One piece, one story: The Tropical Wool Jacket by Meagratia

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Where refined architecture meets personal choreography — for those who view tailoring as a dialogue, not a directive


This is The Tropical Wool Jacket by Meagratia.
In a system that produces tonnes of disposable clothing, we curate: one piece, one story. A radical view for ethical and aesthetic resistance — meaningful garments, an expression of good design. Slow fashion—made to last, made by hand.

The Tropical Wool Jacket is not merely worn; it is a carefully orchestrated piece. It is the versatile protagonist of a modern uniform — an apparent simplicity that offers both sculptural precision and transformative possibility. In its clean, tailored form, it promises structure; in its adjustable silver clips, it delivers a dynamic vocabulary. A silent, powerful gesture of transformative elegance.

It evokes the refined ingenuity of modernist design: a system where form is not fixed but fluid, defined by the wearer’s intent. The classic single-breasted silhouette becomes a canvas; the adjustable front slits, the mechanism that rewrites its architecture. It is a beauty that champions both restraint and personal expression.

Grey. Not a neutral compromise, but a sophisticated foundation. A shade that absorbs and reflects light with equal subtlety, lending depth to texture and gravity to form. A colour that is both grounding and limitless.

Close-up detail of a brunette model with long hair, wearing The Tropical Wool Jacket by Meagratia. The backdrop is a minimalist grey, drawing focus to the texture and tailoring of the jacket.
The Tropical Wool Jacket by Meagratia

Avant-garde tailoring: the anatomy of transformative precision

  • The detail:
    Two front slits secured by three sculptural silver clips. This is its signature, its mechanism. More than a detail, it is an interactive element: a silhouette that the wearer defines, creating a fluid dialogue between structure and self. It challenges the static nature of traditional tailoring, introducing a dynamic relationship between the garment and the wearer’s agency.
  • The design:
    A classic single-breasted jacket with a relaxed fit, two front welt pockets, one back slit, and three-button cuffs. This is the core of its philosophy. The traditional foundation suggests timelessness, yet the adjustable slits resolve it into a piece of modern versatility. The clips grant the freedom to change the drape, silhouette, and visual weight of the jacket in an instant. Comfort, curated by the wearer.
  • The make:
    Made in Japan—from 100% premium cool wool. Not merely a fabric, but a study in functional luxury. The pure wool offers a smooth, breathable texture with an impeccable, wrinkle-resistant finish, making it ideal for transition and travel. The fully lined interior is a private refinement. This is tangible quality — designed to perform with enduring elegance.

The Tropical Wool Jacket: the versatile core of a modern uniform


This is a piece that offers authority through adaptability, allowing you to redefine your own silhouette from morning to evening. It understands that the highest form of luxury is the freedom to choose one’s own expression.

  • For a structured day: Clips fastened to create a clean, fitted front. Paired with tailored trousers and a fine-knit sweater. A uniform for focused presence and quiet confidence.
  • For a fluid transition: One clip open, revealing a glimpse of the base layer. Worn over a silk blouse with wide-leg trousers. A study in proportion, texture, and effortless sophistication.
  • For a deconstructed evening: Both slits open, allowing the jacket to move as a flowing outer layer. Styled with black separates and minimalist leather sandals. The apex of considered nonchalance.

For the modern humans who curate, not consume — whose wardrobe is a library of dog-eared favourites, each piece a chapter in their story.

🌟 The Tropical Wool Jacket – Meagratia
Limited edition. Like a diary page — meant to be lived in.

🖤 To enquire: DM  @suite123 WhatsApp Email

Available by appointment for shopping in Milano or worldwide—from screen to doorstep. From our hands to your daily ritual.

P.S. Ask us about the philosophy of transformative design in fashion, and how this jacket’s silver clips allow you to explore the tension between structure and fluidity. Or how to style this piece for maximum impact across a single day. We are here for the conversations, not just the transactions.

Footnotes: The intelligence of this piece lies in its unique architecture. It offers the timeless structure of a tailored jacket alongside the versatility of a transformable layer, resolving a contemporary sartorial need. It proves that avant-garde design does not dictate a single look—it empowers the wearer. Design refined to its most personal expression.

One piece, one story: The Tropical Wool Jacket by Meagratia Read More »

Front row identity: when celebrities become the product

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Where does a brand’s value come from: designers, garments, or celebrities?


The front row used to be the place to witness fashion. Now, it is the fashion.

When a celebrity generates more headlines than the collection they are seated in front of, the question becomes inevitable: who is really selling—and who is being sold?

Before the shows even begin, cameras, more than angled at garments, focus on faces. The new collection about to be presented becomes almost a backdrop. The identities in the front row take centre stage.

Clearly, this is intentional. However, it increasingly resembles a carnival, where everything centres on marketing and advertising. And the risk of over-saturation is real.

Lately, in the aftermath of Ferragni’s “pandoro gate”, a de-influencing trend has surfaced — though it has quickly migrated from influencers to celebrities.

Nevertheless, a certain exhaustion is growing with celebrity marketing. 

The attention economy


The front row is no longer about proximity to design, but proximity to visibility.

Social media has rewired fashion’s priorities. A single Instagram story can generate more reach than an entire runway show. As a result, brands now curate their front rows as carefully as they design their collections or cast their campaigns.

Visibility has become the value. 

Celebrity marketing is increasingly seen as a key driver of luxury fatigue — and more broadly, of consumer exhaustion with advertising. The relentless flood of celebrity endorsements, coupled with rising prices and, at times, declining quality, has led many consumers to feel alienated and sceptical towards luxury brands.

And in this system, celebrities are not just guests — they are amplifiers. They validate, extend, and monetise a brand’s presence in real time. The front row generates headlines before the first look even appears. See the strategic placement of K-pop stars and the relentless pursuit of younger audiences. 

So the question emerges naturally: are clothes still the centre of fashion? 

Where identity resides


If identity was the underlying theme of the latest Fashion Weeks, then the industry faces a more fundamental question: where does that identity truly reside?

In the clothes. Or in the spectacle surrounding them.

If a celebrity wears one brand for a single show and another the next, what does their endorsement actually signify? Is a garment valued for its design, or for who was seen wearing it?

And ultimately: whose identity are we really buying into?

Front row: authorship vs amplification


Fashion has traditionally been rooted in authorship — the designer’s vision expressed through garments.

But today, that authorship is increasingly filtered through amplification. Who defines value now: the designer and the work itself, or the celebrity whose visibility transforms that work into relevance?

Because — most importantly — the same celebrity who legitimises one brand in the morning may endorse another in the afternoon. These associations are not rooted in continuity, in genuine support, but in circulation. They are transactional, immediate, and temporary.

In short, we have shifted from an era of authorship to an era of amplification.

Final thoughts


Ultimately, a counter-movement is quietly asserting itself. Some designers, particularly those outside the celebrity-driven machinery, deliberately eschew the carnival of front-row dressing and photo opportunities. For many independent designers, this is not merely a philosophical stance but a practical reality: lacking the massive marketing budgets required for celebrity booking and styling, they must rely instead on the quality of their work and the support of local press. 

In doing so, they inadvertently pose a pointed question to the industry: isn’t good design and quality the true point of a collection? And in fact, isn’t that what designers need to show?

Amid all the frenzy over front-row attendance and the relentless pursuit of visibility, the game has grown cloying. There exists, however, a different perspective: one uninterested in celebrities, indifferent to who wears what, and intent on returning to something closer to old-school fashion.

What remains, in the end, is a simple desire: to see beautiful clothes—
in a fashion show where the intensity returns to the clothes themselves.

Front row identity: when celebrities become the product Read More »

Galliano for Zara: this isn’t a victory — it’s a verdict

Reading Time: 5 minutes

A couturier, a fast-fashion giant, and an archive that doesn’t exist


Galliano for Zara. The news landed like a thunderclap in the fashion world: John Galliano, one of the last true couturiers on the scene, has signed a two-year contract with Zara. He will not simply design a collection; he will, in their words, “re-author” the brand’s archive.

On the surface, industry press has framed this as a moment of “fashion democracy”— a thrilling opportunity for the masses to own a fragment of a genius’s vision. But peel back the layers of the press release and something far more unsettling emerges. This is not a celebration of accessibility; it is one of the clearest absurdities of the modern fashion system. A signal of its complete destabilisation.

As we explored in a previous post, the idea of democratic luxury is as contradictory as illiberal democracy: it does not exist. It is either one thing or the other.

What makes this partnership truly fascinating is its jarring incongruity. We are watching John Galliano — a master of bias-cutting and elaborate construction — arrive at Zara’s doorstep. Meanwhile, across the industry, designers who built their reputations on more commercial ready-to-wear lines are now producing couture for heritage houses.

Today, the fashion industry doesn’t care about craft; it only cares about marketing.

Galliano for Zara: the “re-authoring” of nothing


Zara and Galliano describe this project as “re-authoring.” The word is carefully chosen. It sounds intimate, artistic, even sustainable. Galliano has spoken of working physically with garments from past seasons — deconstructing, reconfiguring, transforming. It evokes the atelier: scissors gliding through fabric, a master giving new life to forgotten pieces.

But does Zara really have an archive?

In fashion, the term archive is sacred. It implies a body of original work — pieces that defined eras, garments with a soul and a story, grounded in authorship, memory, and meaning. It suggests a point of view.

So we must ask: what, precisely, is the Zara archive?

Is it a catalogue of items subtly (and not so subtly) lifted from luxury runways as soon as they appear? A repository of trend-driven ephemera designed for a three-week lifecycle at best? Or is it the afterlife of these garments — the toxic mountains of textile waste piling up in Accra, the bleached remnants in the Atacama Desert?

Is the archive, in fact, the sum of garments made in the lowest quality polyester, worn twice, and discarded without ceremony?

To call this churn an archive is not just a marketing stretch. It is an erosion of meaning. An insult to the very concept of design history.

The pile-up we aren’t meant to see


When the strategists behind this campaign at Inditex approved it, did they assume we would ignore the elephant in the room — or rather, the mountains of textile waste?

The dissonance is staggering. Inditex remains one of the highest-emitting fashion companies in the world. Its business model is built on overproduction and planned obsolescence. And now, it seeks to cloak itself in the language of sustainability and high art, inviting a legend to “re-author” the very waste stream it has created.

From a sustainability perspective, “re-authoring” fashion waste only makes sense if the production of new items is significantly reduced. Otherwise, it is simply greenwashing.

This raises an uncomfortable question — not just about them, but about us, consumers.

When we applaud moves like this, when we rush to buy a “re-authored” piece of fast fashion, what exactly are we celebrating? Craft — or the permission to forget?

Brands are betting on our willingness to look away. They are betting that the word archive will blur the reality of the supply chain, and that Galliano’s name will function as a cultural absolution

But isn’t this simply a case of: This is greenwashing?

From our eBook, This is Greenwashing:

According to the British NGO Earthsight (2024), the fabric used by international giants H&M and Zara to produce their clothes is dirty cotton. The NGO alleges that the two European brands are complicit in large-scale illegal deforestation activities in Brazil, including land grabbing, human rights abuses, corruption, and violent land conflicts. “Earthsight’s year-long investigation reveals that corporations and consumers in Europe and North America are driving this destruction in a new way. Not by what they eat – but what they wear.” 

Or consider this excerpt:

Fashion Group Inditex (Zara) has partnered with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). Why is a multinational fast fashion corporation partnering with a foundation focused on protecting the animals whose habitats their manufacturing destroys?

On closer inspection, the answer seems less about transformation and more about optics.

And if we widen the lens further, another troubling dimension appears. In October 2022, ahead of the Israeli Knesset elections, Joey Schwebel — who holds the Zara franchise in Israel — hosted a campaign event for Itamar Ben-Gvir. The move sparked calls for a boycott, raising further questions about the political entanglements surrounding the brand.

Final reflections


Ultimately, the news about Galliano for Zara is not really about John Galliano or Zara. It is about an industry that has run out of ideas — and perhaps, out of direction. 

The fact that a designer like Galliano, a true couturier, has landed within a fast-fashion system is not a sign of creative evolution. It is a sign that the structures once capable of supporting such talent have eroded. The houses that should be courting his genius are too risk-averse, too driven by quarterly performance, to embrace a complex, demanding artist. 

So let’s call this what it is.

Not a meeting of minds.
A merger of convenience.

One side acquires cultural legitimacy—a halo of artistry.
The other secures a paycheck.

And still we are left with a question that no press release can convincingly answer: what does “fast fashion archive” really mean?

Galliano for Zara: this isn’t a victory — it’s a verdict Read More »

Antithesis, Ujoh at FW26 Paris Fashion Week

Reading Time: 4 minutes

The Japanese designer duo created a play on contrasts through unexpected combinations


Antithesis is Ujoh’s starting point for Fall/Winter 26 at Paris Fashion Week. In both Japanese and French, the word does not imply a rupture but rather a questioning. With this idea in mind, Ujoh re-examines its own foundations — its shapes, codes, and certainties — in order to rethink them from within.

Founded by the Japanese designer duo Mitsuru Nishizaki and Aco, the brand has long explored the tension between precision and experimentation. The house’s DNA remains intact, yet it asserts itself with renewed clarity. Silhouettes sharpen while volumes loosen, as if the collection were the result of a deliberate stripping bare. Minimalism acquires an insolent edge, infused with grunge energy and a rock spirit drawn from the 1990s. Between élégance and disorder, a new silhouette begins to emerge.

Antithesis by Ujoh at Paris Fashion Week FW26. A model walks the runway wearing a square pinstriped vest over a black lace blouse and trousers.
Ujoh – Paris Fashion Week FW26.27

Ujoh’s FW26 collection: antithesis


This season, the concept of antithesis takes shape through a deliberate tension between opposing forces— both structural and spiritual. Ujoh’s signature elements, such as precise layering and functional tab-tie details, remain present. But subtly reconfigured, as though charged with a new energy. The collection continues the brand’s long-standing dialogue with tailoring, a discipline rooted in Nishizaki’s early experience as a pattern maker. Structure remains central, yet here it is deliberately destabilised through unexpected layering and fluid volumes.

Volumes become looser, while A-line silhouettes are sharpened by asymmetric, cape-like panels. One particularly inventive gesture appears in the tailoring: Bermuda shorts in striped or solid menswear cloth are pleated along the side seams and layered directly over matching full-length trousers. The result is a hybrid garment — simultaneously tailored and relaxed — that perfectly embodies the collection’s dialogue between structure and ease.

This conceptual rigour drives from in an almost artisanal approach to material. True to its philosophy, the house continues its deep textile research, this season highlighting fabrics produced on a 1960s Schöherr loom in Japan. Operating five times slower than modern machinery, the loom produces textiles with a distinctive tactile surface. A deliberate slowing down that stands in quiet opposition to the logic of speed and overproduction that defines much of the industry today. In one striking example, a diaphanous silver nylon ribbon is woven into black wool, creating a semi-transparent check. Elsewhere, coats and skirts in deep black and aubergine are finished with hand-snipped fringing, introducing a deliberately undone quality.

Rugged elegance & unexpected combinations


The garments that result are studies in rugged elegance. Unexpected fabric combinations abound. Delicate lace juxtaposed with the utilitarian character of an aviator jacket in faux suede and fur. Heavy metal zippers carve graphic lines across coats and tops, functioning not merely as closures but as sculptural elements that shape the silhouette.

Antithesis by Ujoh at Paris Fashion Week FW26.
Ujoh – Paris Fashion Week FW26.27

The palette remains restrained: chocolate, rosewood, fern green, and fig. Punctuated by flashes of optic white and beige borrowed from sharkskin suiting. Recurring check patterns evoke a subtle grunge sensibility. Yet the reference to the 1990s is less about nostalgia than attitude, expressed through layering, texture, and a studied nonchalance rendered with unmistakable Japanese precision.

At the core of the season, a collaboration with the Japanese duo DREAMS COME TRUE extends the collection beyond the runway. Designing stage costumes for their tour, Ujoh translates its tailoring language into performance, with select pieces in the collection emerging as direct continuations of this exchange between clothing and movement.

Final thoughts


The theme of antithesis in FW26 Ujoh’s collection extended even to the show’s format. Rejecting a fixed sequence, the looks appeared in a seemingly personal order, as if drawn from a lived-in wardrobe to be explored rather than a story to be followed. This liberated presentation encouraged the audience to consider each piece individually. An object of desire in its own right. While still belonging to a cohesive, beautifully unresolved whole.

In this sense, antithesis becomes less a stylistic device than a way of thinking. An ongoing negotiation between discipline and disruption, precision and instinct.

Antithesis, Ujoh at FW26 Paris Fashion Week Read More »

Changing shape, keeping the soul: twenty years of suite123

Reading Time: 3 minutes

On fashion, ideas, and the friendships that became bonds


Twenty years of suite123.
There’s a moment when you realise a space has become more than just walls. More than just a store, a studio, or an office. For us, that realisation took 20 years.

On March 15, suite123 turned two decades old. Anniversaries are strange things: they invite you to look back, but they also reveal how much has changed along the way.

suite123 began with fashion. Not simply selling clothes, but curating a point of view — pieces chosen because they carried something lasting. Clothes you wouldn’t tire of. Clothes that felt right.

suite123 was a place you went to.
A destination with its own atmosphere and energy.

Of course, the clothes mattered. But what mattered even more was how you felt when you walked out the door wearing them. That feeling was always the real point.

Somewhere along the road, fashion became something deeper for us: a language. We found ourselves not only interested in hemlines but even more interested in humans. And our relationship with the planet — our impact on it.

We realised we could use fashion as a lens to analyse society, understanding why we wear what we wear. How people live. What they believe. The choices they make. What gives meaning to everyday life.

During the pandemic, that is when suite123 moved.

Not down the street—but from a place to a perspective.

Ideas slowly joined fashion.
Research replaced routine.
Curiosity replaced seasons — and prepackaged concepts.

And with that, a philosophy took shape: ethics alongside aesthetics. Attention to the environment. A commitment to uniqueness. Garments well-made, chosen with care. Less, but better—not as restriction, but as intentional choice.

suite123 stopped being just somewhere you visited and became something you could carry with you — a way of looking at things, a small lens through which to observe the world.

Of course, you don’t shape-shift without friction. There were difficulties — many. Money tight. Health uncertain. Moments when the old path or the mainstream seemed the only possibility. When the new direction felt like a gamble rather than a necessity. Moments when change felt uncertain—
and still now, feels so.

But there were also discoveries. Research that opened unexpected doors.
Style that revealed deeper substance.
And conversations that turned into something more — even a book.

Because through all these years, the most important element has always been people.

Clients who became friends.
Encounters that became relationships.
Friendships that slowly turned into bonds. Unexpected, beautiful. 

Celebrating twenty years of suite123. Three arms intertwined, wearing the same chartreuse knit, seated on a green velvet sofa. A portrait of connection between the two of us from suite123 and a close friend.


Some of you have been with us since the beginning — since the racks, the fittings, the laughter in the boutique. Others arrived during the years of transition, when suite123 began to change shape. And some of you may have discovered us only recently, through a blog post or an Instagram story.

To those who stayed: thank you.
To those who understand the journey: you are the reason this evolution continues.

Twenty years later, suite123 is still evolving.
Still exploring fashion —  with garments worth keeping.
Still searching for ideas.
And still asking questions about what it means to be a modern human—with all the complexity, contradiction, and beauty that comes with it.

Changing shape.
Keeping the soul.

An independent voice in an increasingly corporate fashion system.

Still suite123.
The next chapter is still being written.

Changing shape, keeping the soul: twenty years of suite123 Read More »