Salvatore Ferragamo shows its spring-summer 2019 collection

Creative director of women's collections, Paul Andrew, and Guillaume Meilland, head of the group's ready-to-wear, said the collection was inspired by the color palette of Tuscany's rolling hills, vineyards, and olive groves.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 22-09-2018 19:09 IST | Created: 22-09-2018 18:07 IST
Salvatore Ferragamo shows its spring-summer 2019 collection
"It's an awesome and fun experience designing together, we have built this new common vocabulary," Andrew said. (Image Credit: Twitter)

The Tuscan countryside sprung in the heart of Milan on Saturday as Italian fashion designer Salvatore Ferragamo showed its spring-summer 2019 collection, full of soft hues and rich leather.

Creative director of women's collections, Paul Andrew, and Guillaume Meilland, head of the group's ready-to-wear, said the collection was inspired by the color palette of Tuscany's rolling hills, vineyards, and olive groves.

Bold tones of emerald, indigo, orange, red and violet popped out "as punctuation" among the taupe, caramel, biscuit beige, khaki, and olive green, in clothes and accessories designed for both men and women.

It was a continuation of the Florence-based maison's autumn-winter collection, which was also created by the two designers.

It showed monochrome designs momentarily broken by clothes in palm tree patterns.

"It's an awesome and fun experience designing together, we have built this new common vocabulary," Andrew said.

British model Stella Tennant opened the show, hosted as usual in Milan's stock exchange building, wearing an olive-colored satin handkerchief skirt under a taupe t-shirt, and leather woven boots.

Andrew pointed to the cast of different ages and ethnicities explaining that "(Ferragamo's) customer is not necessarily an 18-year old girl, but rather a man or woman of different ages."

The group, which in July appointed former Gucci executive Micaela Le Divelec Lemmi as chief executive, has refreshed its style to increase its appeal to a younger clientele. However, it did so without turning its back to its traditional customer base.

Leather, as usual, reigned supreme on the catwalk, featuring in different shapes, finishes and used in clothes as well as accessories.

For shoes, Andrew said he was inspired by a picture of 1940s American actress Loretta Young, wearing a pair of Ferragamo shoes with a sculpture-like heel, found in the group's archives.

Models wore wooden clogs, raised sandals and knee-high woven leather boots, and carried the new 'All Gancini Ferragamo Studio' bag and micro bags slung over their shoulder. =

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