Gucci's Sabato De Sarno Brings Casual Grandeur to the Spring/Summer 2025 Runways
At Triennale Milano, Sabato De Sarno presented Gucci's Spring/Summer 2025 collection, merging the brand's heritage with an irreverent attitude.
After presenting the brand's menswear collection back in June, Gucci took over Milan Fashion Week once again to bring colorful irreverence and casual transformation with Sabato De Sarno's Spring/Summer 2025 collection. The show has, in fact, gathered a myriad of stars and celebrities from all over the world to gather at the Triennale Milano for the awaited showcase. The incoming attendees could undoubtedly feel the warmth of the audience and the screams of the fans waiting for De Sarno's special guests: first of all, Jin from BTS, Hanni of NewJeans, actress Dakota Johnson, and Thai star Gulf Kanawut, among others.
“A precise moment in time. A moment to seize and live to the fullest. It’s the moment the sun dives into the sea at the end of an August day. It’s the moment we find ourselves. This collection is a tribute to those moments and an invitation to stop and seek your own moment,” explains Sabato De Sarno, Gucci's creative director.
At the entrance, a long corridor of colours opens up, ranging from white to orange-red shades, until Gucci's signature Rosso Ancora is reached. “A year later, this collection shows an accomplished journey of construction. Moment after moment, I have built my ideas for Gucci. A casual grandeur that takes shape through my obsessions - tailoring, lingerie, leather, 60’s silhouettes, all combined with the tireless exploration of the heritage of this brand - and always with an irreverent attitude.”
Images courtesy of Gucci
Naturally, casual looks follow, proposing a renewed version for the season. Essential tailoring with trousers cut on the sneakers and a color palette of grey tones accented by shades of acid green and orange. The silhouettes feature 1960s references, as seen in structured jackets, couture coats, and trapeze minidresses. The GG monogram is refreshed, as is the glossy leather, the bamboo details, and the horse-bit element revisited with a new pattern.
The show closes with the song "Non voglio mica luna" by Fiordaliso—also among the special guests in the first row—which perfectly frames De Sarno's message of valuing the special moments in our lives.