon, Shein and Walmart, while it will be available on Target this month.
Clarks has recently returned to Tottenham Court Road in London, with a new retail concept – Clarks
Clarks is also aiming to consolidate its presence on TikTok Shop. It launched on the Chinese social shopping channel in Singapore and Malaysia last year, and this year it has reached the UK and the Americas, with Europe set to follow in 2026. This expansion drive follows the September announcement of the first Clarks-owned digital marketplace, which is set to be launched in the UK in early 2026.
Candiani is an Italian family company founded in 1938 and based in Robecchetto con Induno, near Milan, in the Ticino Park Nature Reserve. Besides owning the store in piazza Mentana in Milan, with the Candiani Custom micro-factory for bespoke jeans, Candiani owns among others the patent for Coreva, the first and only biodegradable and compostable stretch denim available on the market.
Another creative director departure at a major brand is shaking up the fashion industry. It is now the turn of Austrian designer Norbert Stumpfl to leave Brioni. The label has just confirmed the end of its collaboration with the designer in a statement. Stumpfl had designed Brioni’s collections for the past seven years.
The fashion house founded in 1945, which in 1952 became the first menswear brand to stage a fashion show (in Florence’s legendary Sala Bianca), has expressed its “deep gratitude for the contribution he has made over the years. During his tenure at Brioni, Norbert interpreted with precision the concepts of lightness and discretion, contributing to the evolution of the men’s wardrobe with a modern approach that pays homage to tradition,” Brioni said.
Federico Arrigoni, CEO of Brioni, said, “Our journey continues, and the Maison will continue to consolidate its tradition- perfection of craftsmanship, exceptional materials, and innovation in tailoring techniques- to create true masterpieces, from formalwear to leisurewear and accessories. Brioni pursues its mission of defining the contemporary codes of Italian elegance, while elevating its mastery of high tailoring and bespoke craftsmanship for those who lead and accept nothing but the exceptional.”
Since 2011, Brioni has been part of the Paris-based French luxury group Kering. From 2018 until his departure, the brand’s collections were designed by Norbert Stumpfl, the acclaimed Austrian menswear couturier, celebrated for his blend of impeccable tailoring and cutting-edge fabrics- among his creations were dinner jackets woven with 24-carat gold threads and enzyme-treated silk-linen blends with a soft, distinctive handle. During his tenure, Brioni also expanded masterfully into womenswear, expressing discreet luxury with rare aplomb.
A pinnacle of Roman sartorial luxury, the Italian label marked its 80th anniversary in late November with an exhibition of its superb tailoring and a gala dinner at the Chiostro del Bramante in Rome.
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An Hermes handbag that once belonged to Jane Birkin was sold for $2.86 million (2.45 million euros) at auction in Abu Dhabi on Friday, just months after the record-breaking sale of her first bag from the French brand, Sotheby’s said.
Jane Birkin with one of her signature Hermes bags – Sotheby’s
Hermes first created the design for the British singer and actress in 1984 and it has gone on to become a modern and highly prized classic, sought by fashionistas the world over. The first prototype was sold for 8.58 million euros ($10 million) at a Sotheby’s auction in Paris in July, smashing previous price records for a handbag.
The one sold on Friday was a ‘Birkin Voyageur,’ which was gifted to the former wife of French singing legend Serge Gainsbourg in 2003. The final sale price was around six times times higher than the estimated price range of $230,000-$430,000 given before the sale.
“Jane Birkin’s handbag legacy continues to captivate collectors,” Sotheby’s said in a statement sent to AFP, adding that bidding took place over 11 minutes between six collectors. The new owner was a phone buyer and has not been identified.
The handbag was one of four owned by the late celebrity, who used to sell them to raise money for charitable causes. It has a handwritten inscription in French inside from Birkin that reads: “My Birkin bag, my globetrotting companion.”
A third Hermes bag owned by Birkin is set to go under the hammer on December 15 at the Hotel Drouot auction house in Paris. It was entrusted by the late star to her friend and biographer Gabrielle Crawford, who is selling it to help fund the future Jane Birkin Foundation, Drouot said in a statement.
Produced in very limited numbers, the modern Birkin bag manufactured by Hermes has maintained an aura of exclusivity and is beloved by celebrities such as the Kardashians, Jennifer Lopez, and Victoria Beckham. The most expensive fashion item ever sold at auction was a pair of ruby red slippers worn by actor Judy Garland from The Wizard of Oz in 1939, which sold for $32.5 million in 2024 in Dallas, Texas, according to Sotheby’s.