En la pintoresca región de la Toscana, donde los tonos dorados del otoño besaban los viñedos y las calles históricas, se desarrolló el siguiente capítulo de “A Father and Son Tale FW23” para Paul&Shark. Pierce Brosnan, personificación del estilo atemporal, y su hijo artístico, Paris, se embarcaron en un viaje que trascendió la moda y se aventuró en el corazón de los lazos familiares.

Bajo la perspicaz lente de Giampaolo Sgura, el fotógrafo de renombre mundial, y con el diseño del ícono de la moda Anna Dello Russo, la campaña cobró vida con una narrativa que celebraba la esencia de la familia, la herencia y la moda impecable.

La campaña comenzó con el icónico Pierce Brosnan, símbolo de sofisticación, recorriendo las encantadoras calles de la Toscana en un automóvil antiguo. Envuelto en un lujoso jersey azul de punto acanalado de la colección FW23, exudaba un aura de elegancia natural que sólo un hombre de su estatura podía transmitir.

A su lado estaba París, portadora de la antorcha de una nueva generación de estilo y creatividad. Envuelto en prendas de abrigo acolchadas y capas de cuello alto, encarnaba la esencia moderna de Paul&Shark. La interacción de generaciones fue evidente, cada una complementándose entre sí en una hermosa armonía de moda y familia.

En medio de la belleza natural de la Toscana, la familia Brosnan se deleitaba con los placeres sencillos. Colocaron mantas a cuadros sobre el césped, abrazando la serenidad de la naturaleza. Jugando a las cartas, vistiendo suéteres de punto grueso y camisas azul pálido, su alegría y unión irradiaban a través de la lente, capturando la esencia del amor y la unidad familiar.

A medida que se desarrolló la campaña, se hizo evidente que Paul&Shark era más que una simple marca para la familia Brosnan; era una extensión de sus valores y estilo, entretejida en el tejido de sus vidas. Simbolizaba la herencia que apreciaban, un testimonio de calidad y atemporalidad.

En medio de esta pintoresca historia, la colección FW23 de Paul&Shark brilló. La combinación de diseños clásicos con una estética moderna fue un testimonio del compromiso de la marca con la evolución preservando al mismo tiempo sus raíces. La colección, una obra maestra de la artesanía italiana, se hizo eco del sentimiento del cuento de la familia Brosnan: eterno, clásico y profundamente arraigado en una rica herencia.

Para concluir, la campaña FW23 de Paul&Shark, “A Father and Son Tale”, no solo mostró su excepcional colección sino que también honró la hermosa narrativa de la familia y la moda, una historia que resonó en el mundo, recordando a todos que más allá de los hilos y las telas, la moda es una celebración de la vida y los vínculos que la definen.

Kim Kardashian

Kim Kardashian is the muse of #DolceGabbana and face of the 2023 Campaign

Kim Kardashian  is the muse of  #DolceGabbana  and face of the  #DGSS23 campaign  . Celebrated photography duo Mert&Marcus follows her through the rooms of an 18th-century Italian villa in a series of black-and-white shots, amplifying the sensual elegance, intimacy and understatedness.

Dolce Gabbana |  Duo Mert&Marcus, Kim Kardashian, muse and face of the Women's Spring-Summer 2023 Campaign

Dolce Gabbana | Duo Mert&Marcus, Kim Kardashian, muse and face of the Women’s Spring-Summer 2023 Campaign

The Collection is born from unique reinterpretations of the Dolce&Gabbana archives of the 90s and 2000s: a journey through the   most authentic #DGDNA . Iconic pieces take on new meaning through reinvention. Explore the collection:  https://www.dolcegabbana.com/en/kim-kardashian-ss23/

#CiaoKim #Madeinitaly

GUCCI Fall Winter 2023 Women's Collection Fashion Show

Desfile de moda de la colección femenina Otoño Invierno 2023 de GUCCI

Un nuevo concepto de herencia toma forma en la colección de mujer Otoño Invierno 2023 con siluetas evocadoras coloreadas en tonos eléctricos y enriquecidas con acentos opulentos.

GUCCI Fall Winter 2023 Women's Collection Fashion Show

GUCCI Fall Winter 2023 Women’s Collection Fashion Show

#GucciFW23#MFW  #myluxepoint #luxury #fashion

PRADA LINEA ROSSA FALL/WINTER 2021 SKI CAMPAIGN

Engineered for high-performance sports, geared for metropolitan life – since 1997, Prada Linea Rossa has been inspired by and designed for champions. That encompasses the technicality of each garment, created to excel in all situations and under all conditions, but also the very ideology of Linea Rossa – of not just reaching your goals, but exceeding them.

PRADA LINEA ROSSA FALL/WINTER 2021 SKI CAMPAIGN

PRADA LINEA ROSSA FALL/WINTER 2021 SKI CAMPAIGN

To front the Linea Rossa Fall/Winter 2021 ski campaign, Prada turns to those who reflect this ongoing heritage of excellence – pioneers and champions, free-thinkers who push themselves beyond. For the second time, champion British-American freestyle skier, philanthropist and prominent LGBTQI+ figure Gus Kenworthy features in a Linea Rossa campaign. A figure of excellence across all fields, Kenworthy is as comfortable as an actor and rights activist as he is on the slopes – constantly striving to be the best.

For this ski campaign, Kenworthy is joined by another leading global figure in winter sports – the American snowboarder Julia Marino, gold-medal winner in the 2017 X Games. The first female boarder to win two medals at the same X Games in 17 years, Marino took 15 podium wins across the 2017-18 season.

She has harnessed her renown and visibility to further causes close to her heart: on the women and youth empowerment front, she inspires young women to pursue their dreams, both on and off the slopes, opening up the traditionally male-dominated sport to a new generation of women. Both figures showcase the Fall/Winter 2021 Prada Linea Rossa ski collection – specifically calibrated for winter conditions, streamlined for speed, geared for life.

Captured in still images and a filmic short directed by Matt Pain, Kenworthy and Marino engage in a fierce battle across the slopes, a race between skier and snowboarder on their shared winter terrain. Their competition, however, harks back to the original root of that word – competere, ‘to strive for.’ Not a rivalry, but a sparring match, an urging of one another to push further and achieve. The ethos of champions, the attainment of excellence synonymous with Linea Rossa – a line to cross, to conqueror.

Credits:
Director: Matt Pain
Photographer: Olav Stubberud
Talents: Gus Kenworthy, Julia Marino

#PradaLineaRossa
#PradaFW21
#PradaLineaRossaSki

ASPENX Prada, a limited-edition collection of elevated ski performance

Introducing ASPENX Prada, a limited-edition collection of elevated ski performance wear inspired by the vibrant energy and atmosphere of Aspen. Designed by Prada with Aspen’s ski professionals and artist Paula Crown, the ASPENX Prada collection is comprised of a thoughtfully curated selection of womenswear and menswear intended to optimize performance, comfort, and style in the snow.

Catered to a community of creatives, athletes, and fashion connoisseurs alike, the high-performance line harmoniously blends the technical excellence of Aspen with Prada’s inherent sleekness and world-class craftsmanship to create a statement-making ensemble built for ultimate movement and mobility. The signature graphic – a visual of red, white, and black slashes – was designed by Paula Crown for an ultra-modern and striking appearance.

Catered to a community of creatives, athletes, and fashion connoisseurs alike, the high-performance line harmoniously blends the technical excellence of Aspen with Prada’s world-class craftsmanship; the result is a statement-making ensemble built for ultimate movement and mobility.

“More than a fashion collection, this collaboration is a physical representation of the one-of-a-kind spirit of Aspen just ahead of the destination’s 75th anniversary. Built for uninhibited exploration, the capsule complements ASPENX’s founding vision of new possibilities, and I am beyond pleased to work with such a revered house as Prada on this momentous occasion.”

The collection’s two outerwear styles – The Extreme-Tex Jacket and Extreme-Tex Ski Jacket – feature optimal insulation and waterproof capabilities achieved through their hero fabric, Extreme-Tex, a three-layer fabric researched and developed exclusively by Prada, as well as Graphene® padding designed to regulate body temperature.

The limited-edition ASPENX Prada collection will be exclusively available for sale on ASPENX.com starting December 15 and at the soon-to-be-open ASPENX store in Aspen’s Gondola Plaza beginning December 20.

Paul & Shark announces AW20 campaign: Voyage en Bretagne.

The new Paul&Shark campaign is a tribute to the brand dna: a direct and sincere bond with the sea, the wind and the sails that tame the elements.

Since its origins, Paul & Shark has always signified authenticity, performance, spirit of adventure. The new Paul&Shark Autumn Winter 2020 campaign expresses the brand’s most authentic spirit:

the loyalty to the key element of its imagination, the sea, through an ecosustainable collection, aimed at respecting the environment and reducing the impact on the planet thanks to advanced technologies, innovative green materials of the highest quality and a highly contemporary design, that guarantee unparalleled performance.

 

Brioni introduces its Autumn-Winter 2020 ‘Tailoring Legends’

Brioni introduces its Autumn/Winter 2020 ‘Tailoring Legends’ advertising campaign featuring brand ambassador Brad Pitt.

Lensed in Los Angeles by photographer Mikael Jansson, Pitt is portrayed in black and white images, capturing his laidback and effortless appeal.

The series of portraits stand out with an intimate atmosphere that contrasts with Pitt’s strong personality and brings his iconic sense of style to a selection of Brioni’s finest ready-to-wear and eveningwear options from the Autumn/Winter 2020 Collection.

“I’ve always admired 
Brioni’s elegant and timeless designs. 
The brand embodies creativity, 
quality and excellence.”

– Brad Pitt

Art will always triumph in the end, even during these unprecedented times. Defying the Covid-19 pandemic, Maison Dior presented its haute couture collection for Fall-Winter 2020-2021 in an exclusive film broadcast live on its digital channels. Drawing inspiration from female surrealists, Maria Grazia Chiuri, Creative Director of Dior women’s collections, seized the opportunity to express alternative visions of femininity through the prism of the fashion doll.

Autumn Winter 2020-2021 Haute Couture Collection

“Surrealist images manage to make visible what is in itself invisible. I am interested in mystery and magic, which are also a way of exorcising uncertainty about the future,” says Maria Grazia Chiuri of her Fall-Winter 2020-2021 haute couture collection for Maison Dior. Taking inspiration from the work of artists like Lee Miller, Dora Maar and Jacqueline Lamba, the Italian designer champions less conventional versions of femininity. In their work, these artists transcended the role of “muse”, going beyond its merely aesthetic dimension.

The collection is embarking on a world tour in a magic trunk replicating Maison Dior’s historic address at 30, avenue Montaigne. The pieces are presented on miniature mannequins, a poetic emblem at the heart of the couture universe, which has previously been appropriated by artists such as Cindy Sherman, who featured this near-magical object in one of her first video projects. The fashion doll is also a reference to the Théâtre de la Mode, a roving exhibition of miniature designs by the greatest couturiers of the day, which toured Europe and America just after the Second World War.

This daring presentation represented a challenge for the Dior ateliers, which had to create flawlessly executed pieces on a miniature scale. Every handmade pleat and fold celebrates the beauty of an elegant, precise gesture, which is the very essence of couture.

Many pieces from the Fall-Winter 2020-2021 haute couture collection were inspired by nature, such as those displaying spectacular gradations of red, like a coral reef swaying in the glimmer of the ocean. The luminous, dreamlike hues of paintings by Leonora Carrington and Dorothea Tanning come to life on the designs of Maria Grazia Chiuri. The finale is equally dazzling, with a sumptuous wedding gown reviving one of fashion’s forgotten traditions.

Iconic supermodel Kate Moss is the epitome of ‘Bohemian Glamour’, the inspiration behind our Pre-Fall 2020 collection.

JimmyChoo – Iconic supermodel Kate Moss is the epitome of Bohemian Glamour – PRE-FALL 2020

Explore sandals with unique jewelled embroidery, wedges with contemporary weaving and chic hobo handbags, all reflecting the free-spirited mood of the collection.

If you have any sort of inclination of taste for the best in luxury design, certainly you are familiar with the iconic fashion design brandJimmy Choo – a leading global luxury brand, with an empowered sense of glamour and a playfully daring spirit. Jimmy Choo has, throughout the years, mastered the art of perfectly blending Italian craftsmanship with its fashion design creations.

The brand traces its roots to a bespoke shoemaker named Jimmy Choo, based in the East End of London in the early 1990s, who catered to the global jet set, including Princess Diana. The Jimmy Choo company was founded in 1996, with Mr Choo’s niece, Sandra Choi, who had been heading up design in the East End atelier, coming on board as Creative Director, a position she holds to this day. Mr Choo departed the company in 2001.

Iconic supermodel Kate Moss is the epitome of ‘Bohemian Glamour’, the inspiration behind the Pre-Fall 2020 collection.

The sexy cut, fashionable design, and exceptional Italian craftsmanship struck a chord with a sophisticated clientele, and the first collection enjoyed immediate success. With a goal of creating a global luxury business, Jimmy Choo attracted outside investment and the company embarked on a significant expansion across product categories, channels and geographies.

A pioneer in the art of celebrity dressing, Jimmy Choo was among the first to bring shoes and handbags to Hollywood where the red carpet proved to be the ideal runway for the brand. Today, Jimmy Choo can be seen on style icons from celebrities to royalty, musicians to heads of state.

The brand’s reputation as a celebrity favourite helped to fuel its rapid expansion. Its iconography was further defined by the bold and dramatic advertising portraying glamorous but strong women in towering heels and luxurious handbags, captured by some of the most acclaimed fashion photographers in the world.

Retail development has been integral to the company’s strategy. The first Jimmy Choo store was opened in 1996 on Motcomb Street in London, complementing a distribution in some of the most prestigious multi-brand stores in the world. Two years later, the company expanded to the US, opening two stores in New York City and Beverly Hills. International expansion continued with Jimmy Choo securing locations in the premiere luxury shopping destinations of the world’s most prestigious cities including Sloane Street and Bond Street in London, Avenue Montaigne in Paris, Via Condotti in Rome, Madison Avenue in New York, Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, and Ginza in Tokyo.

Due to the world’s recent state, the Metropolitan Museum of Art had to postpone its blockbuster spring 2020 Costume Institute art exhibition“About Time: Fashion and Duration” Met Galawhich was originally planned to take place on 4th May 2020.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Unraveling Details About Met Galas About Time Fashion and Duration

Met Gala‘s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” was set to explore fashion’s unique ability to time travel, melding clothing styles from different periods together to create ‘new’ ideas, moving in cycles at the same time as moving forward, and ensuring that some styles are considered timeless and ephemeral. Let’s take a look!

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 12

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 9

Left: Suit, Gabrielle Chanel, Spring/Summer 1963; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Jane Holzer, 1977 | Right: Suit, Karl Lagerfeld for the house of Chanel, Spring/Summer 1994; courtesy CHANEL Patrimoine collection, Paris; all garment images © Nicholas Alan Cope, courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 10

Left: Dress, Iris Van Herpen, Fall/Winter 2012–13 Haute Couture; gift of Iris Van Herpen, in honor of Harold Koda, 2016 | Right: Ballgown, Charles James, 1951; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coulson, 1964

While the Met is still closed, the organization decided to share its curated collection of contemporary and historic garments which traces a century and a half of fashion. Scheduled to open to the public on October 29, 2020, the presented work dates as far back as 1870, in honor of the museum’s 150th anniversary.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 1

Left: Dinner dress, Mrs. Arnold; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; gift of Sally Ingalls, 1932 | Right: Ensemble, Comme des Garçons, Fall/Winter 2004–5; courtesy Comme des Garçons

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 2

left: riding jacket, Morin Blossier; gift of Miss Irene Lewisohn, 1937 | Right: ensemble, Nicolas Ghesquière for Louis Vuitton, Spring/Summer 2018; courtesy collection Louis Vuitton

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 3

left: evening dress, Weeks; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; gift of the estate of Mrs. Arthur F. Schermerhorn, 1957 | right: dress, Comme des Garçons, Fall/Winter 2012–13; courtesy Comme des Garçons

Presented entirely with black garments, the Met Gala‘s “About time: fashion and duration” emphasizes the evolving silhouettes and use of secondary detailing. With the collection of pieces ranging from 1870 to the present, curators aim to connect the concept of “duration” with debates about diversity, inclusivity, sustainability, and other ethical issues that will surely express a continuing impact throughout the next decade of luxury fashion. Employing Henri Bergson’s concept of la durée (duration), it will explore how clothes generate temporal associations that conflate past, present, and future. Virginia Woolf will serve as the “ghost narrator” of the exhibition.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 4

left: dress, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Fall/Winter 1984– 85; purchase, friends of the costume institute gifts, 2010 | right: ‘tulip’ evening dress, Charles James; gift of Elizabeth de Cuevas, 2015

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 5left: ensemble, Viktor & Rolf, Spring/Summer 2005; on loan from the central museum, Utrecht | right: evening dress, Madeleine Vionnet, 1939; gift of Mrs Harrison Williams, 1952

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 6

left: afternoon dress, American, ca. 1877; gift of Theodore Fischer Ells, 1975 | right: ‘bumster’ skirt, Alexander McQueen, Fall/Winter 1995–96, edition 2010; courtesy Alexander McQueen

A timeline of 120 garments will unfold in two adjacent galleries fabricated as enormous clock faces and organized around the principle of sixty minutes of fashion. Each “minute” will feature a pair of garments—the primary work representing the linear nature of fashion and the secondary work its cyclical character. Each pair will be connected through shape, motif, material, pattern, technique, or decoration. For example, a black silk faille princess-line dress from the late 1870s will be paired with an Alexander McQueen “bumster” skirt from 1995.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 7left: evening dress, probably American, ca. 1928; gift of Richard Martin and Harold Koda, 1992 | right: dress, John Galliano, Spring/Summer 1997, edition 2008; gift of John Galliano, 2012

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 8

left: evening jacket, Elsa Schiaparelli, winter 1938–39; gift of Mrs. Pauline potter, 1950 | right: ‘broken mirrors’ ensemble, Yves Saint Laurent, Fall/Winter 1978–79; courtesy Musée Yves Saint Laurent Paris © Yves Saint Laurent

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 11

All of the primary garments will be black, to emphasize their evolving silhouettes, and the second will be either black or white, to underscore their mutually reinforcing associations. The exhibition will conclude with a small selection of garments from 2020 that links the concept of duration to debates about diversity, inclusivity, sustainability, traceability, transparency, longevity, collaboration, and other ethical issues germane to the next decade of fashion. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalog.

Still yet to be seen is the theatrical design of the gallery space, which is scheduled to be unveiled this fall.

“Fashion is indelibly connected to time. It not only reflects and represents the spirit of the times, but it also changes and develops with the times, serving as an especially sensitive and accurate timepiece. Through a series of chronologies, the exhibition will use the concept of duration to analyze the temporal twists and turns of fashion history.” – Andrew Bolton, the Wendy Yu curator in charge of the Met Gala‘s costume institute

Private Collection Boca do Lobo Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” bl private collection 750