11 really weird designer items

The question, at first glance, is: “Nice but … what is it ?!”
Objects strange, curious, with unusual and not easily intelligible shapes are in fact increasingly invading the shops, virtual or otherwise, of fashion labels which until recently were dedicated exclusively to clothes and accessories.
The most prestigious fashion brands, in fact, have long – and more and more – launched themselves into the creation of objects that go beyond the most usual boundaries of the fashion sector, to break into the strongholds of the luxury lifestyle.

In short, in addition to shoes, handbags, perfumes, candles and bijoux, even the most famous brands are discovering and exploring with great curiosity a whole world that, sector after sector, reveals itself to be potentially infinite. The phenomenon is different from that, which many remember, of licensing wild Some years 80, when the most prestigious names in the international fashion scene “rented” their names to companies specialized in various product sectors to produce tiles, cups, mopeds, telephones and so on and so forth, with the sole purpose of making cash with products destined for the mass market (often operating however at the expense of quality andallure of the brands involved).

A cooler bag by Pierre Cardin, a convinced forerunner of the licensing system.

Today there is a tendency, rather, to the creation of objects for travel, for pets, for the home, which are refined and also rather elitist: well-finished, quality, special, sometimes unique. Almost a leap into the most remote past, to update what they did in their beginnings (and which they did for a large part also in the following decades) signatures such as Prada ed Hermes. In short, with the intention of building a world made of beauty, refinement and preciousness in every moment and in every activity of our life.

In gallery, the 11 most curious designer objects from the moment: from the silver golf tee to the stone knotted with precious leather. Because the second question is often: “Nice but … what is it for?”

You may also like