| Type | Privately held |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1985 |
| Headquarters | Milan, Italy |
| Key people | Domenico Dolce, Stefano Gabbana, D.Gelfond |
| Industry | Fashion |
| Products | Clothing, footwear, handbags. |
| Employees | 3,140 |
| Website | www.dolcegabbana.it |
Dolce & Gabbana (ˈdolt͡ʃe ænd gaˈbana) is an Italian fashion house. Its designs are worn by the likes of Jennifer Lopez, Michelle Williams, Madonna, Monica Bellucci, Ashanti, Christina Aguilera, Isabella Rossellini, and Kylie Minogue and many people who can afford it, Lynne Johnson and William Hatton amongst others.[1]
The company was started by the Italian designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana and is based in Milan, Italy. By 2005 their turnover was £597 million (EUR€ 750 million).[2]
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Domenico Dolce (b. 1958) is from Palermo, Sicily, whilst Stefano Gabbana (b. 1962) comes from Milan. The pair first met in Milan in 1980, while working as assistants in an atelier. They started business together in 1982, and continued to do freelance designing for others.[3]
In 1985, they made their name together when the organisers of the Milano Collezioni invited them to take part in a fashion show to launch "New Talents". Just one year later in 1986, they presented their first independent women's ready-to-wear show that won international acclaim.[4] The brand soon expanded to knitwear, beachwear, lingerie and accessories, and also introduced menswear and a line of signature fragrances.[5] The first boutique opened in 1989 in Tokyo, Japan. With subsequent openings in Milan and Hong Kong.
In 2005 the duo ended their romantic relationship[1] but continued their professional relationship as friends. They resumed their romantic relationship in 2008.[citation needed]
In October 2006, they opened their first restaurant, Gold on Via Poerio in Milan with an entirely gold coloured interior. The 202-seat boite, just behind their Metropol show space, sports a first-floor gourmet restaurant, a ground-floor casual bistro and a small food shop that carries items from Gold's traditional Mediterranean menu.[6]
In 2008, the fragrance Light Blue Pour Homme received "Best Men's Fragrance" by the Acedemia del Profumo and the U.S. Fifi award.
Dolce & Gabbana has two central lines :
Dolce&Gabbana (spelled without spaces, unlike the name of the company) specializes on more expensive luxury items, is influenced more by designers and is more formal and 'timeless', responding to long-term trends rather than seasonal changes.
It also sells:
D&G is a more casual line that follows an urban inspiration and attempts to set trends rather than follow them. It is the younger, more flamboyant line of the brand.
It also sells:
D&G Junior is a separate line aimed at children under the age of 11. Similar to the D&G adult line, D&G Junior follows seasonal trends for boys and girls across a range of ages. D&G Junior is more visibly influenced by popular culture compared to D&G, such as the Ibiza line of D&G Junior.
There are seven freestanding Dolce & Gabbana boutiques in the United States in:
D&G Stores:
Beverly Center - Los Angeles, CA Robertson Drive - West Hollywood, CA
Dolce & Gabbana also has kiosks in several department stores, including Bergdorf Goodman, Lord and Taylor, Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue, and plans to expand into the American cities of Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, and Washington D.C.
Dolce and Gabbana is also sold c/o Holt Renfrew department stores at 3 locations in Canada as well as Harry Rosen (Vancouver).
Dolce & Gabbana was publicly criticized by Britain's advertising watchdog Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) in January 2007, for an advertising campaign showing models brandishing knives.
Following complaints from consumers' groups in February 2007, Dolce & Gabbana pulled an advertisement in Madrid, Spain and Paris, France that showed a man holding a woman to the ground by her wrists while a group of men look on. Spain's Labour and Social Affairs Ministry branded the campaign as illegal and humiliating to women, saying the woman's body position had no relation to the products Dolce & Gabbana were trying to sell.[7] Italian publications followed suit, banning the ad.
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