Menu
24matins.uk24matins.uk
Get the app
Navigation : 
Currently : 
  • United States
  • China
  • Military
  • Conflict
  • Diplomacy
  • North Korea

Covid kills men’s fashion buzz in Milan

World > Italy > Covid kills men’s fashion buzz in Milan
By Isabelle SCIAMMA,  published 15 January 2021 at 4h04 GMT.
 2 minutes

A year after the last Covid-free catwalk shows in Milan, men's fashion week begins on Friday, but without the buzz of its traditional audience of buyers, bloggers, celebrities and media.

As the pandemic continues to upend Italy‘s crucial luxury sector nearly 12 months after it first swept through the country, fashion houses have turned to technology to showcase their fall/winter 2021-22 collections.

Shows will be broadcast live on the fashion houses’ own websites or be replaced with pre-recorded presentations, short films and other artistic projects. Others such as Dolce & Gabbana have withdrawn entirely.

The four-day men’s fashion event takes place with infections rising in Italy’s Lombardy region with a return a full lockdown possible as early as the weekend.

Lombardy, whose capital is Milan, is one of five in Italy classified “orange” by the government, which means that stores and most schools are closed, while a curfew remains in force at night.

Among those opting for live shows to be broadcast by the fashion houses are Fendi, Etro and Kway.

Most other brands, however, including Ermenegildo Zegna, Tod’s, Prada and Church’s, have opted for pre-records — choices that allow for creative freedom but lack the immediacy and drama of live shows.

Dolce & Gabbana, which was originally scheduled to offer a traditional runway show on January 16, announced on Monday its decision to pull out entirely.

In view of Covid-19, it said, “the conditions essential to the realisation of our fashion show are not met”.

For the moment, no digital presentation is planned.

Fashion in free fall

The men’s fashion industry has suffered a hard blow from the pandemic. In Italy, the sector ended 2020 with revenues down by 18.6 percent, representing some two billion euros ($2.4 billion) in lost sales.

The global nature of the crisis curtailed exports, which had been on the rise but fell by 16.7 percent last year, crushing revenues by 70.8 percent.

One sign of hope, however, is the beginnings of recovery in the key Asian markets, but industry experts do not expect a full return to health in the luxury sector before 2023.

Italy was the epicentre of the first European outbreak in February last year after Covid-19 first emerged late in 2019 in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

Since then the virus has claimed tens of thousands of lives in Italy, making it one of the two worst-hit countries in Europe alongside Britain.

Learn more
  • Australian PM plays down Italy vaccine blockade
  • Italy blocks export of AstraZeneca doses to Australia
  • Forgotten mausoleum of Roman emperor Augustus reborn

Dans World

3h55 GMT
China exports spike to highest in decades after Covid-19 hit
3h00 GMT
Scarred by war, Armenian veterans look warily to the future
2h25 GMT
Tunisia’s gender violence law struggles to get beyond paper
1h55 GMT
South Korea, US to stage smaller military drills over Covid
1h30 GMT
Pope Francis visits Iraqi Christians who suffered under IS
1h20 GMT
Trial to begin for US policeman charged with George Floyd death
19h40 GMT
Ivory Coast votes in test of stability after political turmoil
18h05 GMT
France extends weekend lockdown to northern region
16h20 GMT
Flamingos poisoned by illegal lead pellets in Greek lagoon
16h05 GMT
Anti-coup protests continue in Myanmar as UN urged to hear ‘pleas’
  • Edition :
  • United Kingdom
  • France
  • Deutschland
  • España
  • América Latina
  • South Asia
© 2021 - All rights reserved on 24matins.uk site content - ADN Contents -