Milan Men's Fashion Week presented the best of menswear for Spring/Summer 2027, showcasing tailoring and innovation. Between renowned fashion houses and emerging labels, Milan has dictated trends that redefine the men's wardrobe. Among the designers who brought their collections on the stage for the first time, Bunhova by Bungaro, Martin Quad, Filippo de Laurentiis, Piacenza 1733, and De Nobiliary Particle are the ones to keep an eye on.
BUNHOVA BY BUNGARO
@bunhova

Founded in Florence in 2025 by Alessio Mussati, Fabiola di San Giuliano, and Niccolò Camarlinghi, Bungaro is a multidisciplinary creative studio from which Bunhova was born, a clothing and accessories line developed as a long-term narrative project. Rooted in a reflection on the meaning of dressing, the brand explores the relationship between identity, memory, and everyday life by observing people through what they choose to wear. Bunhova made its debut during Milan Fashion Week Men's SS27 at Fondazione Sozzani with its first collection, La Stanza (The Room). The collection stems from a reflection on identity and the distance that often exists between who we are and what we choose to show the world.
MARTIN QUAD
@martinquad_online

Founded in 2023, Martin Quad has established itself through a series of performance-led presentations between the realms of fashion, theatre, and installation. Martin Quad presents “Woodman Pt.2,” the label’s international runway debut at Fondazione Sozzani in Bovisa. Conceived as an operatic choreography, the show continues Martin Quad’s exploration of fashion as a medium beyond textiles. Developed from an extended engagement with the work of the late American photographer Francesca Woodman, the collection approaches mirroring as both an image and a construction principle. Garments are duplicated, displaced, inverted, and fragmented through manipulations of classical tailoring, morphing traditional silhouettes without breaking from them. The show environment translates Woodman’s atmospheric compositions into physical space through broken mirrors, suspended drapes, light, and layered surface treatments, referencing the textures and tonal fragility of her work, some of which are held in the Fondazione’s permanent collection. The presentation is structured around an original operatic composition by Creative Director Martin Juncker, in collaboration with Copenhagen-based artist and composer Soli City. Set design and art direction are developed by Kristian Kirk of inter.agcy, and Berlin-based Tim Heyduck is attached as stylist and creative consultant for both the show and collection.
FILIPPO DE LAURENTIIS
@filippodelaurentiis

Filippo de Laurentiis is a knitwear brand established in 2013 by the Ferrante family in Pescara. The brand stemmed from Filippo Ferrante’s desire to reinvent the codes of Made in Italy luxury knitwear by combining the country’s storied artisanship with modern manufacturing techniques and the use of precious yarns, including cashmere, silk, alpaca, and yak, all with an environmentally and socially responsible bent. Yarns are crafted into contemporary knitwear for men and women, imbued with an experimental flair and timeless quality exalting manufacturing know-how.
PIACENZA 1733
@piacenza1733

The collections from Piacenza 1733 emerge from the interplay between the past and a vision for the future. The collections are crafted from carefully selected, traceable, natural raw materials that transport us to distant lands, propelling us toward discoveries through a blend of evocative heritage and constant research and innovation. The company was founded in 1733 in Pollone by Francesco Giovanni Piacenza, in the heart of the Biella textile district, driven by the dream of creating and passing down the art of quality.
DE NOBILIARY PARTICLE
@de.nobiliaryparticle

deNobiliaryParticle was founded in Milan in 2018 by Paolo de Vivo, based on an essential reading of the men’s pullover and the contemporary wardrobe. The brand works with knitwear made from pure materials, produced through a supply chain between Scotland and Italy, where craftsmanship and attention to detail define each piece. a research focused on continuity, use, and the relationship between body and garment, rather than seasonality or formal transformation.
Photo Cover: from left, Bunhova by Bungaro, Martin Quad, Filippo de Laurentiis, Piacenza 1733, and Paolo de Vivo in De Nobiliary Particle.
© Modem



