From cars to couture: Ferrari goes high fashion

Models in Maranello, Italy, presenting outfits from Ferrari's fashion collection, which marks the first step of the carmaker's brand reboot.
Models in Maranello, Italy, presenting outfits from Ferrari's fashion collection, which marks the first step of the carmaker's brand reboot. PHOTO: REUTERS

MARANELLO (Italy) • Ferrari on Sunday rolled out its first in-house fashion collection, offering fans of the Ferrari brand and its supercars a touch of couture within a contemporary clothing range.

The launch marks a major step in Ferrari's new brand strategy, one of its biggest investments outside the car business, which the company wants to account for around 10 per cent of the profits in seven to 10 years.

Ferrari's plans to extend its brand also include a new restaurant in its home town Maranello in northern Italy, with Michelin-starred chef Massimo Bottura.

The fashions, by creative director and former Armani designer Rocco Iannone, were on show at the Ferrari plant in Maranello, with a catwalk set up on the assembly line for the "Prancing Horse" V12 sports cars, such as the new 812 Competizione.

"We want to attract young people and women," Iannone said. "Our targets are not just those who buy a Ferrari, but also those who have awareness of the brand and of its values."

Iannone, 37, a native of Calabria in the south of Italy, said he worked hard on fabrics, which include silk - with a printed pattern of Ferrari iconography - and nylon.

"Most of them are high-performance technical fabrics with a haute-couture touch," he said.

He described the collection as "fluid", with 80 per cent of the offerings designed to appeal to both women and men, with sizes spanning XXXS to XXXL.

"Ferrari is never a nostalgic company. It's always ready to seize the spirit of the present and look to the future," he said.

With prices ranging from around €200 (S$321) for T-shirts to up to €3,000 for top-range coats, the collection has a "luxury" ethos.

But Ferrari will not forget its Formula One supporters, even though it is cutting back on licence-based merchandising by 50 per cent.

The company will still sell hats, cups and T-shirts beloved by fans.

"Our offer will preserve its two souls: car buyers and supporters," Ferrari's chief brand diversification officer Nicola Boari said on Sunday.

Ferrari's fashion collection will be on offer mainly online and through the company's official stores in Maranello, Milan and Rome.

Further store openings are scheduled in Los Angeles and Miami this year, and in China next year.

Mr Boari said Ferrari's luxury collection would be later expanded to include accessories, calling it "an important area of development".

The collection comes just days after Ferrari appointed its new chief executive Benedetto Vigna, a physicist who has spent 26 years in the semiconductor industry and is expected to drive Ferrari into the electric-car era.

"Nothing changes in our brand strategy. The aim is to reach a wider public, especially young people and women, which is instrumental to our core business," Mr Boari said.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on June 16, 2021, with the headline From cars to couture: Ferrari goes high fashion. Subscribe