Alexandra Gucci Zarini, granddaughter of Aldo Gucci, has launched a purpose-driven luxury fashion brand, AGCF, forge a path toward ethical luxury others may follow.
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.
Gucci sent a collection of furry coats, slim pencil skirts and slip dresses down the catwalk for its fall-winter show, a lineup of styles for women and men drawn up by its design studio as the Kering-owned Italian label awaits its next designer.
For its F/W 25 collection, Gucci models walked through a dark green–coated space with a massive interlocking G logo in the middle. The color alone—a departure from the black cherry that has defined its recent seasons—set the tone for the next chapter of the Italian house.
Store closures are also hurting mall owners and undermining projections for an end to the multi-year property market slump.
The brand’s latest iteration of a ’70s accessory makes the horse bit the main event. First of Its Kind, Last of Its Kind tells the story of an exceptional accessory and the archival piece that inspired it.
Even if you don’t have a trip to Italy on the calendar, you can still lean into la dolce vita with Gilt’s latest flash sale. Through March 3, you can shop Gucci Up to 60% Off, and that includes everything — from leather headbands and handbags to silk scarves and fisherman sandals.
Manny Flores is prepared to lay down the law when he face's Jorge Leyva of Mexico on Friday. Leyva is a fringe contender who once held the WBC FECOMBOX Bantamweight title. Manuel Flores is coming off a quick first round stoppage victory late last year.
Jones and Jin seated in the front row, the Italian house’s fall show looked to the ’60s and ’70s for inspiration.
Gucci is a legacy house that lives on a continuum of culture and tastes, constantly changing with time yet still remaining true to itself. Each period is woven with the brand’s DNA in mind, telling a continuous story of the brand’s aesthetics.
A continuum of craft, taste, and culture that passes through time,” the show notes for Gucci’s Fall 2025 collection began. Furthermore, the press release explicates that a fashion house has
Gucci may be in flux, with the shocking news of Sabato De Sarno’s departure just weeks before its Fall 2025 show in Milan. We will miss De Sarno’s Gucci, one that melded archival touches with his