Prada, SpA is an
Italian fashion company
(also known as a "label" or
"house") with retail outlets
worldwide.
The company,
originally known in
Italian as Fratelli
Prada ("Prada
Brothers"), was founded in
1913 by Mario Prada. In
1978, Mario's granddaughter
Miuccia Prada inherited
what was still a leather
goods business from her
mother, and led the
company's expansion into
haute couture.
Miuccia first gained her
reputation for creative use
of materials and simple,
modern lines with her 1985
line of sleek black handbags
made from parachute
nylon.
These novel, high-priced
bags quickly became widely
sought-after, and spawned a
global industry of
counterfeit Prada goods.
Prada's first
prêt-à-porter, or
"ready-to-wear" collection
was designed by Miuccia
Prada in the autumn/winter
season of 1989. The
collection's plain, modern
lines were a stark contrast
to other labels' flamboyant,
sexual designs, and fueled a
sharp rise in Prada's
popularity.
In addition to the
original Prada line, the
company introduced the
Miu Miu collection, a
lower-priced line aimed at a
younger audience, in 1992.
The Miu Miu line, which
shares Miuccia Prada's
nickname, emphasizes earthy
colors and a less haute
couture look, evoking an
overall more bohemian style.
In its advertising
campaigns, waif-like models
in "home photo" poses
further the look. Miu Miu
clothing is often simple,
and evokes a continual image
of high-end vintage items.
It was followed by the Prada
Sport collection.
Prada rose to fashion
primacy in the early 1990s
on a look epitomized by
thick, square glasses and
garish colors known as "Prada
Ugly." Prada takes a
decidedly -- and consciously
-- intellectual approach to
fashion. The look of the
early 2000's has been
described as that of a "chic
neo-fascist army" by the New
York Times. Other critics
have described Prada's look
by comparing it to
Gucci's:
While the Gucci girl is
swigging shots of tequila in
the back of a nightclub
wearing a miniskirt and
halter top, the Prada girl
is reading
Proust in a cafe.
Prada won a
Council of Fashion Designers
of America International
Award for accessories in
1993.
Although Prada remains
the pinnacle of contemporary
fashion following
Tom
Ford's retirement
-- in 2004 Vogue
Editor-in-Chief
Anna Wintour is said to
have told Miuccia Prada that
she was "the only reason
anyone comes to Milan" for
runway shows -- it continues
to derive the overwhelming
bulk of its revenues from
its original leather goods
business, the sale of shoes
and handbags.
Following lead in other
companies in a popular trend
of large labels to absorb as
many other fashion houses as
possible, Prada took on
large debts to take on the
financially floundering
Rome-based house of
Fendi
in the early 1990s. Prada
shared shares in Fendi with
the
Louis Vuitton Moet Hennesy
(LVMH) company. Prada was
unable to turn
around/support the
money-losing Fendi label,
and sold its Fendi shares to
LVMH. Prada is still to
recover from this debt. The
only brand to avoid the
pitfalls of forming a large
luxury label company is that
of
Giorgio Armani.
Other labels within the
Prada Group corporate
umbrella include
Helmut Lang and
Jil Sander.