At the recently concluded Milan Fashion Week, Ermanno Scervino presented a Fall/Winter collection that was impossible to look away from. Its defining themes were not simply “beauty” or “trendiness,” but rather a set of contrasting concepts: relaxed yet structured, everyday yet extraordinary.
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### When Knitwear Gains a Skeleton
This season, the designer stitched “comfort” and “sensuality” together.
Knitwear is no longer merely synonymous with softness—it has been sculpted into angular forms, like waves frozen by the wind. Tulle and lace are no longer symbols of fragility; gold threads weave through them, lending them weight under the lights. The most surprising piece is a workwear-inspired nylon jacket: its exterior exudes pragmatic coolness, while the lining is luxurious lambswool. Here, the line between hard and soft is blurred to perfection.
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### A Colorful Emotional Rollercoaster
It begins with creamy white, like the first rays of morning light. Next comes tobacco gray, carrying the languidness of the afternoon. Then we plunge into black—profound and quiet, like the falling night. Just when you think the story is about to end, a splash of red bursts in, fiery yet restrained, like a long-awaited monologue.
This is not a simple color palette, but an emotional arc spanning an entire day.
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### The Game of Tension in Silhouettes
This season’s silhouettes conceal many “confrontations.”
A cinched waistline and a voluminous skirt pull against each other, creating a subtle visual tension. A wild-textured pony skin jacket is paired with a strapless dress so light it’s almost transparent—a beast and a flower sharing the same space, yet surprisingly harmonious.
This juxtaposition of “hard and soft” isn’t about conflict, but about the multifaceted nature of womanhood: I can be gentle, or I can be sharp; I can be quiet, or I can be bold.
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### Ambition in the Details
Craftsmanship is the silent star of this season.
Laser-cut lace feels like romance calculated to perfection. Crystal-embellished dresses shimmer subtly with every step—unobtrusive, yet impossible to ignore. The ancient “punto sollevato” raised-stitch knitting technique has been revived, giving the fabric a relief-like texture. Meanwhile, dresses inspired by lingerie achieve an elegant transition from the private to the public through layers of embroidery—luxury is no longer a superficial accumulation, but a refinement ingrained in the very fabric of the design.
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### A Wardrobe Mantra for the Modern Woman
This season, Ermano Scervino makes one point clear: true elegance is never about playing by the rules.
You can stride through the wind in a shearling-lined work jacket, or grace a dinner party draped in leopard print and lace. You can wear creamy white by day, switch to deep black by evening, and on a night meant to be remembered, leave your mark with a touch of red.
Relaxed yet not sloppy, gentle yet sharp—this, perhaps, is the attitude most worth wearing in Fall/Winter 2026.

