Sunday 14 October 2012

Fendi S/S 2013, Milan Fashion Week

Hi everyone!

Today I am taking you to Italy for my first report on the Milan Fashion Week:
The FENDI Spring/Summer 2013 collection !
The show was organised via Solari, at the Arnaldo Pomodoro Foundation, with
a huge stand organised outside to welcome the VIPs attending the show.


 

Designer background:

The Fendi company was created in 1925 by Edoardo and Adele Fendi, and was originally a fur
and leather shop in Rome. In the following decades, the collections were enlarged
to apparel, and currently to fragrances, eyewear and watches. 

The company became famous for designing the “Baguette” bag in 1997, the first bag with
a very small size and short handle to be worn, like a French bread, under the arm.
The bag also benefited from celebrities marketing with Madonna being one of the
numerous early customers, and the bags being borrowed for the series “Sex & the City”.
 
In 1999, LVMH and Prada jointly acquired a 51% stake in Fendi (valuing the whole
company to $850m). In 2000 LVMH bought the 25.5% stake of Prada, and in 2002 increased its
stake in Fendi to 67%. By 2004 LVMH had become the sole majority shareholder in Fendi.
 
For the celebration of the design’s 15th birthday, Fendi created in 2012 a range of limited edition designs, with prices ranging from 500£ to 3,800£, offering a revival to this iconic vintage bag:
 
Today the Fendi designs are created by Silvia Venturini Fendi (also President of AltaRomAltaModa) and Karl Lagerfeld (creative director for Fendi since 1967, and for Chanel since 1983).
The current CEO of Fendi is Pietro Beccari – appointed in February 2012 – who joined after being Executive Vice-President of Marketing and Communications for Louis Vuitton during 6 years.





You will find below the press article provided by Fendi at the show
as to how they would describe their collection best:



 Spring summer 2013

Fendi’s explosive summer
 
Splitting dimensions create new feminine and upbeat silhouettes

Multiples lenghts, overlay and architectural interplay build fluid and clean volumes

 Proportions: the importance of the new shoulders, rounded, strong, caped. Rising sun sleeves which lighten the whole collection

Unlimited and innovative combinations of luxurious materials and workmanship

Marquetry of fur, inlay of taffetas, neoprene coupled leathers, weightless crocodile nappa, tiled knitwear, technical double crepe silk, three-dimensional sequin embroidery, exploding prints…

Like in painting, the balance of proportions of colour create other dimensions: peach pink, electric pastel blue, yellow, orange and an extraordinary poppy red…

The shoes feature a sharp, detonating heel and unexpected articulated bridges

Baguette, Peekaboo, 2Jours: timeless shapes are stripped of every buckle, and an amazing craftsmanship resets and reinforces FENDI’s iconic handbags







Fendi created for this season three main sets of clothes:


In the first part, being the main one, Fendi played with geometric shapes cut on plain materials
with the outfits bringing together pieces in different colours. The result was an explosion of very
summery pastel tones ranging from the trendy coral orange to a vintage yellow and a pale
blue – while still using a traditional black for assortments.

 
                 
 

         
 

              
                                                The "2jours" bag
 
 
 The full collection was enhanced by the very representative and well-known Fendi bags in assorted colours, their eyewear pieces - also showing this season a mix of vintage colours on distinct joint bridges - and of course the shoes, with geometric volumes on the heels reflecting the main theme of the season.
 
 

                                                                      The "PeekaBoo" bag
 

       
 

 

    
                                                                              The "Baguette" bag
 
 
The second set of clothes was done with a light floating material cut in large shapes,
using a pattern that creates depth volumes thanks to the effect of colours thrown together.
 
 

      
 

  
 
 

The last one, clearly an evening wear range, was composed of clothes and
accessories (including bags, little capes, jackets) all made of silver sequins.
 
 

  



 

 
 



At the end of the show, Karl Lagerfeld and Silvia Venturini Fendi (unfortunately i couldn't
get a full picture due to the ceiling decorations) came out for the final:  



 

 My next 3 reports for the Milan Fashion Week will be about Genny, Giuseppe Zanotti
and Roberto Musso, and there is even more to come after that !
 

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