Milan Fashion Week

Goście Mediolańskiego Tygodnia Mody chętnie zakładają sukienki od Gucci, kolorowe garnitury i koszule z fontaziem. Włoski styl jak zwykle wygląda świetnie. Zobaczcie prawdziwe la dolce vita w Milano!

KRIS JENNER ON KANYE WEST: SOME DAYS, "THERE SHOULD BE A NO-TWEETING LAW"

Kanye West's tweet storms this past month have at times been cringe-inducing?from dropping that $53 million debt bomb to the Taylor Swift shade. And his mother-in-law, Kris Jenner, isn't a fan of all the posts either—or the reputation they're giving him. "You know, there have been days where there should be a no tweeting law, and I feel like I'll ground him," Kris tells Ellen DeGeneres this week. Kanye means well—his tweets just come off the wrong way, Kris explains. "Sometimes I feel like what he's really trying to say…when he was like 'Oh, I am $53 million in debt,' you know, that whole thing, what he was trying to say was that's what he's done to spend on his clothing line over the last 15 or 20 years or whatever it's been. But it comes out not exactly the right way, and people get it misconstrued through the media and then it's just complicated, what can I say?" She does agree with one thing though: Ellen's suggestion for helping Kanye's Twitter going forward, discussed above.

KARL LAGERFELD THINKS THE FASHION INDUSTRY IS 'A MESS' RIGHT NOW

Of course, Karl Lagerfeld has something to say about the "see now, buy now" movement. Backstage at the Fendi Fall 2016 presentation yesterday, the designer talked to Business of Fashion about the current state of the fashion industry. "It's a mess," he said, referring to the lack of uniformity among designers following traditional and consumer-based schedules. While brands in New York and London embraced the "see now, buy now" calendar to keep up with the fast pace of social media and the internet, those in Milan and Paris seem hesitant to join it. In fact, France's governing body of fashion rejected it, believing that the wait for runway to hit retail is better for business. "I can show my collections and sell them and give people the time to make their choice, to order them and to make them beautifully produced and editors can photograph them. If not, that's the end of everything," Lagerfeld told BoF. He also noted the pressure on production and that designers who don't have retail shops will suffer. But Lagerfeld, a man of tradition, is keeping up with the high-paced changes in fashion in his own way. He already creates a capsule collection for Chanel that doesn't hit runways and premieres directly in stores. He's even mulling over the prospect of creating a special internet-only collection of about 15 items that debut directly online. "The world is changing—not always for the best‚ but we have to follow the changes and the Internet," he said. "But there is a way of doing it, you know? It's not just about talking bullshit."