Bucket bag
International experts predict that large and capacious accessories will replace microbags, which barely fit a mobile phone, in 2020. And what could be bigger and more capacious than a household bucket? It is in his form that the bags of Lanvin, Prada, Stella McCartney, Oscar de la Renta and JW Anderson are made, which even the conservative and strict editor-in-chief of American Vogue Anna Wintour plans to add to her wardrobe in the new year.

1 of 6 JW Anderson, Spring-Summer 2020 © Lanvin Press Service, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service Oscar de la Renta, Spring-Summer 2020 © Prada Press Service, Spring-Summer 2020 © Sportmax Press Service, pre -fall 2020 © Press Service Stella McCartney, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service
Cardigan
Over the past couple of seasons, cardigans have moved from the category "I will wear so as not to upset my grandmother" to the rank of "I want to wear this thing always." They were sold at auctions (for example, Kurt Cobain's cardigan from a performance on MTV Unplugged in 1993 went under the hammer for $ 340 thousand), demonstrated on catwalks (for example, at Gucci, Off-White and Junya Watanabe shows) and walked at events (Suffice it to recall the exits of Renee Zellweger, Diane von Fürstenberg and Karin Roitfeld). This year, they will even be involved in provocation: Miu Miu, Chanel, MSGM and Fendi suggested wearing cardigans on their naked bodies, combining them with an apron dress and taking them with them not only to the red carpet, but also to the beach.

1 of 6 Celine, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Chanel, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Fendi, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office JW Anderson, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Miu Miu, Spring-Summer 2020 © press service MSGM, spring-summer 2020 © press service
Anorak
The revision has also touched the anorak, which skaters, hipsters and hypebeasts appreciate for its ability to protect against heavy rain. Designers Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton and Salvatore Ferragamo made the practical wardrobe even smart: they added flowers, butterflies and a toile de jouy pattern to the waterproof fabric and suggested wearing it with pleated skirts, shiny pumps and even over an office suit.

1 of 6 Dior, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Louis Vuitton, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Off-White, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Prada, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Salvatore Ferragamo, Spring -Summer 2020 © Press Service Stella McCartney, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service
Jersey dress
But a modern fashionable dress should be devoid of flashy prints. Thanks to the trend towards conscious consumption, consumers have begun to value more natural fabric, functionality of the item and ease of care. All these parameters are met by the knitwear models, which have been featured in the collections of Bottega Veneta, Marc Jacobs, Tibi and Zimmermann for several seasons. In combination with ballet flats, they serve as an outfit for every day, and paired with shoes on a platform - quite a festive outfit.

1 of 6 Bottega Veneta, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Marc Jacobs, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Salvatore Ferragamo, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Simon Miller, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Tibi, Spring -Summer 2020 © Press Service Zimmermann, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service
Ballet shoes
The idea of wearing sneakers with dresses, which Karl Lagerfeld proposed in 2014 and which started the athleisure style, has lost its former freshness and appeal today. Indeed, with each season, sports shoes are increasingly turning into ugly shoes - with a deliberately dirty top, deformed soles and even glue drips. Designers return to the fashion of the 2000s and continue to convince us to return ballet flats and leggings to our wardrobe: the models of Dries Van Noten, Joseph and Bode may not attract as much attention to themselves as the sneakers of Balenciaga, Maison Margiela and Gucci, but they certainly cannot spoil the image. but only decorate it.

1 of 6 Bode, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Chanel, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Christian Dior, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Dries Van Noten, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Joseph, pre- fall 2020 © press service Sportmax, pre-fall 2020 © press service
Panama
In 2019, global brands have made a lot of efforts to stop Panama from being associated exclusively with the equipment of summer residents and fishermen. Christian Dior added a veil to it, Valentino decorated it with feathers, and designers Nina Ricci made a panama from soft felt - now it can be worn not only in summer, but also in winter. New collections from other brands - MSGM, Gucci and Jil Sander - only confirm the trend: they have panamas with brims that reach the very collarbones, which means they do not have to carry a raincoat or an umbrella.

1 of 6 Ganni, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Gucci, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Jacquemus, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Jil Sander, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office MSGM, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service Off-White, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service
Colored leather
Neo's black cloak from The Matrix, which has been redesigned and released by many designers in honor of the 20th anniversary of the film and the announcement of the new part, will be painted in more cheerful colors in 2020. Prada has orange, Salvatore Ferragamo has green, and Rochas has classic blue, the most fashionable shade, according to the Pantone Color Institute. From colored leather, creative directors of luxury brands make not only raincoats, but also other clothes: architectural shirts, ultrashort shorts and high-waisted trousers, which should be combined with things made from other materials, for example, knitwear, denim and linen.

1 of 6 Bottega Veneta, pre-fall 2020 © Press Office Coach 1941, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Louis Vuitton, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office
Prada, spring-summer 2020
Ultra short shorts
Shorts, which almost completely expose male or female legs, were the answer to the popularity of closed, baggy and not at all sexy cargo, culottes and palazzo trousers. Raf Simons, Dries van Noten, Donatella Versace and Chanel creative director Virginie Viard suggest wearing them in winter and summer: black tights, high boots and long raincoats to help you.

1 of 6 Balmain, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Brandon Maxwell, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Chanel, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Dries Van Noten, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Raf Simons, Spring -Summer 2020 © Versace Press Service, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service
Bowling shirt
Hawaiian shirts, which we tried to integrate into our wardrobe all of 2019, are being transformed this year into so-called bowling shirts. Differences in a looser silhouette and the absence of pronounced tropical prints. Dries Van Noten replaced them with abstract spots, Valentino with collages by Jun Takahashi, Dior Men with graphics by Sean Stussy, and Etro with a tribute to the Star Wars movie saga.

1 of 6 Dior Men, pre-fall 2020 © Dolce & Gabbana Press Office, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Dries Van Noten, Spring-Summer 2020 © Etro Press Office, Spring-Summer 2020 © Fendi Press Office, Spring- summer 2020 © press service Valentino, spring-summer 2020 © press service
Needlework
Couture has gone beyond the weeks of haute couture: designers engage embroiderers, knitters and artisans from all over the world, entrusting them to create capes, blouses and dresses for the ready-to-wear collection entirely by hand. Wearing hand-made things is much more pleasant than the usual ones, and investing in them as in real art objects, perhaps, is also much more profitable.

1 of 6 Alexander McQueen, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Jonathan Cohen, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Loewe, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Louis Vuitton, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Office Salvatore Ferragamo, Spring -Summer 2020 © Press Service Simone Rocha, Spring-Summer 2020 © Press Service>