Alberta Ferretti

5 Things To Know About Alberta Ferretti’s “Purified Glamour” A/W 2023 Milan Fashion Week Show

5 Things To Know About Alberta Ferretti’s “Purified Glamour” A/W 2023 Milan Fashion Week Show

Alberta Ferretti’s autumn/winter 2023 collection introduced a cleaner, more modern and less romantic version of the Ferretti woman, says Anders Christian Madsen at Milan Fashion Week. Below, five things to know about the collection.

The collection was a new look for Alberta Ferretti
Photo: Getty

Mona Tougaard opened the Alberta Ferretti show in a floor-length tailored grey bustier dress styled with sheer black opera gloves. She was dressed to the nines yet entirely stripped down: no fuss, no embellishment, just glamour – in its purest form. The look heralded a collection that introduced a cleaner, more modern and less romantic version of the Ferretti woman, which didn’t just suit her but snapped her into a mentality that felt ever so 2023.
It came with a change of show venue

“The silhouette is more modern: clean, long and closer to the body. It’s simple but the detail is very special. There’s more tailoring. It’s very sartorial,” Ferretti said backstage before the show. It unfolded in considered surroundings: a nondescript conference centre some 20 minutes by car from Milan’s city centre, which felt very un-Ferretti but also like a blank canvas; a fresh page for a new start, complete with a seductive electro soundtrack with a sultry voice.
It was just as intricate as before
Photo: Getty
Maintained in an elongated silhouette, Ferretti’s updated take on her own creative genetics manifested in sumptuous but consistently restrained textures – shearling, velvet, various forms of appliqué – that looked simpler than they have in the past, but demanded the same levels of savoir-faire synonymous with her brand. “This is not print,” she said, pointing at a cloudy red dress. “This is all applicated velvet embroidery on chiffon.”
It was all about texture
Photo: Getty
The purified colour palette that defined the show – dark greys, scarlet, black and silver – allowed Ferretti to really amplify her textures. She did so in metallics clashed with velvet, in felt confronted with pattern, and rich textures like soft and sculptural shearling, intricate lace, and tonal black embroideries that embellished jackets in opulent beads and paillettes without ever entering over-the-top territory.
Ferretti said it was about focus
Photo: Getty
“It’s super important at this particular moment to have a very precise image and message,” Ferretti said, asked what had brought on her change in direction. “You can’t be vague. With images appearing everywhere around us, I have to be very concentrated on communicating who I am – my DNA – through a very sharp silhouette.” It made for a wardrobe that transcended age groups, and a collection that imprinted itself on your retina.
Originally published in Vogue.co.uk

Alberta Ferretti on Her Four-Decade-Long Career, a Sharp Eye for Business, and Spending Time in the Middle East

Alberta Ferretti on Her Four-Decade-Long Career, a Sharp Eye for Business, and Spending Time in the Middle East

Alberta Ferretti has been crafting exquisite clothes for women for over four decades. As the owner of brands like Moschino, the Italian designer also harnesses significant business power.
Alberta Ferretti. Photo: Luigi & Iango
Rain pounds the cement like a showering of coins. Its repetitive clacks drown out the clomping of feet on the tarmac as people deplane the Airbus that has landed in Bologna from Paris. In the dead of mid-January, the air in Northern Italy is biting cold. The purpose of this voyage is to meet designer and businesswoman Alberta Ferretti; on her turf, and where she headquartered her company Aeffe, a clothing manufacturer and distributor that owns and operates Alberta Ferretti, Moschino, Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini, and Pollini fashion brands. Here, it employs 500 people – and 1 400 worldwide – with offices in New York, London, Paris, Milan, and Hong Kong.
Julia Roberts in Paris in 2021 to shoot a Lancôme campaign wearing Alberta Ferretti
Driving down the Autostrada Adriatica, connecting Rimini to Cattolica, the A14 is surrounded by hills peppered with historic villages. I learn that Ferretti has renovated an entire borgo in the distance. This is where the designer was born and raised – and in a sense never left, even though throughout her life she has traveled to all corners of the world, including Jordan and Saudi Arabia long before the Kingdom flung open its doors. Our car pulls into a parking space before a large, corporate-looking building. The Aeffe headquarters appear surprisingly modern for a structure built in the Eighties. A tour up and down a labyrinth of rooms and corridors starts with aseptic offices dedicated to the four companies’ accounting and customer services, but where everything is centralized, I am explained. Aeffe, after all, is a publicly traded company with 350 million euros in 2022 annual revenue, and 138 mono-brand stores operating in 69 countries. From this sober aesthetic, color starts to permeate the space slowly, through various artworks, or from fashion pictures blown up and framed on the walls. Next, the first peeks of clothing announce the entryway to a dreamlike world. From the pattern cutters to the employees working with programs that help decide the exact fabric measurements to minimize waste – everyone bustles about with serene focus.
From left: Jennifer Lopez prior to her performance at the 2021 Presidential Inauguration in the US; Claudia Schiffer at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, 2007; Alessandra Ambrosio at the Cannes Film Festival last year; all dressed in Alberta Ferretti.
“It’s a good environment, and I am very proud of this,” says Ferretti behind the desk of her bright office. Petite, she is dressed in black pants and a sweater knitted with the globe in the shape of a heart. The words “help me” are sewn below it. Her blonde hair is fashioned in a wind-swept bob that highlights her heart-shaped face. Her hazel eyes are framed with kohl, and her mouth always upturned in a smile. Everything about her feels dynamic. Behind Ferretti’s chair are framed photographs, notably of Queen Rania of Jordan, a friend whom she has known for years. There is also a signed sketch of Meryl Streep in the gray Alberta Ferretti gown she wore to the Oscars in 2009. On the walls are fashion photographs of Amber Valletta, Tatjana Patitz, and Shalom Harlow. The women express freedom, frozen in happiness and time. “I always loved the way she walked the runway; like she was going for a stroll,” Ferretti says, following my eyes to Harlow’s hip-swinging gait.
The Un Omaggio a Venezia collection
There is no one woman or muse for the ever-curious Ferretti. She explains, it is all women who interest her, and any woman in the right outfit can be made to look and feel better. Ferretti’s study of the female form started years ago, when she operated her boutique Jolly Shop in Cattolica. Conversations with her clientele helped her to understand what women wanted – how they desired a garment to fit, what worked, and what didn’t. Along with other designers’ clothes, she also made and sold some of her own, “a manner of humble self-expression,” she smiles of her first designs. Some decades before her, another Italian couturier had a similar start, Elsa Schiaparelli. “I kept in touch with the needs of women who had confidence in me and tried to help them find their type… Women’s looks should correspond to their way of life, to their occupation, to their loves, and also to their pockets,” wrote Schiaparelli in her 1954 autobiography, the method proving timeless.
Eva Longoria at the Cannes Film Festival last year dressed in Alberta Ferretti
When one client asked if she could buy and distribute her clothes, Ferretti agreed, ultimately handing over the management of the boutique to her younger brother Massimo and embarking on a new creative journey with a small team of eight. Soon, the signature Alberta Ferretti style heralding femininity was revealed. “Women used to dress in a very masculine way. They were entering the workforce and [that] implied a certain style of clothing. I remember watching movies in the Sixties, with my mother, and seeing women in their lingerie, watching how they would move, and seeing how wonderful they would feel in their skin; then, they would dress, and the magic disappeared,” she recalls. Chiffon, lace, and silk became Ferretti’s outerwear; fabric grazed the skin, and fluttered like butterfly wings. It was draped and delicately layered. She soon earned the moniker Queen of Lingerie, and season after season, year after year, Ferretti persisted. The world’s women, from Angelina Jolie to Elisa Sednaoui and Hailey Bieber, reveling in her creations. Now, she offers that she is keen to spend more time in the Middle East and become closer to her Arab customers. She’s still chatting with HH Princess Basma of Oman, whom she met at the recent Vogue Ball of Arabia, and a new trip to Al Ula is pending on her busy calendar after the upcoming ready-to-wear show in Milan.
Dua Lipa in Netherlands during a collaboration with Jaguar in 2018, wearing Alberta Ferretti
All through these years, her eye for business has been forever in motion; very early she saw an opportunity to found something that was still new at the time in Italy – a major fashion business. Aeffe – the Italian pronunciation of her initials AF – was born in 1980. Massimo, with whom she gets on splendidly, took the reins as president, and Ferretti as vicepresident. They launched Franco Moschino in 1983, and for 10 years produced and distributed Jean Paul Gaultier, as well as Narciso Rodriguez. Today, Aeffe owns multiple brands. Did she ever face challenges due to her being a woman? “Never. I was so focused. I never even thought about it,” she says, her hazel eyes appearing to ponder the question as if for the first time.
Alberta Ferretti Resort 2023
The moment has arrived for il pranzo – lunch – and Ferretti has found a restaurant still open in the middle of January right on the sea. “I’ll drive,” she smiles. “I’ve always loved to drive.” Very Queen Elizabeth of you, I note. As if on cue, Ferretti motions to a black Land Rover and off we go, driving through the gentle landscape; direction, the sea. Inside the restaurant, the staff’s faces light up in Ferretti’s presence. The designer gazes out the window to observe the sailboats bob and points to birds swooping, while the sun breaks through the clouds the length of our meal. “I don’t have one happy moment, because I love simple things,” she says. “My life is made up of many happy moments.” We say “sì” to a café sorbet.
Alberta Ferretti Resort 2023
Originally published in the February 2023 issue of Vogue Arabia
Read Next: All the Reasons Why Italy is a Country with Extraordinary Cultural Prowess

The 35 Best Modest Looks from Milan Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022

The 35 Best Modest Looks from Milan Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022

Milan Fashion Week came back strong after two years in the deep due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Making bold choices, participating designers played with the fall and winter season colors of black, brown, white, beige, blue, and silver/grey, creating an almost dark/light academia aesthetic. Standing out were Roberto Cavalli’s striking leopard patterns with draping suit jackets and majestic cape dresses, while Dolce & Gabbana made statements with headscarves paired with demure silhouettes in monochrome palettes. Versace embraced a similar mood, but with form-fitting shapes, and Jil Sander took on a more formal approach and offered a modest suit in yellow and a grey dress paired with white leather gloves.
Below, check out the 35 best modest looks spotted on the runways of Milan Fashion Week.
Dolce & Gabbana. Photo: Courtesy of Fillippo Fior
Gucci. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Roberto Cavalli. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Versace. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Max Mara. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Roberto Cavalli. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Alberta Ferretti. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Versace. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Max Mara. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Roberto Cavalli. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Prada. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Alberta Ferretti. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Loro Piana. Photo: Courtesy of Loro Piana
Versace. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Dolce & Gabbana. Photo: Courtesy of Fillipo Fior
Moschino. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Emporio Armani. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Max Mara. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Dolce & Gabbana. Photo: Courtesy of Fillippo Fior
Fendi. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Giorgio Armani. Photo: Courtesy of Fillippo Fior
Bottega Veneta. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Versace. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Fendi. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Etro. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Versace. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Jil Sander. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Gucci. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Prada. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Jil Sander. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Versace. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Gucci. Photo: Courtesy of GoRunway
Bottega. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Emporio Armani. Photo: Courtesy of Alessandro Lucioni
Giorgio Armani. Photo: Courtesy of Fillippo Fior
Read Next: The 27 Best Modest Looks from London Fashion Week Fall 2022 Ready-to-Wear

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