TomBlanksFullFatMiuMiu
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They look homeless
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My simple answer would be that essentially, Valentino is a very different brand. A lot of hate towards Alessandro’s work is directed to that fact. Yes he was able to mold Gucci to whatever he wanted overtime. But you can’t turn the epitome of Italian Glamour into a costume fest in one season.I am shocked by the hate towards Alessandro on this forum. I have contrasting thoughts about the couture but is comical how the same people (from the industry too) who praised Galliano’s artisanal costume feast are now shocked by how costumy and impractical Alessandro’couture is.
This dress looks great on Bianca Balti yesterday at San Remo festival
i loved both looks on him...you see AM but in a less costumey way...I also loved the looks on Damiano ❤️ the first blazer had amazing shoulders
This dress looks great on Bianca Balti yesterday at San Remo festival
actually I also saw similarities with this Gucci that Lupita wore in 2015, one of Alessandro Michele's first red carpets... the georgette, the bold but not sexy neckline, the jewel details...Loved the dress on Bianca, however it looks like a leftover from a PPP collection...bright color and feathers are so PPP coded, the style of the dress also gave me huge PPP vibes. It reminded me a lot of Naomi's MET 2019 Valentino look...
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I agree with you anyways, this "toned down" and more bourgeois version of Lallo over the top dusty maximalism is more suited for Valentino.
FINANCIAL TIMES
Financial TimesAlessandro Michele: ‘Valentino doesn’t have the attitude to be big’
The former creative director of Gucci on taking the reins of Valentino Garavani’s atelier — and why turning the house into another fashion giant would be a disaster
Alexander Fury
Published MAR 8 2025
“Valentino is a place that has a very specific soul,” muses its designer, Alessandro Michele. “Not a soul of a brand, but a maison de couture, an atelier, a home.” Michele has made himself at home at Valentino since he took up the reins of the Roman couture house in March of last year.
He also looks at home — on our Zoom call, Michele fits perfectly into the cognac-coloured confines of his office in Valentino’s late Renaissance headquarters at the Palazzo Gabrielli-Mignanelli. With coffered ceiling and vast windows, it used to belong to the brand’s founder, the permanently tanned and besuited Valentino Garavani, when it was filled with flowers and an omnipresent cortege of pug dogs. By contrast, with his flowing hair and beatific smile, the 52-year old Michele looks like an Italian nobleman who could have been painted there back in the 16th century.
A palazzo is very in keeping with Valentino, the fashion house founded in 1959 by Garavani and his business partner Giancarlo Giammetti. They also have a château outside of Paris, a Swiss ski chalet, a London apartment and a yacht — indeed, they live as large as Valentino’s clients, which have included crowned heads from across Europe and the Middle East, Italian aristocracy and Elizabeth Taylor.
The eccentricities of their fabulous lifestyle — and the beauty of Valentino’s clothes — were charted in the 2008 documentary The Last Emperor, marking the retirement of Mr Valentino. After that, the house was stewarded by its former accessories designers, Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli, as co-creative directors, then by Piccioli alone, who had worked with Valentino since 1999. Michele is the first outsider allowed through the castle gate.
Michele is, most famously, the designer who remade Gucci — and its fortunes — which increased from €3.9bn to €9.7bn between 2015 to 2021 alongside CEO Marco Bizzarri. Born in Rome, Michele studied at the city’s Accademia di Costume e di Moda, where he designed both fashion and costume. He worked at Rome’s other big fashion house, Fendi, before he joined Gucci in Milan in 2002. He spent 13 years alongside designers Tom Ford and Frida Giannini before he became creative director in January 2015.
At Gucci, he worked with a 360-degree vision. Rather than employing a stylist to work on his shows, for example, he always devised each look with his team. “I give all of myself to this job,” Michele says. He also oversaw whimsical advertising campaigns (one was staged as a Busby Berkeley musical) and pop cultural collaborations with celebrities, including Harry Styles and also Elton John, for whom Michele designed costumes for his 2018-23 final tour, Farewell Yellow Brick Road. Now a close friend, Elton has defected from Gucci and sat front row at both of Michele’s Valentino shows.
I ask Michele when he first became aware of the brand. “There are two memories. One is the building, the square, the mythology of Mr Valentino,” he says. “The other memory is very pop. McDonald’s was opening the first fast food in town, and in Italy. And was in Piazza di Spagna.” That’s the square where Valentino’s headquarters are located and this was in 1986, when Michele was 13. “Someone told me, ‘Look on the corner there is Valentino!’ With two dogs and Giammetti . . . Maybe they were just curious to see what was happening?” He smiles. “I saw Mr Valentino in person, and I thought it was incredible. It was like an epiphany of . . . like a God.”
Like cinema, fashion loves a sequel. The assumption is that Valentino’s Qatari owners, Mayhoola, want Michele to work his magic and “do a Gucci” at Valentino, similarly exploding the brand’s turnover which, as of 2023 stands at €1.35bn. That would be a natural aim for CEO Jacopo Venturini, who was executive vice-president of merchandising at Gucci during Michele‘s tenure (he moved to Valentino in 2020). Michele says it isn’t his goal. “I think that Valentino doesn’t have the vocation, the attitude to be big,” he says. “If you want to do this brand big as Gucci, it’s going to be a disaster. So this is a little brand that you can make brighter as it was, and it is, and you can do a great job. But keeping it the right size.”
How does Michele intend to do that? First, by exploring what Valentino already represents in the collective consciousness. Some critics see Michele’s vintage-inspired styles for the house — eclectic, maximalist, with unusual and arcane accessories (his first collection featured bags in the shape of porcelain kittens) — as incompatible with the elegance at the heart of Valentino.
But Michele’s first Valentino collections — two pre-collections, one ready-to-wear show and an haute couture extravaganza in January (where Giammetti was front row and beaming in a rousing endorsement) — were embedded with references to the Valentino archive. Those Valentino codes and signifiers included the well-known — ruffles, bows, the colour red — as well as the more obscure. The opening look of Michele’s January couture show was a vast crinoline in Commedia dell’arte harlequin checks, inspired by a Valentino gown from 1992, as internet fashion sleuths discovered after the show.
Indeed, there have been many other examples surfacing online to show how close Michele’s work is or isn’t to the Valentino original. “They are doing thousands of TikTok of Valentino — old dress, new dress,” says Michele. He sounds delighted. “It’s like playing a game, now the people are trying to find the story of Mr Valentino.” That kind of engagement is gold for a brand.
Michele’s archival riffing will be further on display on Sunday’s autumn/winter 2025 ready-to-wear show in Paris. “Especially in this collection, I’m trying to touch things and to manipulate things that for many people, they completely forgot,” says Michele. “Because they think that the golden age of Valentino is just the beginning of the Seventies. But Valentino gave his idea of the Eighties in such an incredible way. And always very romantic. And so I’m trying to make my mash up, and working.”
For Michele, Valentino’s present is about its past and its future. “There is a big legacy, a soul that you must protect,” Michele says. “And you have also to open a different conversation, to make the brand relevant and in conversation with the young generation, with the customers. And make the brand translate this beauty that we . . . I don’t want to say that we take for granted, but it’s something that we know, everybody knows. When you say Valentino, they think about that incredible, unbelievable level of ‘making of’.”
He’s speaking of craftsmanship — and he’s right. Valentino is lauded for the qualities of its manufacturing for ready-to-wear, and commands high prices. The ateliers that create its haute couture are only equalled by Dior and Chanel. “But it sometimes seems like that the brand is in a bubble,” Michele continues. “It’s interesting to be in that position, because there are so many fans of the brand. But I’m trying also to make that beauty relevant now.”