Fashion
Denim Première Vision charts a course for spring/ summer 2027
Published
November 18, 2025
Denim Première Vision will stage its spring/ summer 2027 edition at Milan’s Superstudio Più on November 26 and 27. The event will bring together 65 exhibitors, including 45 textile manufacturers.
Around fifteen nationalities will be represented among the exhibitors at this Italian edition, which will notably include five accessories manufacturers serving the industry (zips, buttons, rivets, etc.), as well as three yarn and fibre manufacturers—Casati Flock, Mic, and XLance. The show will also feature around a dozen garment manufacturers, with notable representation from Turkey, Italy, China, and Portugal.
“This is something interesting and new because, several years ago, we didn’t have any garment manufacturers from Portugal. Today we have two, Pizarro and IVN Industria,” the show’s director, Fabio Adami Dalla Val, told FashionNetwork.com. He also welcomed the presence of around 10 Japanese companies at this edition.
Conceived as a global showcase for developments in denim, the show will present its “Denim Fashion District” for the eighth time. Curated by designer Olivia Spinelli and Opaa Studio, this space will spotlight the work of 23 innovative brands, including Adriano Goldschmied of Daily Blue.
The show will also feature a trends area. “This is the heart of the show,” its director emphasises. “The aim is to give visitors a relevant, comprehensive overview of what’s happening in denim, whether in terms of trends, materials or technology.” This area will also host the Underrated project, which brought together manufacturers, weavers and print specialists around designer Kristian Guerra to create a collection.

A programme of conferences will accompany these two days of meetings, with several sessions on trends for spring/ summer 2027, as well as talks by G-Star creative directors Lisi Herrebrugh and Rushemy Botter. An industry debate will bring together Maurizio Donadi of Champion, Adriano Goldschmied, and the duo Manuela Mariotti and Massimo Berloni, co-founders of Seafarer.
The strategic issue of dyeing will also be explored in a conference bringing together three innovative players in the field: US-based Chloris for its bio-based blue dyes produced via microbial fermentation, Italy’s Officina 39 for its sustainable dyes and pigments, and the UK’s Infinity Blue for its process to recover indigo from textile waste.
The previous edition of Denim Première Vision, held in Milan on 21 and 22 May, attracted 2,100 visitors and 84 exhibitors.
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Fashion
ASEAN+3 nations must safeguard fiscal viability, rebuild buffers: AMRO
At the same time, growing demands on fiscal policy require governments not only to respond to immediate shocks, but also to support growth, facilitate structural transformation and reduce poverty and inequality over the medium to long term, it noted.
With fiscal positions weakened and policy space narrowed, ASEAN+3 policymakers must safeguard fiscal sustainability and rebuild buffers, the ASEAN+3 Fiscal Policy Report 2026 said.
Governments should also support growth, facilitate structural transformation and reduce poverty and inequality over the medium to long term, it noted.
Particular attention should be given to liabilities outside the budget.
ASEAN+3 comprises members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, along with China, South Korea and Japan.
These competing demands are compounded by sluggish revenue growth and rigid budget structures. Addressing these challenges will require stronger fiscal management frameworks, including improvements in risk management, fiscal aggregate management, strategic resource allocation, spending efficiency and revenue mobilisation.
The report also highlights the importance of comprehensive fiscal risk management, urging policymakers to strengthen the identification, assessment and disclosure of fiscal risks.
Particular attention should be given to liabilities outside the budget, including borrowing by off-budget public entities and government arrears.
Systematic monitoring and proactive management of contingent liabilities are essential, especially those related to government guarantees, public-private partnerships, state-owned enterprises and social security obligations, the report remarked.
Enhancing fiscal aggregate management, alongside improving strategic resource allocation and spending efficiency, will be critical to meeting rising expenditure demands in line with national priorities, while safeguarding fiscal sustainability and rebuilding buffers, it added.
The report further encourages policymakers to implement comprehensive and durable revenue-enhancing measures, including strengthening tax administration—particularly through digitalisation—rationalising tax expenditures and advancing structural reforms to major taxes.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Trade bodies call for moving HR 4930 forward in US legislative process
The piece of legislation, aimed at addressing long-standing challenges to the enforcement of intellectual property rights (IPR) at US borders, was reported with unanimous, bipartisan support from the House Ways and Means Committee.
AAFA along with 18 other trade bodies recently wrote to Congressional leadership in the US House of Representatives seeking support to move HR 4930 forward in the legislative process.
The piece of legislation, aimed at addressing long-standing challenges to the enforcement of IPR at US borders, was reported with unanimous, bipartisan support from the House Ways and Means Committee.
“We encourage you to move swiftly in bringing the bill to the Floor,” the letter noted.
In fiscal 2023-2024, US Customs & Border Protection (CBP) seized over 32 million counterfeit and pirated items, valued in excess of $5 billion, across more than 300 ports of entry, the letter noted.
“More disconcerting though is the rate at which those figures are increasing. In just the past five years, the number of illicit goods seized by CBP has more than doubled, while the value of those goods has grown by more than 400 per cent,” the letter said.
“The cost of this criminal trafficking cannot be measured in dollars alone though, but in the injuries caused by often dangerous fakes that put consumers’ health and safety at risk, in diminished investments to drive the next wave of innovation by American businesses, in jobs lost
to unfair competition, and increasingly, by the threats such products pose to our national security,” the letter said.
The overwhelming volume of trade passing through U.S. ports, and the speed at which it moves, presents a significant obstacle to effective border enforcement, it noted.
While Congress has expressed a clear desire in recent years for greater partnership between the public and private sectors on these issues, CBP has raised concerns over both the scope of its authority to share information with, and to seek assistance from, its partners in the private sector in carrying out its IP enforcement mission, it said.
HR 4930 clarifies and expands the agency’s authority, offering practical tools to safeguard consumers and legitimate businesses.
“It is essential that CBP has the ability to work with relevant stakeholders throughout the supply chain, both to avoid the siloing of information that has often hindered the agency’s efficiency, and to ensure that the private sector can offer effective and timely assistance on matters of trade enforcement, thereby ensuring that bad actors and trade cheats are held accountable,” the letter added.
The trade associations which signed the letter include Baby Safety Alliance, International AntiCounterfeiting Coalition, International Intellectual Property Association, Personal Care Products Council and Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
UK revises intellectual property fee structure effective April 2026
This marks the first comprehensive revision in decades, with the last fee increases recorded in 1998 for trademarks, 2016 for designs, and 2018 for patents. The IPO stated that the changes aim to address a 32 per cent rise in inflation since 2016 while supporting continued investment in digital systems and services.
The UK IPO has increased fees for trademarks, designs and patents from April 1, 2026 under new rules, marking the first major revision in years.
The move reflects a 32 per cent rise in inflation since 2016 and aims to support continued investment in digital systems and services, with transitional provisions applicable for certain filings and payments.
The updated fees apply to all applications and payments made on or after April 1, 2026. Transitional provisions have also been outlined for certain cases. For designs, deferred registration requests submitted from April 1 onwards will be subject to the new fees, even if the original application was filed earlier.
For trademarks, applicants using the permitted period of grace may still be eligible to pay the previous fee, provided the application was filed before April 1 and any outstanding payment is completed within the IPO’s deadline.
Separately, UKFT has submitted industry feedback to the IPO regarding the UK’s updated Design Framework, which is expected to be announced later this year.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (JP)
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