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HUNTER SCHAFER by Myles Kalus (@photomyles) | Milan Fashion Week 2020
#hunter schafer#milan fashion week#mfw2020#fashion week#milan#italy#lgbt#lgbtq#euphoria#zendaya#myedit#jules vaughn#jules#rue#rue x jules#rue bennett#euphoria cast#alexa demie#sydney sweeney#maude apatow#jacob elordi#barbie ferreira#storm reid#angus cloud
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Madelaine at Vogue Italiaâs RE-GENERATION Boss Party; February 21st, 2020
#madelaine petsch#madelainepetschedit#riverdalecentral#milan fashion week#mfw2020#vogue italia#my gifs#gif set
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emporio armani fall 2020 rtw
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Olivia Palermo at MFW20
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HELENA BORDON PER PRADAÂ
MILANO FASHION WEEK 2020FASHIO
#women's fashion#fashionphotography#fashion#helena bordon#fashionblogger#blogger#fashionstyle#fashionstreet#Streetwear#streetphoto#street#pradamilano#mfw2020#mfwreporter#mfw#streetphotographer#streetphotointernational
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A/W 2020 Fashion Month: Before Vogue Went Blank
Hi to anyone reading,
Iâm sorry this post is so late! I really have no excuse apart from all my mental energy being taken up by shooting and editing my Euphoria lookbook up until now and me being too much of a lazy, nap-loving twat to face the mammoth task of a fashion month review; honestly, by the time itâs done, itâs like a dissertation-level amount of characters, so letâs say the final push to get this out is in sympathy with all my 3rd year friends I started uni with finishing their ACTUAL dissertations.

Things have got scary since I originally started saving the photos for this post, and the world has been turned upside down. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the likes of which have not been seen since the Spanish Flu, Italian Vogueâs April cover was blank. As Iâm writing this, 26,000+ people have died of coronavirus in Italy, the worst affected country behind the U.S in terms of sheer numbers ( though quick update: as I post this, Iâm pretty sure our incompetent prick of a PM has made sure weâre up there too). Proportionally, the actual death rate is even higher, along with a handful of other European countries. There have been some complaints made about the cover and itâs supposed âlack of imaginationâ; all I know is that in a country whose death toll accounts for 10% of worldwide coronavirus deaths, something of a visual silence feels appropriate.Â
That being said, for me, writing is one of the only things giving me a sense of purpose right now. Yeah, surprise surprise, working in a grocery store isnât all that fulfilling. Who wouldâve thought it? So what better time to reflect on a time when all the rich people of the world were going about their lives as usual and sitting front row at fashion week rather than crying on Instagram live to their millions of followers about how trapped they feel in their 10 bedroom mansions.
Iâve got to say, this yearâs A/W offerings were a lot better than I expected, mostly due to the fact that Iâm not generally a big fan of winter fashion; itâs hard to be disappointed given my preconceptions! Thereâs only so many knits and coats and jeans you can see before it begins to get a bit tiring, and I expected that to be reflected in the presentations. Fortunately, even the brands which are known for their bohemian, Coachella-esque collections generally managed to translate that into something recognisable and consistent on the runway whilst actually being weather appropriate. Of course, there were a few disappointments-Iâm sure if I say one of them begins with D, you can guess which brand Iâm talking about-but that was more than made up for by the standouts. Gucci in particular was my 2013 Tumblr wet dream and the Moschino show was what I can only describe as a live continuation of Sofia Coppolaâs Marie Antoinette, though Iâll stop with my praise there and wait til I get to actually reviewing before I go overboard with kissing Alessandro Micheleâs ass. And on that note, in chronological order, Iâll get one with the reviews! First up, Acne:






Continuing on a winning streak when it comes to catering to my personal preferences (if someone tries to tell me designers donât care about my personal preferences Iâm going to whack out that âjust found out the world doesnât revolve around me, shocked and upsetâ Marina Diamandis tweet), Acne once again channels futuristic hippy commune living in a dystopian wasteland. I know, those are very specific personal preferences
I love the shredded hems and the burnt velvet, the rawness of it all, and the baroque/your-nanâs-wallpaper patterns are actually a surprisingly nice touch. I imagine if Giselle from Enchanted had to make her dresses out of a thrifty gothâs curtains rather than an upper-middle-class New Yorkerâs, theyâd look something like this collection. Youâve even got the odd bit of classic fresh Scandi tailoring in there with the oversized coats and blazers which holds it back from being a bit TOO flea market. Plus, the renaissance painting detailing on the black leather-look coat is a stunning detail as well; Iâm so glad it seems this trend is here to stay, why wouldnât I want random nude bodies all over my clothes?Â
As for the styling, I canât get enough of the tousled hair. As an eternally tired person who can't be arsed to pick up a brush most of the time, I feel represented. Along with the outfits, it says âIâm an art student/transient painter in the 70s living in a city loft who smokes a lot of weed and does acid on the regularâ and that is a life worth manifesting.












Alberta Ferretti was dreamy, and a perfect example of how to translate the bohemian aesthetic of their S/S show to A/W. Somehow despite the furs, ruffles (pussy-bows under tailored jackets and knits/generally heavier pieces always looks really chic imo), tulle, metallic tapestry style prints and chunky jewellery, it all still looks very effortless, like a natural continuation of what we saw last summer; the typically masculine structure of the oversized suits with the ornate patterns and the accessories lends to the careful navigation along the line where maximalism and minimalism meet, the looks as practical as they are decorative. Picture it: you work some high-flying, powerful job in the city, commute on a motor cycle and roll up in one of these suit sets. This collection is for the edgy businesswoman who is completely comfortable telling all the twattish males she works with where to stick it and I want to be her.Â
The evening gowns are, of course, stunning too. In this analogy where I am a powerful businesswoman and not a pushover who works at a grocery store right now and only beefs with rude customers, I would be wearing one of them to the boujie work Christmas party. The ruffled dresses remind me of something Valentino would put out with the colour palette and the ruffles, and whilst weâre on the topic of colour palettes, this one is beautiful. The lilac and hot pink is SO right.






Though predictable, Alessandra Rich is just as much of a treat as usual, the first brand youâd go to if you were styling a throwback it-girl, Chanel Oberlin in Scream Queens if it took place 30 years earlier. Reminiscent of an amalgamation of vintage Chanel and Versace, there are so many cute details I love here, from the white tights with the black heels and the double breasted blazers to the gold chainlink belts and the pearls. The tartan suits with the shoulder padding are very Heathers, the prints the best of your mumâs 80s wardrobe, and nobody else out there is doing bows as well as this; these are the outfits that prissy bitch wears in the cartoons of my childhood that turn out to actually be quite good fashion inspo 15 years later, Trixie Tang from Fairly Odd Parents Iâm looking at you.Â
This girl was the blueprint.Â
I think someone like Lilly Collins or Daphne Groeneveld would be an ideal fit for any of these looks, or Lana Del Rey if she wanted to stop serving us middle-aged suburban soccer mom and took us back to those H&M ad campaign days. Lana stans please donât come for me for saying that, I am one of you; I say this because I love her. Itâs all altruistic.Â










Whilst I admittedly didnât love it as much as last summerâs, I really enjoyed the Alexander McQueen collection too, plus I had a better idea of what to expect this time round; no, weâre not gonna get a repeat of the Platoâs Atlantis show but we do always get some beautiful pieces. Again, like with Alberta Ferretti, this seems like a natural continuation of what we saw in the summer, just with adjustments made for the colder, darker, and altogether moodier months. A/W being the gothier older sister of S/S, it seems right that a lot of the looks turn their back on the ethereal, almost fairy-like feel of what we saw before and embrace the vampier side, reds and blacks (the ultimate Bratz Rock Angels colour combination), plenty of dramatic structures and formidable suit sets. Itâs punk but itâs classy, and even with the lighter pieces, weâve got the grunge inspired harnesses on top to contrast with the elegance and effectively, toughen the whole look up, something Gucci does well too.Â
The patterned suits with the clunky boots in particular are very cool and I need a gun metal grey heart detailing harness, but undoubtedly the MOMENT of this collection is Adut Akech in what appears to be a silver chainmail dress. She looks like an Amazonian goddess, and whilst I could never dream of pulling something like that off myself, I could happily admire her in it for hours.





There wasnât much to get excited about at Altuzarra. The collection was very elegant for sure and the feathered belts are cute but it was all quite pedestrian and nothing new-the only detail I really like is the cut out on the second dress from the left, 3rd row down.
As for Anna Sui:





Iâm not altogether sure why I wanted to review it. A lot of the outfits as a whole are a bit messy, and not in that avant-garde, expensive-looking Margiela kind of way, just in a âhow many fabrics can we possibly get on this modelâ kind of way. Plus, the styling seems weirdly outdated-a lot of the jewellery looks like the kind of thing youâd see if you searched âgothic chokerâ on Ebay and ordered the results from low to high, and the makeup and hair in particular is very 2012 Tumblr fashion blogger. Backcombed hair and red lipstick? Weâve got a Zoella thumbnail on our hands.
When the collection did go down the bohemian route though (and when that route wasnât a failed attempt at what Etro does a lot better), there were a few nice pieces and prints. I mean you really canât go wrong with a teal fur trimmed coat.





Ashish, on the other hand, took their aesthetic from a similar era and did it a lot more creatively and kookily; this collection looks a lot more deserving of being on a runway. The prints are so loud and costume-y that at times the garments risk looking like something youâd wear at a decades themed dress up party, but theyâre saved by understated and much more commercial silhouettes, plus some gorgeous hair and make up. On the whole, very groovy, unintentional disco queen, despite the few risks that didnât quite pay off.
Next is a brand I always look forward to. In the words of Myrtle Snow:

















BALENCIAGA!
Seriously though, if any brand knows how to blend costume and high fashion, itâs them. They take over-the-top, almost absurd silhouettes and turn them into theatre. This year weâre taking it in the direction of Phantom of the Opera, I guess? Dracula? The Woman in Black? An off-broadway production of Harry Potter where Snape is the protagonist? Whatever the direction of the collection is, I live for the dramatics of it all. Demna Gvasalia got these models walkinâ down the runway like theyâre members of the Volutri, which is a reference you should all understand given the renaissance Twilight is having online atm.
Straight off the bat, I adore the staging, and all the models are exquisite-the theme of the show was climate change, and I always love when thereâs a story behind the presentation of the clothes. I canât imagine how amazing this must have been to witness in person, though Iâm guessing equal parts mystical and intimidating. There are so many things I love here: billowing coats, cinched in waists, the pattens that are sprinkled sparingly in amongst the black, and the bloody shoulder pads that almost run PARALLEL to the modelâs necks. This is really a collection that Myrtle Snow would be proud of and brb whilst I get rid of my padlock necklaces in favour of putting whatever meagre amount I can get for them on Depop towards a Balenciaga padlock belt (as if, lol, I donât even think selling my soul would cover it).











And then thereâs Balmain, which isnât always the fashion criticâs favourite, but which I do tend to like.Â
I mean there are some really good takeaways here-though the 80s inspired suit, as wearable as they are, can get a little repetitive, they are staples which here seem to pave the way for Olivier Rousteing to try something new for the brand. The moulded breast plates (reminiscent of the Tom Ford one Zendaya wore though Iâm not sure which came first!), for example, along with the Matador-style capes and the flowing silk dresses are the most glamorous incarnation of Lara Croft one can possibly imagine, probably just as equally suited for a Roman goddess as they are for an Assassins Creed style action heroine. And yes, I am aware of the fact that Tomb Raider and Assassins Creed are two separate games, okay! Â I just donât know enough about the visuals of either to firmly plant this collection in the camp of either one, so Iâm going down the crossover route with it!
Not to say there werenât any bad choices-I omitted a good portion of the looks that were shown; there were definitely pieces that I found to be a little tacky, particularly a recurring chain print which has got to be one of my least favourite patterns out there. Overall, though, itâs gonna be the richly coloured art-deco prints, the wet-look boots and the gem-encrusted scorpion brooch which stick with me, so Iâll let it slide.Â








Bottega Veneta was very meh; even of the looks I picked out, there are a lot Iâm now looking back at and wishing I hadnât included. Some of the menâs pieces are nice, sure, and I feel like one of those vaguely sick, victorian ghost looking male celebrities everyone obsesses over (TimothĂ©e Chalamet and Dane DeHaan Iâm looking at you) would make those suits on the second row look fine af, but itâs mostly the womenswear that Iâm here for and on this occasion it wasnât great. A couple of the coats are nice and thatâs about it. Like I really had to act as if the tassels werenât there on a lot of the clothes and go from there because I really donât like them in this context and if I was to veto looks purely on one of the garments having tassels, thereâd be nothing to show or reference when giving my opinion on the show. They were EVERYWHERE. In a summer collection, done right, they can be a nice detail but here they just feel unnecessary and if Iâm being honest, are quite ugly.Â






Thank god for Brock taking the sour Bottega Veneta tassel taste out of my mouth. Never a let down. Literally, everything they put out sends me into a daze of imagining Iâm in some romantic drama wearing one of the pieces, in a manâs idea of âno makeupâ, running round in a field looking forlorn and windswept because my ghostly lover has-
Okay, you get the picture. Iâve never read Wuthering Heights, but it goes something like that, right? If not, lets just say envisioning myself in any of these catapults me straight into some period drama where Iâm born into wealth and sit by my mansion window looking sad all the time and writing poetry and lusting over some stuffy upper-class man I canât have and who is probably played by Colin Firth because Iâm pretty sure thatâs what happens in most of them (about to enrage my future English lit undergraduate sister with that line).
Nobody does modest, muted sexy to such a masterful degree. I mean, when Maison Marigela did face veils I was just mildly afraid, but here theyâre subtle enough that theyâre quite beautiful and almost other-worldly, acting as some kind of boundary between this world and the past that Brock aims to recapture through its designs-the red lip popping out from underneath is a perfect touch too. I donât like it AS much as the summer collection but I would say thatâs solely on the basis of the more autumn/winter appropriate colour scheme and the heavier fits, which is just a personal preference. I mean, Iâm usually not a fan of empire waistlines at all and Brock even manages to make that work.













Burberry this season was a real mixed bag, mostly due to the styling. There are some really gorgeous, London back alley vintage shop looking pieces, especially the 70s style coats, reminiscent of outerwear a slimy record exec would've worn back in the day repurposed by someone like Alexa Chung or Zoe Kravitz or whichever effortlessly cool woman it is we all want to be-also the private boyâs school rugby gear looking shit is classic Burberry and Iâm a fan of that, even though itâs not the most inventive or exciting. I just donât get why there had to be SO much ill-fitting plaid over ill-fitting plaid. Again, like with Bottega Veneta, I thought the menswear was a lot stronger; whilst I wasnât really wowed by anything, it seemed a lot less forced, whereas a few of the womenswear looks gave me the vibe of a design team desperately grasping onto some ill-conceived ideas of street style and relevancy.Â









The design team at Carolina Herrera for example, know their niche. They never try to be something theyâre not, always sublimely preppy and pretty and predictable-when it comes to target market, the bag is reliably secured. Laid- back princess dresses never get old for those constantly âsummeringâ in one expensive coastal town or another, for the rich American moms attending charity galas and the Spencer Hastings and Blair Waldorfs of the world; women with glossy hair and fresh faces who act as if they woke up looking like that polished but are actually anal as hell and take 2 hours to get ready and would NEVER, I repeat NEVER, shit in a public toilet.Â
Yes, I managed to worm toilet habits into a review of a Carolina Herrera collection. Iâm sorry. Enough with the pearl clutching.Â
Next is Celine:

















I mean, when there are THIS many looks, itâs hard not to find something you like, and though VERY predictable and verging on lazy when youâre putting out the same shit every collection, Celineâs aesthetic is so similar to my own ideal style, itâs hard to be mad at it. That being said, a lot of the pieces, as per usual, came across as cheap YSL knock offs; the overall outfits are cute, but the more you look at the details-it particularly pained me to include a metal bow belt and an ill-fitting velvet skater skirt but I liked the rest of the outfits-the worse it gets. Please, PLEASE someone drive it home to Hedi Slimane, Iâm begging you: QUALITY NOT QUANTITY. I get what heâs going for, 70s hipster Jane Birkin is a vision I can very much get behind, but not when it seems to be so rushed.
With the menâs looks, you can get away with it a lot more; when so much of menswear is so plain and unchanging, the slightest hint of Mick Jagger is enough to make a outfit edgy. But even then, I still feel like weâre seeing a load of variations of the same outfit. There are always some pieces that catch my eye, this time round the capes and the velvet blazers, and I would wear most of these things, sure, however I donât think the combinations SHOULD necessarily look like something Iâd personally put together; a runway collection is supposed to be aspirational and cutting edge, not pedestrian (entirely intentional self-drag, lol). Also, side note, the lack of diversity really bothered me. 111 looks and not one of these models has a body type that is naturally achievable for most people. Itâs 2020 for fuckâs sake. Iâm tired.
SO, letâs liven things up a bit with the Central Saint Martins collection, a breath of fresh air in terms of diversity (though a few more plus-size models would be nice):
















As a former University of London student, I hate to heap praise upon them. If youâve studied in London as well, youâll know CSM students are ANNOYING. I mean, Iâm sure theyâre lovely as individuals but you canât fully understand the meaning of the word pretentious until youâve seen a group of them at a Uniqlo Tate Late. That being said, they are very good at what they do and Iâm so glad that Vogue Runway includes them; this is what Off-White thinks it is, and really it makes sense that a bunch of current fashion students are able to come together to present one of the most experimental and forward-thinking shows of this season.Â
And letâs talk about the RANGE. From catsuits worthy of comic book heroes to  dresses Twiggy wouldâve worn in a 1960s editorial, every subgenre of fashion has been fully delved into here. Whilst weâve got the adrogyny of the suits and suspenders combo and kitschy gender-bending co-ords David Bowie would be proud of, at the other end of the scale weâve also got models walking down the runway dressed like wood nymphs or some other kind of siren-like creatures. Thereâs looks that wouldnât be out of place in a Gucci or Come Des Garcons collection but at that same time would be equally at home in a Berlin techno club.Â
Honestly, credit where creditâs due-it was a really interesting show and I wouldnât expect anything less.






Chanel was quite literally the polar opposite of the CSM show.Â
Very blah.Â
Itâs crazy because before you properly get INTO fashion, Chanel is like the epitome of style. And then you do, and you see the runway shows get lazier and lazier (with some exceptions) every year, and you realise that same prestige that had you aware of Chanel at the age of 7 or 8 is literally all thatâs keeping the brand going at this point. Iâm not saying the collection is flat out ugly, a lot of itâs cute, but youâre CHANEL for fuckâs sake. Yeah, I like the crucifixes but SCALLOPED HEMS!? No. I do NOT recall travelling back in time to witness Primarkâs Spring 2013 collection on the runway and I am NOT having it.





Itâs not at all surprising that a lot of the time newer brands Charlotte Knowles (above) tend to be more interesting than those more established-and yes that was a Chanel indirect if the transition wasnât obvious.
With no room to rest on laurels or reputation, everything has to be bolder and smarter and more distinctive and most importantly, has to appeal to its target market with the fervour of an L.A sign spinner. I only found out about Charlotte Knowles because of a Vogue article citing her as Bella Hadidâs new favourite brand to wear, and once I saw the collection, it was clear why; daringly modern, slick, and edgy is both her street style (say what you want about her as a model but her outfit game is unbeaten) and Knowlesâ USP to a T. If Dion Lee, Off-White, GCDS and Acne had an orgy, this would be the result, and that is a GOOD compliment.
Next, Chloe:








Not a huge amount to say, to be honest. Low-key, wearable, and cute. Like Emma Robertsâ Nancy Drew if she did an autumn exchange program at the Sorbonne and studied art history, libraries and coffee shops on the weekdays and galleries and protests at the weekend. On reflection, that definitely makes this collection sound more exciting than it is but there are some effortlessly beautiful pieces here. The 4th row in particular is full of stand outs-the vest with the watercolour faces on with the shirt underneath is perfection, and the burgundy suit with the saffron ruffled collar peeking out from underneath is adorable and not at all reminiscent of the Ronald McDonald inspired nightmare that any combination of red and yellow tones should theoretically be.






As for Christian Siriano, I see why people hate it, I really do. I understand that it seems kinda unfair to have it show the same week as Brock and Rodarte and Oscar de La Renta. Weâre talking 2 very different kinds of quality here. BUT, at pure face value, his clothes are FUN, plus Coco Rocha will always have a special place in my heart as someone who lived on The Face and Americaâs Next Top Model and every show that could possibly give me an unhealthy body image ever.
Like are you telling me you wouldnât wear these dresses to a party!? Live a little. They just need tailoring...which ideally would be done BEFORE the modelâs walking down the runway in it but...you know...canât have it all.








Christopher Kane is a show I always look forward to.
I would say his designs are the only thing that make geometry look fun but Iâm going to expose myself and admit that would be a lie because I actually found geometry really fun. Trigonometry was my shit, lol.
He is a designer who perfectly demonstrates that juggling interseasonal consistency and taking risks can be done. Thereâs always something DIFFERENT about his collections, fresh and subtly experimental. There are occasionally a few misses, sure, but Iâd rather that than for a brand to keep playing safe, plus he never goes too far in the opposite direction either; no going weird for the sake of weird. I donât like it AS much as the summer collection but itâs mostly because of the more muted, autumn/winter appropriate colour palette.


Comme Des Garçons? Too weird?
Never.
Honestly when it comes to a CDG collection, I have to really shift my perspective to appreciate it. Iâm not looking at fashion presentation, Iâm looking at a moving piece of experimental art. I know, itâs a stretch. But you know youâll never be bored by one of their shows. Not gonna lie, this specific collection crossed the line into plain ugly a couple of times for me. We had padding so extravagant it looked like several models were walking round with Ikea pillows stuck to their chest and headdresses reminiscent of the kidsâ game Headbandz. In amongst that though, we did get some gorgeous veils like the ones seen above and the shoes and socks combo is actually quite wearable.






Iâd say Dilara Findikoglu is the cut-off point after which things get a little too avant-garde for my personal taste, and it hovers over that cut-off point flawlessly; despite the other-worldly elements of her collections, they remain somewhat grounded by nods towards conventional fashion that allow the beauty, be it inner or outer, of the wearer to shine through. Comme Des Garcons garments undeniably have character but they tend to swallow up any trace of the individual underneath, whereas the character of Dilara Findikoglu garments seamlessly merges with the wearer and in turn elevates both to something transcendent and ethereal. If the Pussycat Dolls got transported into a rugged, post-apocalyptic future, theyâd scrape together these outfits to perform in, I know it; the energy of the collection, with the body jewellery and the frayed cut outs and the chalk white faces, is very warrior princess, just as raw and intimidating as it is hot as fuck, and I want that energy in my life. Along with a Dilara belt, of course. I would wear her name like a badge of honour anytime she wants. Dilara, pls pls let me be part of your tribe. PLEASE.
Anyway, this is where I thought Iâd cut things off, so as to end on a positive note. You know what that means: Dior is coming up. I feel bad knowing my first post was defending Maria Grazia and yet here I am now, looking at the bar down on the floor, but I mean, you never know; maybe girl is doing this on purpose and one day sheâs gonna come out with a Gucci level quality show like a phoenix from the ashes.
If you got this far, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR READING even if youâre just here for the pics. Part 2 will be covering some of my most anticipated shows from Elie Saab, Fendi and Etro to Gucci and Moschino, Miu Miu and Marc Jacobs, and everything in between. Yes, the shitty ones too.
Iâm plowing through all the material as quick as I can so I hope to get the next post up really soon, and yes-you can count on the overwhelming sense of needing to be productive pushing me into fulfilling that statement.Â
Thanks again and I hope youâre well!
Lauren x
#fashion#fashionreview#style#fashionblogger#styleblogger#high fashion#fashion week#couture#runway#vogue runway#vogue#nyfw#aw20#aw2020#pfw#lfw2020#mfw2020#balenciaga#chanel#celine#chloe#dilara findikoglu#bella hadid#charlotte knowles#comme de garcons#christopher kane#ashish#alberta ferretti
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Alberta Ferretti Spring 2020 Milan
#the fashion dish#alberta ferretti#spring 2020 runway#royal blue#mfw2020#detail#fashion details#silk/chiffon#evening dresses#ballgown#flowing fabric#dress
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âI encouraged them to play, improvising with their life.â - Alessandro Michele, in regard to letting the modelâs freely express themselves in the Gucci fall 2020 ad campaign.
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moschino fall 2020 rtw
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Candice Swanepoel at MFW SS20
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LEONI HANNE outside FERRAGAMO fashion showÂ
MILANO FASHION WEEK
#fashionphotography#fashionmodel#fashionblogger#streetstyle#streetphoto#fashion#fashionbag#ferragamo#sunglasses#pink#Streetwear#photographers#women's fashion#mfw#mfw2020
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MFW FALL WINTER 19/20 | More on Streets in Vogue
#milan fashion week#milan fashion#Milan fashion show#milan fashion trend#mfw#mfw2020#mfw19#fw#street style#urban street style#street fashion#streetwear#Ada Kokosar#Anna dello Russo#Anna Ewers#Chiara Ferragni#Christine Centenera#Fall Winter 2019/20#fendi#gucci#Lisa Aiken#Lou Doillon#Max Mara#olivia palermo
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Blumarine Spring 2020 Milan Fashion Week Detail
#the fashion dish#bluemarine#spring 2020 milan#mfw2020#aqua gown#silk/chiffon#evening dresses#gala#ballgown#fashion details
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âWe all belong to the same circus...â - Alessandro Michele
For the Gucci fall 2020 show, Michele staged a theatre in the round, exposing the behind-the-scenes action of the hair and makeup teams and the model dressers at work as they prepared the 60 cast members in their looks.
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