Etro Spring 2027 Menswear

The setting could hardly have been more appropriate. Staged at Milan’s Museo della Scienza e della Tecnologia, inside the pavilion dedicated to air and maritime transport, Etro’s menswear presentation unfolded among vintage locomotives, historic tram replicas and stacks of Arnica-printed luggage. Models wandered through the space as if waiting for a departure that never quite came—an apt metaphor, perhaps, for a brand seemingly still searching for its next destination.
Travel has always been central to Etro’s identity, and the house once built entire worlds around the romance of discovery, cultural crossovers and haute bohemian flair. This season, however, the journey felt less like an adventurous grand tour and more like a practical packing exercise.
The collection assembled all the familiar Etro signifiers with reassuring diligence: Paisleys, stripes, archive foulard prints, madras checks, embroidered details, silk shirts, suede outerwear and the omnipresent Arnica motif. Everything was there, almost to a fault. The problem was not a lack of ingredients, but the absence of some aesthetic frisson. Without a discernible fashion direction to shape or challenge the house codes, collections resemble inventories rather than propositions.
Soft tailoring, double-faced silk dusters, printed suede trenches and laser-cut shirt jackets were designed with ease and functionality in mind. Garments were interchangeable, adaptable and eminently wearable. A suit was worn like a shirt; a shirt doubled as a jacket or elongated into a robe. Jacquards, prints and laser cuts added visual and textural variety.
However, there was little tension, and no surprise. The lineup suggested a man who dresses instinctively, mixing colors and prints with spontaneity and taste, yet the celebrated Etro exuberance seemed carefully preserved under glass, like one of the museum exhibits surrounding the presentation.
The house’s iconic codes certainly remain intact, from the irrepressible Paisleys to the ubiquitous Arnica luggage. But preserving heritage and breathing new life into it are not the same thing. What emerged was a collection that felt comfortable, considered and commercially sound, yet lacking in fashion urgency: a wardrobe for well-traveled men still waiting for a train to a more compelling destination.
Información reportada originalmente por Vogue. Leer la nota completa en la fuente original.




