10 C
Munich
星期日, 19 10 月, 2025

ATXV Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

Must read

Molten Brunette Is This Fall’s Most Luxurious Hair Color Trend

This fall and winter, the classic brunette comes with a precious glow. Enter: “molten brunette”—a deep, shimmering shade that looks expensive and luxurious. Already...

The Best Lip Oils Feel as Good as They Look

The best lip oils are the “work smarter, not harder” product of one’s arsenal—perfectly toeing the line between hydration and next-level shine. Beginning with...

How the Sari Came To Define New York

A frilly grey sari and a bejeweled silver blouse on display speaks to the story of Shahana Hanif, the first Bangladeshi and Muslim woman...

Sabrina Carpenter Nailed the Art of Showgirl Style on SNL

As the show progressed, Carpenter’s promo photos—because every host gets a full-on SNL photo shoot—continued her high-fashion takeover. She sported pieces such as a...

At the same time that other designers have adapted the physicality that has characterized Antonio Tarantini’s work for ATXV (lots of pulling and tying), so the Italian designer has refined his technique for spring. He still draped directly on the form, but feeling especially liberated, focused on suspended strips of fabric (the edges all finished by hand) that fell open to reveal materials of different textures or colors. “When I work with my hands; in that moment I feel completely, completely free. This season I wanted to give life to my drapes to be more three-dimensional,” said Tarantini on a call. To that end, elastic replaced belts.

As always, the designer found ingenious ways to reveal swaths of skins in ways that felt classical as well as modern, and which appeal to pop stars like Rosé and Charli XCX. Some of the pieces could be worn in more than one way. Tarantini also took on one of the foundational pieces of the wardrobe, the T-shirt. ATXV’s in the finest silk jersey, and the designer, who has been spending time on TikTok, was thinking of these simple garments as a transformative filter. Yet in the end, the story of ATXV isn’t about concealing but a love affair with the body. “I really like to create clothes that don’t speak for you; clothes have to be alive,” Tarantini said. “I don’t like clothes as armor; for me, clothing is freedom, a garment is an emotion, and in my case, a form of liberation.”

#ATXV #Spring #ReadytoWear #Collection

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Molten Brunette Is This Fall’s Most Luxurious Hair Color Trend

This fall and winter, the classic brunette comes with a precious glow. Enter: “molten brunette”—a deep, shimmering shade that looks expensive and luxurious. Already...

The Best Lip Oils Feel as Good as They Look

The best lip oils are the “work smarter, not harder” product of one’s arsenal—perfectly toeing the line between hydration and next-level shine. Beginning with...

How the Sari Came To Define New York

A frilly grey sari and a bejeweled silver blouse on display speaks to the story of Shahana Hanif, the first Bangladeshi and Muslim woman...

Sabrina Carpenter Nailed the Art of Showgirl Style on SNL

As the show progressed, Carpenter’s promo photos—because every host gets a full-on SNL photo shoot—continued her high-fashion takeover. She sported pieces such as a...

Stars Let Their Hair Down at Cartier’s Academy Gala After-Party

As the fifth annual Academy Gala —honoring Penélope Cruz, Walter Salles, Bowen Yang and Bruce Springsteen—wrapped up at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures...