Our Favourite Shows From Milan Fashion Week
Our Favourite Shows From Milan Fashion Week
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Our Favourite Shows From Milan Fashion Week

As usual, Milan Fashion Week delivered its signature mix of heritage and spectacle this season, complete with a few headline-worthy twists. From Gucci’s cinematic turn to Louise Trotter’s much-anticipated Bottega debut – and a truly meta front-row moment featuring Anna Wintour and Meryl Streep’s Miranda Priestly – these were the highlights…
Images: Bottega Veneta; Shutterstock; Prada; Dolce & Gabbana

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Prada

Prada

Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons delivered a collection that was equal parts sharp and subversive. Tailored jackets came layered over sheer dresses, while jolts of lilac and crimson broke up the house’s signature neutrals. Accessories were front and centre, with sculptural bags already tipped for cult status and outerwear oscillating between precise lines and fluid layers.

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Prada

The Attico

Gilda Ambrosio and Giorgia Tordini pushed their signature contrasts further this season with sharp trench coats and biker jackets offset by lace slips and sheer gowns. Cork wedge-heels made their debut too, alongside powerfully loose tailoring, plus a standout feather-trimmed, see-through dress.

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The Attico
Dolce & Gabbana

Dolce & Gabbana

The cultural headline of the week belonged to Dolce & Gabbana, with Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci reprising their The Devil Wears Prada roles on the front row – and Streep photographed beside Anna Wintour for a truly meta moment. On the runway, pyjama dressing was reimagined with embroidered sets, tuxedo jackets and sheer layers over lingerie. Romantic slips and lace detailing ensured the house’s signatures were never far from view, even amid all the theatre.

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Dolce & Gabbana

Giorgio Armani

Staged at his Milan palazzo, Giorgio  Armani’s show embodied the now late-designer’s signature refined glamour. Deep velvets and midnight blues ran through dresses and tailoring, a reminder of his singular ability to merge structure with softness. Amid the week’s noise, the quiet grandeur felt all the more powerful – an elegant lesson in timeless sophistication.

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Armani
Armani

Bottega Veneta

Louise Trotter’s debut was one of the week’s most anticipated moments and it didn’t disappoint. Drawing on her tailoring background and time at Lacoste, she reimagined Bottega’s leather codes through oversized trenches, glossy separates and sculptural new bags. Fringing – rendered in unexpected fibreglass – added drama, making the collection both a nod to the house’s heritage and a confident step into new territory.

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Bottega Veneta; Shutterstock

Jil Sander

Minimalism came with impact at Jil Sander, as Lucie and Luke Meier refined their understated vision. Clean lines and neutral tones were elevated by sculptural silhouettes and subtle metallic finishes. Fringing and long-line shapes offered movement, turning quiet luxury into something quietly striking.

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Jil Sander

Ferragamo

Modern glamour defined Maximilian Davis’s Ferragamo. A rich palette of bronze, gold and plum tones framed slip dresses and sharply tailored suiting, offering polish with sensuality. Sharp silhouettes and fluid metallic fabrics only further reinforced his ability to combine heritage with a contemporary edge.

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Ferragamo
Gucci

Gucci

Choosing cinema over the runway, Gucci’s new creative chief Demna Gvasalia premiered a short film directed by Spike Jonze and Halina Reijn, with Demi Moore fronting a cast that also included Chloë Sevigny, Jodie Turner-Smith and Paul Mescal. Metallic tailoring and statement outerwear set the tone for the new collection but the bigger story was the shift in format. This was fashion framed as narrative – designed to resonate long after its first viewing.

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Gucci

Fendi

Kim Jones mined the 1970s for inspiration this season, leaning into earthy tones of rust, khaki and chocolate. Structured tailoring was offset by draped skirts and knitwear, while cobalt and red accents brought a modern lift. It was an assured exercise in balance – workwear grounded in sensuality.

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Fendi

Versace

Donatella’s creative heir Dario Vitale turned up the energy with metallics, leather tailoring and bold bursts of cobalt and lime – a lot of which harkened back to Gianni classics from the 90s. Power shoulders and body-conscious dresses captured the brand’s unapologetic DNA, while confident minis and sharp outerwear gave the collection modern punch.

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Versace

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