Luisa Beccaria Spring Summer 2015 at Milan Fashion Week felt like stepping into a memory you are not entirely sure is yours. Designed by Luisa Beccaria alongside Lucilla Bonaccorsi, the collection leaned fully into romance, softness, and nostalgia, without tipping into costume. The palette was the first thing to seduce. Creams dominated the runway, pale and luminous, creating an almost glowing effect under the lights. It was gentle, calming, and undeniably feminine. Nothing felt loud. Everything felt intentional.
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Salvatore Ferragamo S/S 2015 MFW
Salvatore Ferragamo Spring Summer 2015 unfolded on one of Milan Fashion Week’s many catwalks with the kind of quiet assurance the house does best. No theatrics. No distractions. Just beautifully considered clothes, presented with confidence and clarity. Graveravens.com was there to capture every look, and what stood out immediately was the sense of control. This was a collection rooted in refinement, where nothing felt excessive and every detail felt deliberate.
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Marni S/S 2015 MFW
Marni Spring Summer 2015 at Milan Fashion Week unfolded like a process rather than a moment. It did not rush to impress. Instead, it built itself slowly, intentionally, almost academically, before letting creativity take over. The opening looks felt raw and restrained. Canvas like fabrics appeared rough, textured, and utilitarian. They looked unfinished on purpose, as if the garments were still in conversation with the idea of becoming something else. Styling leaned into that roughness. Nothing was polished too early. It felt honest and experimental, which is exactly where Marni thrives.
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Emilio Pucci S/S 2015 MFW
Emilio Pucci Spring Summer 2015 at Milan Fashion Week was a full throwback moment, and it owned every second of it. This was sexy, girly, and unapologetically nostalgic. The kind of collection that makes you want to dance before you even leave your seat. From the start, the influence of the 1970s was impossible to miss. It lived in the silhouettes, the prints, and the way the clothes moved. Minis were short. Cuts were confident. The fits hugged and released in all the right places. This was Pucci doing what Pucci does best, channeling glamour with a playful edge.
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Jil Sander S/S 2015 MFW
Jil Sander Spring Summer 2015 at Milan Fashion Week was all about control. Not the rigid kind, but the confident kind. The type of restraint that feels intentional rather than limiting. This was a collection built on structure, balance, and a deep understanding of proportion. From the opening looks, there was a clear equestrian influence. Tailored jackets, strong shoulders, and refined silhouettes evoked riding uniforms and countryside polish. But this was not costume. It was elevated, streamlined, and reimagined through a modern lens.
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Bottega Veneta S/S 2015 MFW
As the show progressed, texture became the focus. Gowns emerged with rich surfaces and tactile depth, transforming the collection’s mood without disrupting its cohesion. These pieces felt sculptural yet wearable, dramatic without being theatrical. The transition was seamless. What began as understated daywear evolved into evening looks that felt refined rather than showy. It was a quiet escalation, and it worked.
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Versace S/S 2015 MFW
Versace Spring Summer 2015 at Milan Fashion Week was all about temptation. Not the obvious kind. The slow burn. The knowing glance. Donatella Versace delivered a collection that teased rather than shouted, proving that sensuality can be powerful when it is controlled. From the opening looks, the mood was unmistakable. This was classic Versace energy, streamlined for a modern moment. Body conscious silhouettes hugged the figure, while strategic cutouts and sheer paneling created the illusion of skin floating beneath fabric. The effect was subtle at first, then impossible to ignore.
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Missoni S/S 2015 MFW
Missoni Spring Summer 2015 at Milan Fashion Week took the house’s signature language and turned up the volume. This was Missoni, but funkier. Brighter. More playful. A collection that honored the brand’s legacy while reminding us that it still knows how to have fun. From the start, color was the star. Vivid hues replaced the softer tones often associated with Missoni’s knitwear, giving the runway an energetic pulse. The effect felt youthful and optimistic, like a wardrobe made for movement and music.
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Giamba S/S 2015 MFW
Giambattista Valli’s Giamba collection for S/S 2015 at Milan Fashion Week was a whimsical daydream of youthfulness and delicate charm. Think soft, airy fabrics mixed with playful touches that somehow feel both couture and perfectly wearable. The show leaned into a dainty, almost girlish aesthetic while keeping the polish and precision you expect from Valli. Nothing felt sloppy or overly costume-like, which is a hard balance to strike when working with sheer fabrics, furry textures, and playful prints.
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Etro S/S 2015 MFW
Etro’s S/S 2015 collection at Milan Fashion Week felt like a love letter to Native American-inspired aesthetics interpreted through a modern fashion lens. Designer Kean Etro focused on geometric prints, earthy tones, and intricate patterns that brought each piece to life. This was a collection that clearly knew its story and stuck to it, embracing cultural motifs while making them wearable for the contemporary fashion crowd.
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Moschino S/S 2015 MFW
Jeremy Scott went full Barbie fantasy this season at Milan Fashion Week, and it was glorious. Moschino S/S 2015 was unapologetically pink, fun, and absurdly over-the-top, with each look feeling like a different Barbie persona brought to life. This collection didn’t whisper. It shouted, laughed, and posed dramatically for the runway cameras.