Older Women Summer Fashion Trends 2018
While 2021 was all about hot pink, logomania, color blocking and the 'hot goth' tendency, the SS22 flavour is bringing sexy back – and we couldn't be more than excited to breathe new life into our working from home wardrobes.
As lockdown restrictions are gradually offset to lift and the futurity is beginning to look a piddling brighter, terminal twelvemonth's desire for complete escapism has been replaced with all-out celebration, and SS22 is nigh dressing accordingly. It's time to show off the bodies that lockdowns kept hidden at home for far too long – then think short, sheer or second-skin. The mood? Less fashion, more flesh.
It follows, so, that Nineties and Y2K throwbacks were in affluence in this season's collections, with micro-mini skirts, sky-high heels, glitzy tops and low-slung waistlines making a improvement. And on the other terminate of the mode spectrum, Bridgerton fever has seen designers turn to the 18th and 19th centuries as inspiration for their dramatic mail-pandemic looks.
Bold stripes, solar shades and swimwear also emerged as hot trends, confirming once and for all that the SS22 flavour is all virtually optimism. 2022, we're ready for y'all – and nosotros'll be dressing the part.
FASHION TRENDS 2022 Written report
Seen at: Versace, Prada, Etro, Giambattista Valli, Lanvin, Chanel, Blumarine, Dolce & Gabbana, Valentino, Moschino and Courrèges.
From mini to micro, hemlines are getting hotter and higher. On the catwalks, Sixties rebellion collided with Noughties exuberance for a barely-at that place have on the trend that's both low-rise (run across Miu Miu, where skirts barely skimmed the hip bones) and high-rise (run across everyone else).
Seen at: Stella McCartney, Burberry, Dolce & Gabbana, Nensi Dojaka, Burberry, Miu Miu, Balmain
If decadence is the theme of this spring-summer season – a bright, shiny take on sexy dressing for the Y2K generation – here's how the grown-ups do information technology. This is destructive seduction, equally much nearly body confidence as it is about provocation. It's time to unbutton.
Seen at: Alexander McQueen, Louis Vuitton, Givenchy, Simone Rocha, Balenciaga, Loewe and Giambattista Valli.
Post-pandemic dressing goes dramatic courtesy of Louis Vuitton, where Nicolas Ghesquière presented a masterclass in making the gothic glamorous by styling old with new. Other designers also looked dorsum to the hereafter for their collections, with crazy, creative takes on 18th- and 19th-century style. Quite literally historic.
Seen at: Dolce & Gabbana, Fendi, Chanel, Balmain, Coperni, Isabel Marant, Loewe, Tom Ford and Peter Practise.
From cargo pants to glitzy tops, depression-slung waistlines and Grecian draping, information technology'due south fourth dimension to go back to the year 2000. Channel your inner Beyoncé circa the Destiny's Kid 'Survivor' era – this is utility with an insanely glamorous edge, and it'due south anything but basic.
The but rule: wear heels with everything.
Seen at: Chanel, Etro, Altuzarra, Anna Sui, Loewe, Moschino, Tom Ford, Valentino, Versace, Isabel Marant, Stella McCartney, Coperni, Fendi, Fendi Past Versace, Alberta Ferretti, Giorgio Armani and Etro.
Maybe information technology'southward because we're all in need of a hot holiday, but beachwear became set-to-habiliment for SS22. Virginie Viard sent chichi swimsuits down the Chanel catwalk, while Rejina Pyo took things a step further, showing her collection past the pool at London's Aquatics Centre.
Seen at: Balmain, Raf Simons, Saint Laurent By Anthony Vaccarello, Emporio Armani, Carolina Herrera, Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Ports 1961, Dolce & Gabbana, Jil Sander and Schiaparelli.
No need to read between the lines: there's a uncomplicated formula for making a statement. The bigger, bolder and more in-your-face the ameliorate, as fashion gets two-tone and graphic. Banish the Breton – instead, stripes beautify dresses, suiting and shirts.
Seen at: Acne Studios, Chanel, Ermanno Scervino, Jason Wu, Jil Sander, Versace, Christian Dior, Stella McCartney, Isabel Marant, Prada, Valentino, Proenza Schouler, Giorgio Armani and Saint Laurent By Anthony Vaccarello.
And so bright you'll need SPF: this season's retina-searing palette is all about solar shades. From golden to amber through to burnt orangish and peppery red, consider this visual vitamin D.
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