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Dolce & Gabbana’s Fall–Winter 2026 Milan runway offered a refreshing provocation for anyone who thinks watches begin and end at the wrist. Instead of predictable placements, timepieces appeared as pocket watches slipped into tailoring, belt buckles anchoring the waist, brooches pinned like heirlooms, and pendants worn close to the heart. It felt less like accessorizing and more like archeology, as if Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana were excavating forgotten ways of carrying time and reintroducing them with theatrical confidence. These weren’t novelty gestures, either. The styling suggested a deeper point: watches are cultural objects before they are technical ones. By liberating them from the wrist, the collection reframed timekeeping as ornament, symbol, and storytelling device. A pocket watch becomes about ritual and intention; a brooch or pendant turns time into something intimate, even emotional. In an era where wristwatches often blur together, this felt genuinely radical, opening a new vocabulary for collectors, designers, and wearers alike. Dolce & Gabbana reminded us that the future of watches may lie not in new complications, but in reimagining how, and why, we choose to wear time at all.
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