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The Milan runways this season were crowded with debuts, but Louise Trotter’s at Bottega Veneta was the one that mattered. The only woman appointed to a heritage house in this game of musical chairs, she delivered a collection that didn’t just rise to the occasion but moved with its own gravity—and did it move a lot. While the men on schedule tinkered with legacy and branding, the creative director gave us something unique: a female gaze wrapped in leather, fringe, and life. It was a refreshing perspective, and her gorgeous work shows that, perhaps, we do need more female creative directors right now.
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The opening was a sort of Genesis, moving like breath, captured by craft, distilled in neutrals before the surprise that takes the same breath away. A succession of clothes that made you lean in: leather stretched into sculptural capes, intrecciato reimagined into billowing outerwear, shirts so feathery they seemed to flutter off the body or imbue a sense of mesmerizing aura. It was made from recycled fiberglass, has the feeling of fur but moves like glass through red, blue, and yellow, sometimes ombre for the skirts. A sweep of chartreuse and lilac jolted the palette awake, while liquid metallics slipped across the runway as flats and clogs grounded the airy atmosphere. The silhouettes, thankfully, always had presence.



Texture was Trotter’s weapon of choice, and she wielded it with wit. Fringe swung like sea grass in tide pools, coats bristled with movement, knits vibrated in unexpected shades. There was joy in the tactility, a sense that clothes are meant to be felt as much as seen. Even the leather—Bottega’s sacred ground—was coaxed into softness, almost tenderness, without losing its authority.



Strength in the Sway
It was “soft functionality”, Trotter’s term and her thesis, an echo of cofounder Renzo Zengiaro’s early experimentations with intrecciato woven bags, expanded here into tailoring and eveningwear. Even the accessories carried this layering of memory and reinvention: the Knot, softened; the Cabat, cut into a clutch; the Lauren, resized with modern mischief.



Trotter framed it herself: “The language of Bottega Veneta is Intrecciato. And it is a metaphor—different strips woven together that become stronger. Collaboration and connectivity run throughout this house and its history.” Men’s tailoring techniques underpinned women’s dresses, while gowns carried the invisible scaffolding of coats. The masculine and feminine, rigorous and fluid, intertwined into something more resilient, more alive.



Bottega Veneta turned sixty this year, but under Trotter, it felt reborn through the clarity of perspective. What made the collection sing wasn’t only its beauty, but its insight. She understood that strength need not be rigid, that sensuality doesn’t have to seduce with blunt force. power was reframed—found in the sway of a hemline rather than the square of a shoulder, in the refusal to rehash what’s been done, in the courage to enhance what already breathes within the house.
A Trust in the Vision
Her debut posed its own question: what happens when a woman is entrusted to shape a house so often defined by men? The answer walked right past us; it even floated. You can say transcended. Maybe the industry doesn’t need another reshuffle of the usual suspects. Maybe it needs to let more women take the wheel. Trotter has proven she can drive—fast, assured, and toward something new.



Bottega Veneta carried the runway humming with vitality. The lone woman debuting this season left us with the rarest gift of all: the certainty that her perspective is not an exception, but a necessity. In fashion, ironically enough, we should trust more of the female gaze. Something different can exist.
Photos courtesy of BOTTEGA VENETA
