Is couture becoming a prop for the digital spectacle?
What does haute couture in the digital age represent: craftsmanship, complexity, and technical innovation—or pure spectacle? In an era where we judge everything from our phones, how can we possibly appreciate the hundreds of hours of handwork, the weight of a bespoke silk gown, the architecture of a hidden seam?
Platforms like 1Granary have sparked debates by placing designers likeBlazy and Anderson at the centre of a modern couture dilemma. Anderson’s silhouettes were elaborate, with floral decorations, built for impact—a showstopper perfectly engineered for the digital gaze. This, in turn, ignited debate over Blazy’s Chanel: was it true couture, or elevated ready-to-wear? Dubbed “boring” by some, his collection was a quiet manifesto for wearability, for the tactile, a dreamy escape. What scrolled past as a simple suit may have taken weeks just to weave the fabric. This is the ocean between a post and a piece of art: one is designed for reaction, the other for reality.
Let’s be clear: couture is the highest form of fashion, and it is elitist by definition. It exists for the few who can afford it. It’s a matter of wealth, not representation. Yet, its audience is now global, watching through a screen. Even if they can’t afford it, they judge it.
So what does haute couture in the digital age, in the age of content, represent? Why do houses continue? Because Haute Couture is the ultimate engine of the dream. It is high-stakes marketing, an artistic flag planted to validate the entire brand’s luxury status. The shows themselves are rarely profitable, but they generate the priceless cultural capital that sells perfumes, lipsticks, and handbags.
It’s a brilliant, necessary paradox: they craft the unattainable to move the mass-produced.
This brings us to the core tension: spectacle versus substance. When a gown goes viral, are we admiring art—or just consuming content? Has couture become a prop for the digital circus, where the “wow” factor must be instantly legible in a thumbnail?
Perhaps the most radical act in today’s couture is not extravagance, but integrity. It is the insistence on existing beyond the scroll—in three dimensions, in time, in the human hand. The greatest luxury it offers now may not be the price tag, but its physical, tangible truth in a world of filters and facades.
So, does it matter if it keeps the ateliers alive? Absolutely. But let’s look closer, beyond the spectacle. The real dream isn’t just the dress on the runway; it’s the persistence of craft in a disposable age. It’s the hand that sews, the eye that fits, the art that refuses to be flattened.
Portrait of contemporary madness. Milan men’s fashion week. The buzz of Prada on sustainability. Doing our work “at its best” doesn’t change reality. Doesn’t solve anything. A five-year-old child arrested in the US. What is innocence in the age of surveillance? Tear-gas shadows across playgrounds. Twelve thousand people killed in Iran — grief measured in hashtags, silence in policy halls. The world scrolls. Paris men’s fashion week. Dior: what’s the point? Identity disrupted, a punkish take designed for someone else’s customers.
A cyclone, Harry, devastates Sicily — a climate out of control is no longer news.
Runways glowing while real lives bleed outside the glass.
In Minneapolis on January 24, Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and US citizen, was shot and killed by federal immigration enforcement agents during protests against a swelling ICE operation — the second fatal shooting by federal agents in the city this month. Videos and witness accounts show he was filming and attempting to help others when the confrontation escalated, raising intense public anger and prompting investigations and lawsuits over denied evidence access and use of force.
The official narrative and the evidence clash. The streets erupt in outrage. Protesters push back as cities shudder.
The runways continue: models beneath spotlights, ideal silhouettes, future trends. In the streets: crowds march in frozen cities, shouting, “We want justice.” “We want dignity.”
One world churns in couture, the next bleeds on asphalt.
But what is life without empathy? What is fashion without empathy? What is style when bodies are collateral? When governments shoot their own citizens? When children are detained? Or when faraway wars count their dead by the thousands?
And when horrors are normalised, and a global war feels closer?
This is not future fiction. This is now.
A portrait of contemporary madness.
And still — the fashion industry speaks of next season’s must-have. Feeling overwhelmed? Perhaps we all are.
FW26 Men’s Fashion Week: unpacking Miuccia Prada’s statement on sustainability
Men’s Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2026/27 has just wrapped up in Milan, bringing the luxury dilemma sharply into focus. Beyond the collections themselves, one statement in particular stood out — a widely shared comment by Miuccia Prada on sustainability.
In a season marked by uncertainty, many brands sought reassurance either in the past through nostalgia or in bold contemporary provocations, while reaffirming tailoring and colour as anchors of meaning. Following a runway show explicitly reflecting on the present moment, Miuccia Prada and co-designer Raf Simons spoke to the press. Sustainability inevitably entered the conversation.
Luxury fashion and sustainability: pragmatism versus idealism
Miuccia Prada reiterated her long-standing commitment to doing her work conscientiously and striving for excellence. She stated:
“I’m trying to get on with my work and do it properly. If we truly wanted to be sustainable, we’d have to stop everything: no cars, no clothes, no consumption at all. We must be honest and do our work to the best of our ability, bringing creativity, quality, and awareness to it.”
It is a compelling, deliberately provocative statement — one that exposes the tension between idealism and pragmatism in sustainability discourse.
A titan of the luxury fashion industry and a figure known for her intellectual and often contradictory positions, Prada draws a stark dichotomy:
The pure ideal: true, absolute sustainability would require a complete halt to modern industrial life — no cars, no new clothes, no consumption.
The pragmatic reality: since such a scenario is implicitly deemed impossible or unacceptable, the alternative is not withdrawal but “doing our work properly”.
The underlying message is clear: perfection becomes the enemy of improvement. Prada rejects a paralysing purity test in favour of an ethic of incremental responsibility.
The luxury dilemma and its internal contradictions
Yet this statement also reveals a deeper contradiction.
1. A defence of the luxury system At its core, the quote functions as a defence of high-end fashion’s right to exist. Prada suggests that even the creative and qualitative apex of the industry would fail a test of absolute sustainability. The implicit argument is: if fast fashion is condemned, then so must luxury be — the overproduction model is the same. And if that happens, society risks losing creativity, craftsmanship, culture.
2. Quality and creativity as a smokescreen For luxury brands, “quality” (durability, materials, craftsmanship) and “creativity” (cultural and artistic value) are repeatedly invoked as ethical justifications for continued mass production. But this framing sidesteps the central issue: the business model itself.
Whether it is a €50 polyester blouse or a €5.000 nylon bag, the luxury industry still depends on:
Seasonal cycles, driving perpetual “newness” and the obsolescence of desire
Marketing-driven consumption, creating symbolic rather than utilitarian needs
Vast, opaque supply chains, with environmental and social impacts regardless of material quality
Manufactured exclusivity and scarcity, fundamentally at odds with the anti-consumption logic Prada herself references
Within this structure, creativity and quality are not neutral values — they are often the very engines of consumption.
3. Intellectual honesty vs corporate reality There is undeniable honesty in Prada’s acknowledgement that true sustainability would mean “no clothes”. It openly names the conflict at the heart of fashion. Yet the conclusion — “do our work well” — feels like an intellectual sleight of hand.
The problem shifts from systemic change (overproduction, growth imperatives, marketing pressure) to individual ethics: my work, our work. In doing so, responsibility is displaced from the corporation and its structural drivers onto personal integrity.
By articulating the critic’s most radical argument — we should stop everything — Prada positions herself as the sober realist. The critique is acknowledged, absorbed, and then dismissed as unworkable. It is a sophisticated form of containment: recognising the radical in order to defend a softened status quo.
What the luxury dilemma leaves out
A false binary Prada presents a choice between total civilisational shutdown and business-as-usual with better intentions. This erases the vast middle ground: degrowth, sufficiency, circular systems, and radical business-model innovation.
Denial of agency As creative director of a billion-euro group, Prada possesses exceptional power to experiment with new models. Retreating to “just doing my work” understates this agency. The argument might be defensible from a junior designer — far less so from one of the most influential figures in fashion.
Final thoughts
One could read the collection itself — clothes that appear worn yet are brand new — as an implicit suggestion: use what you already have. This is a ritual we always cherish at the end of a Prada show, because there is always a message that transcends the clothes. But the more pressing question remains how to build genuinely sustainable models for the fashion business.
Terms like degrowth or smaller production volumes threaten the very structures that allow luxury brands to maintain their cathedrals — architectural, symbolic, and economic. And so they remain largely unspoken.
Miuccia Prada’s statement ultimately becomes a revealing manifesto of the luxury dilemma. It is intellectually lucid about the problem, yet philosophically conservative in its solution. It mobilises the language of ethics — honesty, awareness — to justify the preservation of a system that, by its own admission, cannot exist within true planetary limits.
Focusing on “doing the work at its best” inside a broken model, even with the best intentions of creativity and quality, amounts to a form of managed dissent: it critiques the ends, but fiercely defends the means.
Report Rai3: fashion sweatshops and the unbroken link between luxury and labour abuse
While Italy was in the midst of Men’s Fashion Week, Rai3’s Reportaired a hard-hitting investigation into the labour exploitation behind the luxury brands now seeking a legal shield. Thetopic itself was not new: recently, media outlets have reported on sweatshops hidden behind the façade of Made in Italy. What Report did differently was to go further—attempting to speak directly with manufacturers, workers and brand owners.
Among the major figures contacted, only Diego Della Valle—chairman of Tod’s Group (Tod’s, Hogan, Fay and Roger Vivier)—agreed to appear on camera. His appearance, however, raised more questions than it answered. The investigation revealed that audits had been conducted within the supply chain, yet Tod’s disregarded their findings.
Some commentators accused Report of daring to criticise an industry that represents a significant share of Italy’s GDP. We strongly disagree. When an industry operates—directly or indirectly—through sweatshop conditions, exposing it is not only legitimate, it is necessary.
Judicial administration and labour abuse
Several luxury brands have been placed under judicial administration over failures to monitor labour exploitation in their supply chains.
Valentino Bags—a company controlled by Valentino and responsible for producing bags for the brand—was among them, alongside Loro Piana, Armani and Dior. In one of the Chinese workshops producing Valentino bags, the Carabinieri found a child playing among fabrics and industrial machinery.
In July 2025, the Milan court ordered judicial administration for Loro Piana, the Italian high‑end clothing brand controlled by LVMH. Investigators found that production had been entrusted to companies that subcontracted work to Chinese workshops where workers were exploited.
Della Valle: “The Chinese workshops are not our concern”
In October, the Milan Prosecutor’s Office requested preventive judicial administration for Tod’s SpA. The investigation uncovered serious violations of workers’ rights across the subcontracting chain responsible for producing the brand’s goods. Prosecutors stated that the company was aware of these practices, leading to an investigation for caporalato (the gangmaster system).
Following similar measures against multiple fashion brands, Milan prosecutor Paolo Storari also requested a six‑month advertising ban for Tod’s. Through an exclusive interview with Diego Della Valle, Report reconstructed the luxury supply chain: production is outsourced to Italian firms with no manufacturing facilities, which then subcontract to Chinese workshops.
Della Valle argued that responsibility should not extend beyond the first level of the supply chain. This position is deeply problematic. If a brand entrusts production to intermediaries that do not manufacture anything themselves, what does it expect to happen? And why do brands choose this model in the first place?
In the Tod’s case, one of the most serious issues to emerge was the failure to act on clear audit findings. Problems were identified, yet deliberately overlooked.
The attempted legal shield for luxury brands
Against this backdrop, Article 30 of the Small and Medium Enterprises Bill—approved by the Senate and debated in the Chamber of Deputies—attempted to exempt major fashion brands from liability for crimes committed along their production chains.
Widely described as a legal shield for luxury brands, the amendment was eventually withdrawn following protests by trade unions, workers and the Clean Clothes Campaign. It will now return to the Senate.
During his interview with Report, Minister Adolfo Urso stated that caporalato in Italy had been “brought by the Chinese”. A staggering statement that shifts blame away from the structural drivers.
Shifting blame to the lowest—and weakest—links in the chain conveniently ignores who sets prices, who designs supply chains and who ultimately benefits from lower production costs.
Made in Chitaly: the testimony that explains everything
One of the most powerful moments in Report was the testimony of Andrea Parisi, owner of Spectre Srl, a company specialising in the finishing of heels for luxury footwear.
Until recently, Spectre employed 34–35 people and worked for all the major luxury brands. Today, only three workers remain.
Parisi explained how brands outsource work to companies that possess no machinery, which then subcontract—unofficially—to Chinese workshops capable of producing tens of thousands of units at prices that are economically impossible under legal conditions.
A heel paid €0.80 per piece (€1.60 per pair), he explained, should cost at least twice that amount. This pricing mechanism drives law-abiding Italian manufacturers out of the market, depriving them of contracts, revenue, and skilled labour.
“The most serious loss,” Parisi said, “is our workforce.” Competing, he explained, is impossible unless one is willing to break the law.
Andrea Parisi’s most touching words:
“The fashion sector in Italy no longer exists. But at this moment we don’t even have the tools to fight anymore, how are we supposed to go forward? Must our workers be reduced to ‘Vietnam conditions’? What have we come to? Behind subcontracting, lies undeclared labour, lies precarious employment, exploitation. It must be abolished, full stop, and it must be done tomorrow morning. It’s Made in Italy if the workers’ ethics are respected. Otherwise, write on the products ‘Made in Italy 50%’, at least tell the truth.”
A structural system, not an anomaly
The idea of serving luxury products to everyone has generated this system. The so-called democratic luxury.
As Della Valle said: “We survive because people recognise in us an absolute quality. How many people buy a bag or a pair of shoes from me? Many have the money to do so, then there are those who love them, who perhaps don’t have the money, they make a sacrifice, and to those people you can’t say: ‘You’re working your arse off to buy this little thing, and these people are a bunch of wankers.’”
So brands serve entry price products while, at the same time, cut their costs as much as they can to maximise profits. Let’s clearly state this: the idea of democratic luxury is as contradictory as illiberal democracy: it does not exist. It is either one thing or the other.
As Luca Bertazzoni (Report) said: “The point is that those Chinese companies which President Meloni claims to be fighting are now an integral part of the system and continue to be sought by the major fashion brands to maximise profits. Take the case of Mr Yang, whom we had met a year ago after the Carabinieri found Dior bags inside his workshop in Opera, where workers were being exploited.”
Gian Gaetano Bellavia – expert in corporate criminal law, explained further: “The Italian who wins the contract always keeps his own margin, and it’s the Chinese contractor who has to cut his margin. So then the Chinese contractor perhaps goes to a Pakistani, right? Who is even more desperate than the Chinese.”
This system is not limited to handbags or footwear, nor is it an exception. Furthermore, it is not solely an Italian issue—is Dior an Italian brand? And doesn’t LVMH owns Loro Piana? The problem is structural and global. To be clear, it also exists beyond fashion. Yet, this breadth is not a mitigating factor but an aggravating one.
As Bellavia noted, it is a “war among the poor to serve the rich”. Those at the top remain silent, protected by distance, complexity and legal ambiguity.
Final thoughts
In conclusion, this operating system is not new. As young women working in fashion in the late 1990s, we witnessed its gradual consolidation. For over twenty years, opacity has prevailed. If we saw that, how did nobody question what was happening?
Today, instead of dismantling the system, the Italian government proposes a legal shield for luxury.
But when luxury products are made through exploitation, who is responsible? The last link in the chain? Really? Or those who decide to maximise profits by compressing production costs from the top down?
If Italian manufacturing has been decimated, responsibility lies with both political choices and brand strategies. Blaming labour exploitation solely on the weakest links in the chain is not only dishonest—it is shameful.
A legal shield is not the solution. These companies have money, power and structure. They must be responsible for workers’ conditions and for the reality behind their products. Choosing ignorance forfeits accountability.
Luca Bertazzoni offered a definitive direction:
“If high fashion were to abandon the subcontracting chain that allows it to make profits by producing at rock-bottom prices, Italian artisans could go back to work, with full respect for workers’ rights.”
So, forget a legal shield for luxury. The real solution is clear: dismantle the subcontracting chains that allow luxury brands to profit from cut‑price labour. Only then can Italian artisans return to work under conditions that respect dignity and rights.
Where sculptural form meets liquid drape — for those who wear an atmosphere, not just a dress
This is The Draped Neckline Dress by Marc Le Bihan. 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 Draped Neckline Dress is not merely worn; it is experienced. It is the embodiment of poetic tension — a loose silhouette that offers profound ease, while its double-draped collar creates a focal point of sculptural intensity. A silent, powerful gesture of romantic intellect. It evokes the fluid discipline of modernist sculpture: form that appears both captured and in motion, defined by the gravity of its own fabric.
Windsor. Not merely a colour, but a depth of mood. A rich, complex neutral that holds shadow and light within its weave, lending a painterly quality to the drape. A shade that is both grounding and ethereal.
Marc Le Bihan’s avant-garde clothing: the anatomy of fluid elegance
The detail: A double-draped neckline, softly folded and anchored with precise intention. This is its signature, its soul. More than a detail, it is a fixed moment of fluidity — a sculptural frame that introduces a dialogue between structure and softness. It challenges the expected, offering a wearable study in volume and line.
The design: A loose, knee-length silhouette with asymmetric cuffs and a longer, drifting back hem. Sleeves are extra-long with a glove-like finish. This is the core of its philosophy. The cut suggests effortless, airy movement, yet resolves on the body with a defined, elegant shape. The longer back grants a whisper of drama; the asymmetric cuffs and elongated sleeves provide a subtle, intellectual finish. Ease, meticulously composed.
The make: Made in France — from a distinctive hand-dyed, wool-blend knit. Not merely a fabric, but a sensorial statement. The blend of viscose, wool, and elastane creates a fabric with memory, weight, and a beautiful, forgiving stretch. It drapes with intention and moves with the body. This is tangible quality — designed to become a second skin.
The Draped Neckline Dress: a timeless addition to a poetic wardrobe
This piece offers confidence through softness. It allows you to move through your world with grace and quiet authority. It understands that true sophistication is the sovereignty over one’s own silhouette.
For a cultured afternoon: paired with delicate ankle boots and a single, significant piece of jewellery. A uniform for contemplation and creation.
For the urban landscape: paired with wide-leg trousers and beneath a tailored, deconstructed coat. An interplay of soft structure and deliberate, fluid movement.
For the understated evening: worn alone, its glove-like sleeves the sole adornment, with sleek heels. The apex of considered, feminine power.
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 Draped Neckline Dress – Marc Le Bihan Limited edition. Like a line of poetry—meant to be felt.
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 French art of drapé and how this dress masters it. Or how to style the asymmetric hem to highlight movement. We are here for the conversations, not just the transactions.
Footnotes: The intelligence of this piece lies in its balanced contradiction. It offers the psychological comfort of a forgiving silhouette alongside the refined polish of meticulous draping, resolving a timeless sartorial desire. It proves that avant-garde design does not sacrifice wearability—it elevates it. Emotion, refined to its most powerful expression.