Berluti Living Apart Together: social-distancing inspired preview for 2021 Fashion Week season

    2021 Fashion Week season: Menswear designers once again met the challenges of reinventing Fashion Week. Berluti kicked things off, changing the time and date in the official Fashion Week to unveil a preview in a one minute, one second long teaser entitled Living Apart Together, inspired by the pandemic restrictions. “We start from … Read more

Berluti’s iconic Venezia patina on Hublot Big Bang Unico Berluti Cold Brown

    Initiated four years ago, the collaboration between Berluti and the Swiss luxury watchmaker Hublot has given life to a series of unique watches. The Hublot Big Bang Unico Berluti Cold Brown watch fuses the heritage of the men’s fashion house Berluti, the vision of its creative Director Kris Van Assche and the mastery … Read more

Exuberant ceramic art x menswear fashion: Brian Rochefort for Berluti

 

 

The traditional idea of fashion week and fashion shows got canceled. Kris Van Assche says it is a once in lifetime occasion to actually give people the background of a new collection.

Brian Rochefort x Berluti; @berluti

Paris Fashion Week Men’s Spring/Summer 2021 went all-digital in the Covid-19 context. LVMH fashion houses like Berluti rethought the presentations of their ready-to-wear collections as runway events were replaced by novel online shows and special films.

Inspired by volcanoes and exotic plants, the exuberant signature of ceramic artist Brian Rochefort blends intuitively with the augmented natural texture and colour language exercised at Berluti luxury fashion Maison.

This season, Berluti’s Artistic Director Kris Van Assche adapts to the challenges of our moment in time in a long-distance collaboration with the ceramic artist and sculptor Brian Rochefort, the first creative collaboration on ready-to-wear for Berluti. This new collection whets the curiosity of Berluti aficionados as Kris Van Assche takes a familiar aesthetic and transports it with a new proposal, taking sartorial creations into unexplored territory.

The collection of garments and accessories will be fully unveiled and launched in stores in January 2021.

Berluti approaches the concept of collaborations from a supplementary and illuminating perspective. When, in 2019, Kris Van Assche partnered with the furniture house Pierre Jeanneret, the collaboration illustrated aspects of craft and colour shared by the two parties. For the evolving clientele of Berluti, the approach manifests in curiosity by association: a new proposal within an aesthetic to which the client already relates. In his collaboration with Brian Rochefort, Kris Van Assche builds on the character of Berluti in a gesture of connectivity and communication key to the time in which we find ourselves.

“Right now, collaboration feels like a meaningful way to create something new. As something of a ceramics nerd, I have admired Brian Rochefort’s expression for a long time, and am fortunate enough to own one of his works. I couldn’t be more excited to interpret his vision through the lens of Berluti,” comments Kris Van Assche. Creative Director of Berluti.

The behind-the-scenes of the collaboration was previewed in a video between the two collaborators, screened online as part of Digital Paris Fashion Week on 9 July 2020. The film can be accessed on YouTube.com/Berluti.

Brian Rochefort x Berluti; @berluti
Berluti Canvas; @berluti

For 2020, Berluti also presented Signature – The maison’s first patterned canvas created by Kris Van Assche.

Inspired by the archives, the Signature Canvas blends the new Berluti logo, taken from the shoe tree of the very first pair of shoes made by Alessandro Berluti, and the undulating strokes of the iconic scritto motif, a tribute to the art of calligraphy created by Olga Berluti.

The Signature pattern is engraved on a black textured fabric that resists everyday use and is completed with Berluti’s trademark finishings – including leather details embellished with bootmaker studs that bring a metallic sparkle to each piece.

This new collection offers a variety of briefcases, cross-body bags, clutches, totes, backpacks, travel bags, and a sailor bag – all featuring the new emblematic of the Maison.

Brian Rochefort x Berluti; @berluti
Brian Rochefort x Berluti; @berluti

The Travel Capsule: The Berluti x Globe-Trotter

 

 

This season, Berluti collaborates with British hand-crafted luggage brand Globe-Trotter to create a Travel Capsule collection featuring for the first time Berluti’s SIGNATURE Canvas.

@berluti x @globe-trotter

Artistic Director Kris Van Assche’s aim was to create a collection with a shared philosophy. “At the heart of both our work are quality and know-how that have remained unaltered throughout history.”

The Berluti x Globe-Trotter Travel Capsule includes eight hard cases in different formats. The pieces were unveiled at the Berluti Winter 2020 Show and will be available In-Store and on the E-Shop starting April 2020.

Each Berluti case is the result of combined expertise, starting with the solid yet lightweight base of Globe-Trotter’s luggage – obtained through a process in which 14 layers of Japanese paper are compressed to form an organically-textured shell -, and then completed with Berluti’s brand new SIGNATURE Canvas and iconic details, including hand patinated Venezia leather handles and corners, leather straps and nickel hardware engraved with the Maison’s logo, mostly assembled with the same set of tools Globe-Trotter has been using since its foundation.

The Globe-Trotter Travel Capsule includes eight hard cases in different formats: 2 rolling suitcases, a shoe trunk holding up to eight pairs of shoes, a shoe care kit case and a watch box, as well as day-to-day accessories such as a messenger bag, a backpack and a briefcase.

Globe-Trotter’s collaborations include projects with Paul Smith, England Polo, The Goring Hotel, and James Bond’s franchise No Time to Die.

@no time to die x @globe-trotter

Bond is back, and so is the official 007 luggage collection from Globe-Trotter.

Inspired by the suitcases created specially for the film, the No Time To Die luxury luggage collection from Globe-Trotter is the ultimate travel companion.

The brand-new vulcanised fibreboard suitcase is available in both carry-on and check-in sizes, with an innovative four-wheel design for adventure and espionage on every level. The case is available in a statement Ocean Green colourway, contrasted with stylish black leather trim. A matching luggage tag embossed with the No Time To Die logo completes the look.

@berluti x @globe-trotter

Berluti patina know-how is giving back all their splendor to Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic furniture pieces

    Berluti, the subsidiary luxury brand of LVMH that manufactures menswear, especially the leather finishing of calfskin, kangaroo leather and alligator skin x Laffanour Galerie Downtown: Pierre Jeanneret Limited Edition. Berluti’s Artistic Director Kris Van Assche, together with François Laffanour of Laffanour – Galerie Downtown / Paris, present a small exclusive series of 17 original … Read more

Berluti shoe leathers turned into tailoring for Spring/ Summer 2020. The famous patina is everywhere

 

 

Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 expands on the adventurous wardrobe.

Presented in front of the Orangerie of the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris, the Berluti Men’s Spring-Summer 2020 collection expanded on the adventurous wardrobe proposed for the previous season, amplifying its details.

berluti summer-2020-runway-show-02
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Runaway; @berluti.com

Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 collection underscores the continuity between Kris Van Assche’s contemporary spirit and Berluti’s heritage.

Berluti is a curious brand because, in terms of clothing, it has almost no heritage: its story is found in shoes rather than ready-to-wear. That blank canvas appears to fascinate Van Assche who, alongside presenting the “fashion forward” and womenswear looks, is also reimagining its past,” commented Vogue UK’ Olivia Singer.

Informed by the stained surfaces of the marble tables on which Berluti artisans in the Manufacture de Ferrare hand-dyed patina shoes, Artistic Director Kris Van Assche added bright neon and fluorescent hues to his palette.

berluti summer-2020-runway-show-05
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Runaway; @berluti.com
berluti summer-2020-runway-show-06
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com

The patina suit, transmuted from the classic Alessandro shoe, is embossed with the Maison’s heritage scritto motif, which reappears on jacquard shirts and suits, printed on sportswear, as well as on bags and in the details of linings and zips. With an unrestrained attitude towards dress codes, silhouettes expand in pants, Bermuda shorts and sleeveless jackets with epaulettes.

Kris Van Assche also explores new iterations of sportswear with takes on perforation in woven leather tops.

“Berluti is supposed to be LVMH’s solely all-menswear marque, but Kris Van Assche is not down with the same-sex, boarding school vibe,” commented vogue.com

“Van Assche again mixed tailoring with moto-inspired pieces to evoke the complementary interplay of heritage values and fashion-forwardness he is working to achieve. This was also exemplified in the orange-accent-soled Alessandro shoes and the orange piping on this season’s bag offer.”

berluti summer-2020-runway-show-04
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
berluti summer-2020-runway-show-03
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
berluti summer-2020-runway-show-01
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
berluti summer-2020-runway-show-001
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com
berluti summer-2020-runway-show
Berluti Spring/ Summer 2020 Fashion Show; @berluti.com