FERRARI FALL/WINTER 2022 | CRASH Magazine
FASHION

FERRARI FALL/WINTER 2022

By Crash redaction

Ferrari presented its Fall/Winter 2022-23 collection with a unisex runway show as part of the Milan Fashion Week calendar. Designed by creative director Rocco Iannone, the collection featured slim silhouettes and garments that included tailoring and natural materials teamed with the latest technological research. Jackets and coats were cut and sewn using traditional tailoring techniques and inside-out stitching. There were contoured shoulders, evident but never overly padded, defined by stitching and flat-felled seams. Skirts were pencil shaped, often with adjustable metal-zippered slits, or started out snug around the hips and flared out towards the hem. The little black dress came in new materials, such as leather treated with unprecedented finishes. Cargo trousers were coated with black crystals. Shearlings had a shiny outer layer thanks to a heat-sealed film that picks up on the colors visible on the inside. A camo print was obtained by breaking down the silhouette of the Ferrari “Prancing Horse”. Suits and jackets were made from carbon fibers and iridescent-looking metallic fabrics. A jacquard weave in a glow-in-the-dark yarn shines in the absence of light, fueling the aspects of technological derivation applied to natural materials.

Special attention was paid to sustainability, reflecting the core values at Ferrari. All the materials used in the collection met the criteria of environmentally and socially sustainable fashion: cottons were organic and GRS-certified, padding inside the jackets was made of Ecodown, which is an ethically responsible material obtained from recycled plastic bottles. Leathers were also certified and derived from food waste. The fabrics were all technologically treated, thus enhancing their performance and durability; leather was thermoformed, cotton drill was enriched with a waterproof technical fiber, and brass was galvanized. Accessories were an integral part of the aesthetic vision and sartorial choices. Bags were either small and rigid in shiny satin, and finished with colored metals, or colorful printed shopping bags. Footwear featured low and high heels, boots and lace-ups and fashion forward sneakers. Jewelry came in galvanized brass with aerodynamic shapes: necklaces and bracelets, pendants and Prancing Horses in gold hanging from thin chains.

  

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