Italian Fashion: Designers and Brands | Made-In-Italy.com
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Designers and Brands

Italy is home to the world’s most famous fashion designers and labels. From Gucci and Diesel to Fendi, and Dolce & Gabbana, the country turns out top quality talent and designs which have a worldwide appeal. Italian style is rightly celebrated as being unique among competitors with its unmistakable elegance, excellent tailoring, exquisite fabrics, and unmatched creativity and innovation.

Italian fashion catwalk; © Paolo Lanzi,
www.paololanzi.com© Paolo Lanzi, http://www.paololanzi.com

The first Italian fashion show was held in the 1950’s in Florence and organized by Count Giovanni Battista Giorgini. This began a popular new trend and soon fashion shows were being produced throughout the country. Gradually the emphasis shifted from Florence to Rome and Milan; these eventually became two of the top five fashion capitals in the world.

The success of the shows meant Italian fashion labels like Salvatore Ferragamo, Valentino, Versace, Gucci, Emilio Pucci, Laura Biagiotti, Roberto Cavalli, Brioni and Bottega Veneta began competing with established French haute couture from famous fashion houses like Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent and Lanvin.

Italian designers and fashion houses of the 1950s brought a breath of fresh air to haute couture with revolutionary, innovative creations. Italy has always excelled at innovative use of fabrics, creating simple shapes and superior hand finishing, all ensuring that Italian design is of utmost quality and wearability.

Of course Italian designers have always been popular with celebrities and royalty. From the Valentino dress that Jacqueline Kennedy wore at her wedding to Onassis, and the famous Salvatore Ferragamo red shoes worn by Marylin Monroe, to the Borsalino hat worn by Michael Jackson, Italian fashion houses have never hidden from the world stage. Emilio Pucci was one of the first stylists to bringItalian fashion to the skies with its chic uniforms for hostesses and crew.

As part of couture and prêt-a-porter collections, Italian brands offer a plethora of choice in accessories, leading to even more global fame and success. Gucci is known for its bags and Ferragamo for its shoes while the unmistakable style of Bottega Veneta characterizes many different types of leather goods. Then there are perfumes and fragrances like Roma by Laura Biagiotti and the Mediterranean fragrances of Dolce&Gabbana as well as the uniquely shaped Moschino perfume-bottles; they all hold a special place in the perfume hall of fame. Sunglasses and eyewear, with Italian lables like Miu Miu, Roberto Cavalli, Gucci and Dolce&Gabbana setting the trends, have helped expand Italian market share and success.

Whether it’s haute couture or pret-a-porter, sportswear or accessories, Italian fashion houses are undoubtedly the shining stars of the international fashion scene. Italy is the place where fashion trends are started, innovations encouraged and names made. And thanks to the talent of its fashion designers, it seems set to continue on this stellar path for many decades to come.

Angelo Litrico

In 1959 Kruschev took one of his shoes off at the United Nations in New York and slammed it on the table. That shoe was part of a range of accessories and garments that Angelo Litrico had expressly created and produced for the leader of the…

Les Copains

For the last 50 years, Les Copains has been a synonym of style, modernity and elegance in the ready-to-wear fashion field. Starting from an Italian town, it has spread its name and fame all over the world, from Europe, to USA, South America…

André Laug

A mix of French taste and Italian fashion tradition is what characterizes the André Laug brand, which still bears the name of its founder. Born in the northern French region of Normandy in 1931, André Laug nurtured his talent while working…

Lancetti

Giuseppe Lancetti, better known as Pino, wasn't only a fashion designer, but a complete artist, who used fabrics as raw material for his work. His creativity and his innovative techniques mixed with the typical Italian taste for luxe led…

Krizia

Krizia is the name Mariuccia Mandelli chose to make her dream come true. She borrowed it from the title of Plato's unfinished dialogue on women's vanity, spelling it with a K to make it sound more exotic. Plato's Crizia is Mariuccia's ideal…

Gucci

A maitre d' who became one of the world's most famous Italian fashion designers. No, not the stuff of fairytales but the life story of Guccio Gucci. Son of a Florentine craftsman, he was born in 1881 in Florence. While still a…

Romeo Gigli

The trend-setting Milanese catwalks in 1986 were populated by aggressive managerial women dressed "to kill" in severely tailored suits with broad shoulders that meant "business." The "Dress for Success" look was the expression of a rampant…

Gattinoni

The late Fernanda Gattinoni was celebrated by Hollywood stars of the 1950s and 1960s for creating strikingly elegant designs worn both on and off the silver screen. The Lombardy-born designer Fernanda Gattinoni left for London at the age…

Nazareno Gabrielli

An investment in Nazareno Gabrielli is an investment in the rich and timeless heritage of the iconic Italian fashion label. Gabrielli was founded in 1907, when craftsmanship and quality surpassed society's fashionable needs. However,…

Antonio Fusco

Italian roots mixed with international experience is what characterize the style of Antonio Fusco, one of the most known standard-bearer of the made-in-Italy. Born in 1942 in a little village near Naples, Antonio inherited from…