The 75th edition of the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week Madrid begins with a day in which Ágatha Ruiz de la Prada, Pertegaz, Roberto Diz, Dominnico or the rookie Ynésuelves show their proposals
The 75th wedding anniversary is known as a brilliant wedding. And the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Madrid (MBFWMadrid) catwalk has managed to reach that commemoration. The great date with Spanish fashion at Ifema Madrid has begun with Pedro del Hierro. The firm has started from the roaring 20s to propose a dual collection that drinks from the parallels between men and women, inviting them to discover their limits with a transition between day and night.
A dialogue turned into a new code in which the silhouettes merge and blur with a resounding style for a collection guided by very powerful tailoring pieces, sharing codes of silhouettes and fabrics. Nacho Aguayo and Álex Miralles, creative directors for women and men respectively, present new shapes featuring fabrics such as velvet or traditional tailoring checks, which will be the link that will guide us to achieve that fluidity that will be the common thread throughout the collection.
For women, Pedro del Hierro will highlight masculine lines and marked shoulders with ultra-feminine garments in silk satin. In the men’s collection, the day is ‘upper’ casual, where suits with new silhouettes and extra-long coats are mixed with a very resounding night. The day pieces are bathed in duck, red and brown tones. The debauchery and opulence of the night will be manifested through festive greys, blacks and whites sprinkled with glitter or elements such as glitter, sequins, crystals or velvet, which aims to transport attendees to the lights and shadows of the evening.
Content joy that has overflowed with a ‘hippie’ facet of Ágatha Ruiz de la Prada, who has not hesitated to show her support for Ukraine. Samy’s eyes, the model who has opened and closed her parade, said it all. The young Ukrainian, whose grandfather is fighting against the Russian troops, has worn tights with the colors of his flag, like the one that the designer herself has raised with the singer Omar Montes at the end of the exhibition, who repeats on the catwalk with the consecrated seamstress, who was followed by a novice in these matters, Ynésuelves. The firm, made up of mother, María, and daughter, Ynés, has debuted with a line that highlights a play on volumes based on ruffles and pleats, along with a touch of masculine tailoring, without neglecting feminine details. , with careful prints of mermaids, butterflies and, of course, the symbol of the house: a red rose with thorns.