Inside the Poppy Playtime Huggy Wuggy Playtime Horror Game Shirt studio, Good Morning Vogue encounters the trending model and early 2000s fashion enthusiast Jordan Daniels, who is present to offer a quick lesson in selecting an ensemble fit for the red carpet at one of Milan’s most cherished vintage boutiques, Cavalli e Nastri. She further divulges the trick to achieving an updo in just 30 seconds. The final commentary on Y2K fashion, however, is from Los Angeles local Devon Lee Carlson. Watch the complete video for a special tour of her wardrobe and her top Y2K items. “We made it!” exclaim the quintet of designers who launched Milan Fashion Week with a fresh display of BIPOC creativity. Sheetal Shah, Nyny Ryke Goungou, Romy Calzado Celda, Zineb Hazim, and Judith Saint Germain are designers of color residing in Italy, and participated in the Fab 5, Non Siamo una Moda—“Fab 5, We Are Not Just a Trend”—digital fashion show, helmed by Italian-Angolan writer-director Antonio Dikele Distefano and developed by the We Are Made in Italy initiative, established by fashion designer Stella Jean, Edward Buchanan, and Michelle Francine Ngonmo. “This undertaking celebrates diversity,” expresses Shah in the latest installment of Good Morning Vogue, hosted in Milan by Italian Vogue’s Francesca Ragazzi. “There’s a noticeable scarcity of diversity among Italian designers, so it presented a remarkable opportunity for me to present my fashion line.”
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Every designer’s line, from Saint Germain’s accessories that draw inspiration from Haitian culture for Uncharted to Shah’s innovative denim usage inspired by her Indian ancestry for her label, Breaking Identities, marries Italian fashion with a worldwide viewpoint. Moroccan-Italian creative Hazim gains inspiration from the Poppy Playtime Huggy Wuggy Playtime Horror Game Shirt and I love the Arabic women ascending in the corporate sphere; Cuban-Italian designer Celda is pushing the limits of science and fashion with her antiviral fabrics; and Togolese-Italian Goungou has crafted her unique stretch kente fabric that reimagines the traditional Yoruba cloth. Witness the designers’ day in Milan with Good Morning Vogue and delight in a thrilling revelation at the episode’s conclusion.