Photo: Indigitalimages.com1/61Burberry Prorsum
Embracing one's feminine side has rarely looked so good. From guipure to Chantilly, from Burberry to Gucci, designers dared their customers to take on frothy fabrics for Spring.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com2/61Moschino
Photo: Indigitalimages.com3/61Gucci
Photo: Indigitalimages.com4/61No. 21
Photo: Indigitalimages.com5/61MSGM
Photo: Indigitalimages.com6/61Lanvin
Leave It to Beaver? No, leave it to the industry's top talents to take on a decidedly retro silhouette, the bowling shirt and tapered trousers, and send it out in fresh new iterations.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com7/61Louis Vuitton
8/61Dries Van Noten
Photo: Indigitalimages.com9/61Raf Simons
Photo: Indigitalimages.com10/61E. Tautz
Photo: Indigitalimages.com11/61Canali
Photo: Indigitalimages.com12/61Umit Benan
Photo: Indigitalimages.com13/61Gucci
As suiting went this season, no take was as opulent as the botanical riffs, all vines and fruit, proposed at labels like Dolce & Gabbana and Saint Laurent.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com14/61Dolce & Gabbana
Photo: Indigitalimages.com15/61Saint Laurent
Photo: Indigitalimages.com16/61Dior Homme
Photo: Indigitalimages.com17/61Hermès
Photo: Indigitalimages.com18/61Richard James
Photo: Marcus Tondo / Indigitalimages.com19/61J.W. Anderson
Photo: Indigitalimages.com20/61Saint Laurent
Once only the province of rakish fellows like Keith Richards and Steven Tyler, long, Isadora Duncan-esque scarves were served up on the Spring runways in ways that will suit many.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com21/61Burberry Prorsum
Photo: Indigitalimages.com22/61Missoni
Photo: Indigitalimages.com23/61Emporio Armani
Photo: Indigitalimages.com24/61Gucci
Photo: Indigitalimages.com25/61Andrea Pompilio
Photo: Indigitalimages.com26/61Haider Ackermann
These aren't your father's pinstripes. Spring's suiting came with striations that were big, bold, and anything but business-y.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com27/61Agi & Sam
Photo: Indigitalimages.com28/61Comme des Garçons Homme Plus
Photo: Indigitalimages.com29/61Givenchy
Photo: Indigitalimages.com30/61Tiger of Sweden
Photo: Indigitalimages.com31/61Bottega Veneta
Photo: Indigitalimages.com32/613.1 Phillip Lim
Photo: Indigitalimages.com33/61Valentino
The male jumpsuit has finally made it mainstream. If countless catwalks were any indication, even the most sartorially inclined guys will be spending less time mapping out their ensembles come Spring.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com34/61Givenchy
Photo: Indigitalimages.com35/61Kenzo
Photo: Indigitalimages.com36/61Balmain
Photo: Indigitalimages.com37/613.1 Phillip Lim
Photo: Courtesy of Alexander Wang38/61Alexander Wang
Photo: Indigitalimages.com39/61Fendi
Photo: Indigitalimages.com40/61Louis Vuitton
Call it the effect of the Met's China: Through the Looking Glass show, but this season found designers looking eastward to Japan and China, tapping into the opulence and rich aesthetic heritage of both nations.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com41/61Thom Browne
Photo: Indigitalimages.com42/61Dolce & Gabbana
Photo: Indigitalimages.com43/61Astrid Andersen
Photo: Courtesy of Marc Jacobs44/61Marc Jacobs
Photo: Indigitalimages.com45/61Julien David
Gentlemen, stow away your irons. Spring's decidedly unfussy suiting solution comes rumpled, crinkled, and creased all over.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com46/61Kenzo
Photo: Indigitalimages.com47/61Matthew Miller
Photo: Indigitalimages.com48/61Yohji Yamamoto
Photo: Indigitalimages.com49/61Paul Smith
Photo: Indigitalimages.com50/61Craig Green
The past several seasons have seen women's pant legs getting wider and wider. Starting with Spring, menswear is catching up, as designers like Jonny Johansson at Acne Studios and Walter Van Beirendonck turned up the volume.
Photo: Indigitalimages.com51/61Hood by Air
Photo: Indigitalimages.com52/61Walter Van Beirendonck
Photo: Indigitalimages.com53/61Berluti