Gucci F/W 2025.26 Milan

sorry but there is nothing forgivable about this collection at all, from the colors to the set to the dumb way the models are carrying those duffle bags. gucci doesn't know what it wants to be. the only semi-decent looks are direct copies of vaccarello's ysl. other than that this show is a complete disaster and embarrassing.
 

Where Does Gucci Go Now?​

It’s time for the brand to take some risks.


By Vanessa Friedman
Reporting from Milan
Feb. 26, 2025, 3:16 a.m. ET


Ancora red is out; emerald green is in. Or so it seemed during the Gucci show at the opening of Milan Fashion Week, where it was as if Sabato De Sarno, the designer who abruptly left his job earlier this month, had practically never even been there.

Fashion, it turns out, is fully capable of its own revisionist history. It’s that kind of moment.

Mr. De Sarno was not mentioned in the show notes, which instead spoke of “many owners and guardians” and “generational shifts.” His signature shade of burgundy, which he named “ancora” after the Italian word for “again” — as in, “I want it again, again,” an idea that proved more like wishful thinking than reality — was likewise gone.

At the end of the show, the design team came out en masse in matching green sweatshirts to take a bow. The runway formed two enormous interlocking Gs that were reflected in the mirrored ceiling, where the audience could also see the usual front row celebrity crew — Jessica Chastain, Dev Patel, Daisy Edgar-Jones, Jannik Sinner — as well as a live orchestra playing an original score by Justin Hurwitz, the composer behind “La La Land.”

No matter who is behind the curtain, the brand lives on. Even if in a holding pattern. Even if in a mishmash of a show that seemed as unconvincing as the man whose contributions it appeared to be trying to erase.

For still on view was the style that Mr. De Sarno brought to Gucci when he was hired in 2023 and charged with cleansing the brand of Alessandro Michele’s excess and turning it into a “timeless luxury” name. Not surprisingly, perhaps, given that up until about two weeks ago, Mr. De Sarno was still designing the collection. The team simply added in a little bit of history from here, references from there.

Mr. De Sarno was present, for example, in the lingerie-inspired halter-neck lace bodysuits paired with frumpy tweed pencil skirts, and in the candy pink slip dresses. In the super-short boxy tweed tunics that had apparently replaced his favorite shorts. In the lace skirts embroidered with big floral paillettes beneath granny mohair sweater sets.

And in the men’s wear versions of all the above that came after (the show was oddly bifurcated, so rather than weaving the men’s and women’s wear together, as is usually the case in dual-gendered shows, the men’s followed the women’s — in both reality and ideas). See the rounded tweed overcoats atop slithery, double-breasted suits; beaded shirts beneath sweater vests; that same mohair, in a body-con cardigan.

Along with all that were some faux fur bedroom slippers reminiscent of the Michele-era fur-lined slides, a rhinestone-logo velvet bodysuit and a backless lamé jersey T-shirt dress circa Tom Ford time. And even some Prada-like ’90s fugliness of kerchiefs and off-kilter color combinations, like bright purple and lime green, or burnt sienna and gray.

That after two years Mr. De Sarno’s signature could be reduced to a mere handful of familiar styles is a reflection of why his tenure was as abbreviated as the hemlines he favored. And why, in the story of the brand, he is more likely to be a footnote than a protagonist. His vision of Gucci always seemed like a palate cleanser, rather than a meaty main course. It wasn’t bad. It just wasn’t memorable.

Which is not to say he did not matter. He was fashion’s equivalent of a bridge boyfriend, creating some distance from the drama of Mr. Michele’s Gucci, and he should get credit for that. He had the thankless task of making the necessary space for whatever big idea comes next — while also, probably unwittingly, demonstrating the need for a big idea. One more expansive, and startling, than a horsebit or a color alone. One that, next time around, no one will be able to forget.
NYTIMES
 
it's awful. all around. it's a worse version of Patou, somehow.
I just think it's funny people saying it's better because they think Sabato was not involved, which he clearly was.
 
This collection was so void of creativity the personal style of Cantino the turtleneck and tonal suit was on the mood board
 
"This show was kind of about all sides of Gucci, all at once. Because in reality, the fabulous thing about this brand is that it can be a projection of ideas and ideology, a blank canvas for creativity – founded as a luggage and leather goods company, Gucci’s fashion is open to endless interpretation, while paradoxically offering a host of emblems for reinvention."

:poop:
 
Cantino really said "I want Vaccarello at Gucci", but Bellettini bursted in laughter in front his face and left the Zoom meeting, that's why Cantino had to go for the budget Vaccarello from the design team. Was the YSL Prefall 2024 lookbook on the moodboard?
- Lace top + lace skirt
1740586423695.png1740586468141.png

- Lace top + pencil skirt + thin belt to cinch waist
1740586538798.png1740586641015.png
 
Cantino really said "I want Vaccarello at Gucci", but Bellettini bursted in laughter in front his face and left the Zoom meeting, that's why Cantino had to go for the budget Vaccarello from the design team. Was the YSL Prefall 2024 lookbook on the moodboard?
- Lace top + lace skirt
View attachment 1353231View attachment 1353232

- Lace top + pencil skirt + thin belt to cinch waist
View attachment 1353233View attachment 1353234
even if most season you vind archive TF´s Gucci in SL by Vaccarello in the collection ........ still as a brand you should not do the latest copy of the copy of your sister brand
 
Making me realize how flimsy vacarello’s ysl is and I generally like the aesthetic or vibes or whatever you would call what he does. But it’s actually rather weak
 

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