Carven has always lived comfortably in that sweet spot between playful and precise, and the Spring Summer 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week leaned confidently into that identity. This season felt like a stylish nod to the seventies, but not the dusty or overly nostalgic version. Instead, it was sharp, graphic, and refreshingly modern. Think Parisian cool with a retro wink.
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Yang Li S/S 2015 PFW
Yang Li’s S/S 2015 collection at Paris Fashion Week was a masterclass in contrast. The sharp, almost architectural tailoring met flowing sheer silk and chiffon panels that added weightless movement to otherwise strong silhouettes. It was a delicate balancing act that somehow felt effortless. Every piece had an underlying tension between rigidity and fluidity, and the collection’s energy came from that push and pull.
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Trussardi S/S 2015 MFW
Layering was key this season, and it was done with restraint. Nothing looked bulky. Nothing felt forced. Long coats over streamlined separates. Soft knits paired with structured outerwear. The silhouettes stayed relaxed, but the execution remained precise. This was chic casual in the truest sense. Clothes designed for movement, for real life, for a woman who values ease but still wants polish. It was effortless in spirit, even if the craftsmanship was anything but.
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Dolce & Gabbana S/S 2015 MFW
Dolce and Gabbana Spring Summer 2015 was not a fashion show. It was a spectacle. The kind that makes you sit up straighter and pay attention, even if you think you know exactly what is coming. From the first look, it was clear. Subtlety was not invited. The color story did all the talking. Deep, devotional reds. Gilded golds that caught the light like treasure. Sharp, uncompromising blacks that grounded the drama. Together, they created a visual language rooted in old world grandeur and unapologetic excess.
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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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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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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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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.
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Dsquared² S/S 2015 MFW
Dsquared² brought a burst of youthful energy to Milan this season. The S/S 2015 collection was playful, vibrant, and slightly retro, taking cues from mod aesthetics but injecting the brand’s signature irreverence. Each look had a sense of fun, showing that fashion can be both stylish and spirited without feeling forced.
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Uma Wang S/S 2015 MFW
Uma Wang delivered a collection that felt almost divine in its simplicity and fluidity. If you were looking for fashion inspiration that borders on spiritual, this was it. Not the casual Olsen twin kind of chic, but more walking-on-water level heavenly. Each outfit had a flowing, effortless quality that suggested movement, weightlessness, and a quiet confidence.