This Roberto Cavalli collection is badass luxury and exotic. Full of colorful safari leaf and snakeskin prints. The play on the mixture of these prints with an array of different textures and styles. The more you think about it the more these pieces remind you of the 80’s, in the good way of course. source:
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Dsquared2 Menswear S/S 2015 Young and Neon
A distinctively obvious Dsquared2 collection. With it’s young preppy rebel vibe and bright clothing #tanned #duckface. The thing that makes this show stand out of the rest are the uses of neon colors, we aren’t seeing much of those this season. Overall fun collection, I specifically enjoy the graphic art on the shirts and sweaters. Especially the cat sweater, meow.
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Calvin Klein Menswear S/S 2015 A Timeline
This Calvin Klein collection is a story with a timeline unlike most collections this season. I assume the nude represents birth, the bright industrial plastic candy like coats represent blooming and/or our highest peak and the black is symbolic of death. It’s a lifespan, It’s interesting seeing them all dip into each-other as the timeline slowly progresses. I personally love the full nude and dark outfits because they are the extreme of both sides.
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Burberry Prorsum Menswear S/S 2015
Burberry Prorsum’s Spring Summer 2015 menswear collection arrived with a sense of confidence that felt both polished and quietly experimental. Under the direction of Christopher Bailey, the house continued to refine its vision of modern British elegance, blending tradition with a willingness to play with color, proportion, and styling in a way that felt fresh rather than forced.
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Monster Hands! Sankuanz Menswear S/S 2015
Pow. Smack. High five. That is the immediate, almost unavoidable reaction to Sankuanz’s Menswear Spring Summer 2015 show. At a moment when menswear had settled deeply into restraint and normcore neutrality, this collection arrived swinging. Loudly. Joyfully. With zero interest in blending in.
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In Bloom by Jason Hetherington
A tasteful flowery styled photoshoot featuring male models titled In Bloom by Jason Hetherington for Observer Magazine. This series has a cold dreamlike feel, and the use of living plants gives an organic twist reminding us of the delicate beauty we borrow from. dope.
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Miles McMillan Scotch & Soda S/S 2014
Miles McMillin in pastels and neons with mixed and matched patterns for Scotch & Soda’s S/S 2014 menswear collection. Dressed up separates that are broken down into colorful relaxing summer lounge wear.
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Elisa Strozyk’s Wooden Menswear
Elisa Strozyk’s menswear collection pushes the boundaries of material and form by incorporating intricately placed wood paneling into her designs. The result is a striking blend of structure and movement, where garments feel at once architectural and wearable. The jackets carry a geometric rigidity reminiscent of over-pixelated photographs, translating digital aesthetics into physical, three-dimensional form.
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Men in Flowers, Floral Menswear
In the words of Miranda Priestly “Florals? For spring? Groundbreaking” It’s a cliché we know. But when things are naturally beautiful why not roll with it? The thing that can offset the cheesiness of a spring floral would to switch some things up. So why not the gender. Men don’t have as many options as woman do when it comes to different articles of clothing they can wear, so they have to rely greatly on fit and pattern. A pattern for men that has been seemingly untouched would be floral. Here are a few photographs featuring men in colorful floral based outfits. source:
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Menswear Campaign Zara S/S 2014
ZARA’s Spring Summer 2014 menswear campaign leaned into clarity rather than noise, presenting a vision of modern dressing shaped by sharp tailoring and historical reference. The influence of the 1960s was present throughout, but it arrived quietly, translated through silhouette rather than costume.
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Dolce & Gabbana Menswear – A/W 2014
“The Dolce&Gabbana Men’s Winter 2015 collection takes inspiration from the Norman Kings Ruggero I, Ruggero II, William I, William II, Tancredi, Henry VI, Federico II and Manfredi as well as from the architecture of Norman Sicily as seen in Palermo in the Norman Building, the Cathedral and the Church of the Martorana” www.dolcegabbana.com Style.com