Innovation concerns a process or a product that guarantees greater results or benefits, thus bringing about social progress, even if sometimes not always effective and better than what is going to innovate. In the fashion field, innovation refers to production technologies, materials and work methods.
A very tight suit like cotton or wool tights that wraps around the whole body. Female garment of various shapes, loose and almost always long, made of light fabric, to be worn on the nightdress in the same fabric. In its broadest sense the term can also mean a person not totally in order and completely dressed.
Silk or satin under-dress that completes a transparent dress. Appeared in the first half of the ‘900 as a children’s garment especially in the summer. Later he went on to indicate an elegant feminine underwear almost always in silk, with a bodice and panties united, of a comfortable and soft line. The term derives from the Indian language and literally means cover for legs.
Model of a safari jacket developed in the colonial war and then taken as an inspiration to make sports jackets in cotton, linen or waterproof fabric. Normally it has four bellows pockets, the Polarized Floating Sunglasses and a waist belt.
Piece of silk fabric or other square-shaped fabric that, when folded in a rectangular or triangular sense, is worn on the shoulders or on the head or as an ornament for evening dresses. Indicates a short jacket at the waist, single or double-breasted, very popular in ‘700 England and which, with a fur border, was worn by cavalry officers. It is still a ceremonial dress for officers of various weapons and on some occasions it is also used as a formal dress.
Light overcoat, once used during travel, first in a carriage then in a car, to protect itself from dust. It could be made of cotton or very light wool. In the 1960s it was very fashionable to wear evening gowns or elegant for a large straight fur scarf, slightly shaped or rounded on the back.
At the beginning it is only a night garment, used at the end of the nineteenth century by the English and by tropical travelers. Imported into Europe after the great war, women also took it instead of the nightgown. Consists of two fabric or lace triangles, one on the back and one on the front joined together by the elastic that rests on the sides and paired with Polarized Floating Sunglasses.
A term also used in fashion to indicate a particular garment or a model that often occurs during a fashion show or a collection of a stylist from which other models are introduced.