Diesel, renowned for its denim and casual wear, showcased a range of ultra-low-waist jeans and skirts, boucle jackets, and plastic-coated garments against a vivid backdrop of giant graffiti on the second day of the Milan Fashion Week.
The zombie apocalypse is now, according to Italian denim brand Diesel, which sent models onto a heavily graffiti-ed runway with unsettling milky gazes and spray-painted smiles.
Diesel captivated audiences at Milan Fashion Week with ultra-low-waist jeans, boucle jackets, and avant-garde styles. Against a graffiti-filled backdrop created by 7,000 artists, the show highlighted creative director Glenn Martens' vision,
Last year, while Diesel, Maison Margiela and the direct-to-consumer channel all reported growth, the slowdown in China and a 15 percent decrease in the group’s wholesale channel impacted OTB’s turnover, which decreased 5.2 percent to 1.8 billion euros ...
Developed under the creative direction of Glenn Martens, the collection explores materials and technologies, channeling a growing base of Gen Z consumers.
Italian group OTB is the latest luxury conglomerate to report a downturn in sales for the full year 2024. The group, which owns Maison Margiela, Diesel, Jil Sander, Marni, and Viktor & Rolf, reported a turnover of $1.88 billion USD and an overall decrease of 4.4% in sales across all brands.
During Martin Margiela’s spring 1989 debut runway show, held in a Paris fringe theater, veiled models looked like an eminence of kentaurides clomping down a white cotton runway in red paint dipped split-toe Tabi boots paired with pointy-shouldered slim jackets and long-line skirts slit up the back.
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