We do not own the rights to any of these images and they have been used in good faith. Every effort has been made to ensure that all images are used with proper credits. If you are the rightful owner of any image used on our site and wish to have it removed, please contact us at ayerhsmagazine@gmail.com and we will promptly remove it. We are a non-commercial, passion-driven, independent fashion blog and do not intend to infringe any copyright. Thank you for your understanding.
Nicola Brognano’s debut for 7 For All Mankind was easily one of the coolest moments of New York Fashion Week. It felt like stepping straight into the mid-2000s, but without the irony or costume energy that often comes with nostalgia. Brognano understands how to bring that era back in a way that feels natural, desirable, and very now.
The collection centered around a specific girl. Imagine an Olsen or Kate Moss running around the city in 2006, slightly disheveled but impossibly chic. Or even a party girl in the start of a rom com. There was a slinky, off-duty ease to everything. Skinny jeans made a confident return, styled with shrunken jackets, sheer blouses, and babydoll dresses. Column skirts with dramatic high-low hems added movement, while ultra-cropped coats and fitted tops emphasized a long, lean silhouette.
Denim remained the core, but Brognano pushed it further. A cropped jacket that looked like waxed leather was actually denim. Printed plaid pants, washed-out skirts, and studded skinny jeans showed how much experimentation went into reworking the fabric. The pieces felt lived-in, slightly vintage, and incredibly tactile.
Styling played a huge role in bringing the world together. Mussed hair, oversized Ray-Ban Wayfarers, towering platform heels, and giant handbags created that messy, indie sleaze energy. It was sexy, feminine, and careless in the best way. Nothing looked overthought, even though every detail clearly was.
What made the collection stand out most was how organic it felt. Brognano is genuinely good at nostalgia. He does not force it or exaggerate it. Instead, he builds a believable wardrobe around it. This was not just about bringing skinny jeans back. It was about reintroducing a whole attitude. The result was confident, cohesive, and instantly desirable. A clear hit, and a strong new chapter for the brand.













Pictures courtesy of Vogue Runway
Featured Image
We do not own the rights to any of these images and they have been used in good faith. Every effort has been made to ensure that all images are used with proper credits. If you are the rightful owner of any image used on our site and wish to have it removed, please contact us at ayerhsmagazine@gmail.com and we will promptly remove it. We are a non-commercial, passion-driven, independent fashion blog and do not intend to infringe any copyright. Thank you for your understanding.

