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Milan

My favourite haunts in the fashion capital

With this edition of Eyestylist, we launch our City Guides section – highlights taking place in various European cities each month that include art, music, and auctions, as well as restaurant and hotel recommendations and other news. This month, we journey to Milan.  Often labelled as a bustling industrial metropolis, this doesn’t really do justice to this city and its fascinating history. Throughout the centuries, Milan has experienced great heights, and sunk to ruins, always rising again.

Milan has certainly risen to a major fashion capital, and Italian names are equated with state-of-the art designs in clothing and accessories. Explore the style and shopping delights of Via Montenapoleone, Via della Spiga, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele 11, and Corso Como (noted in Design & Inspiration). For a relaxing break, enjoy a drink or lunch in the charming Corso Como Café, with a menu that offers delicious choices.

Milan Attractions

Three splendid structures are intricately linked with Milan: The Duomo, Teatro alla Scala and Villa Reale. Milan and The Duomo are inseparable – their histories entwined since 1386, the date when construction began. However, it took until the early 19th century to finish this Gothic splendour, when under Napoléon’s dictate, they completed what is now the world’s third largest cathedral. Another exquisite church to visit is Santa Maria delle Grazie, where Leonardo de Vinci’s masterpiece Last Supper is on display.

La Scala

Music and Milan are also synonymous. Teatro alla Scala rose from the site of Santa Maria della Scala, a church built in 1381, and how La Scala was named. The opera house opened in 1778, and for over two hundred years, has attracted the grandest names in operatic voices and conductors, including Arturo Toscanini, to the present Principal Conductor, Daniel Barenboim. This month, the operas performed include Puccini’s Tosca, with Welshman Bryn Terfel singing Scarpia on 6 March. Nab a ticket if you can!  Other Tosca dates are 2, 4, 23 and 25 March. Death in Venice, by English composer Benjamin Britten is performed on 27, 29 and 31 March. The Theatre Museum, part of the La Scala building, has a wonderful array of paintings and costumes connected to La Scala’s history, a grand source of information for fashion historians, as well as music lovers. www.teatroallascala.org

La Scala, Milan

 

Villa Reale,

Art aficionados will revel in the Neo-Classical beauty of Villa Reale, built in 1790, and where Napoleon lived in 1802.  Nowadays, this magnificent villa, houses Milan’s Modern Art Gallery. The stunning collection includes superb paintings and sculptures from Canova, Cremona, Ranzoni and others, on display in this beautifully preserved building. The Grassi Art Collection can also be seen here, with paintings by 19th and 20th century artists, including Gauguin, Corot, Van Gogh and Cézanne. The gardens are delightful and well worth a stroll. www.gam-milano.com

Villa Reale - Comune di Milano, Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Milan

 

Osteria Stendhal, Via Ancona, 1

Clodagh introduced me to this restaurant, and it was an immediate favourite. Now each time that we are in Milan, we have dinner there, joyously throwing caution and calories to the wind, and indulging in tempting Italian specialities. The name is a tribute to Marie-Henri Beyle, better known for his pen name, Stendhal, the writer. Although French born, Stendhal lived in the city and was Milanese at heart. So in a spirited, convivial environment, you can feast on Italian specialities, often with a twist, like pasta with prawns, blue cheese and black truffle. Meat and seafood dishes are lovingly prepared; one of the best is Sicilian swordfish with taggiashe olives. The wine selection offers Italian delights, including the smooth Tuscan wine Col di Sasso.

Osteria Stendhal

 

The garden is the place to lunch or dine during spring and summer. Be sure to book!  www.osteriastendhal.it

Hotel Diana Majestic, Viale Piave, 42

The Diana Majestic (pictured at top under title) is my Italian home-away-from-home.  I first stayed in the hotel more than twenty years ago, and first impressions are lasting. Sipping a smooth café macchiato in the wisteria-scented garden certainly had much to do with that favourable assessment.  However, so did the pleasant rooms, (some overlooking the garden) the very friendly and helpful staff, and the superb service. In 1998, the Diana Majestic was totally renovated, and the good news is that everything that was already great, just got better – rooms with high-speed internet service, a CD player and other gracious amenities. The h club>diana bar is where style setters gather every evening, and the restaurant has, for me, the best, melt-in-the-mouth risotto in Milan. The beds and pillows are sumptuous, so sweet dreams are assured. JG www.sheraton.com/dianamajestic

Caroline Abram, Filao Paris

Mido fair preview

Caroline Abram of Filao Paris is one of the best known luxury eyewear accessory designers…with her optical background (her mother Annette Hoffman runs the stunning Les Createurs d’Opta in Paris ….www.opta-createurs.net) it is not surprising that Caroline has been tempted to design her own elegant acetate optical frame and sunglass collections, produced in France exclusively. I have just had the chance to preview what she will show in Milan this week…a choice of luxurious feminine plastic designs in zingy colours and combinations such as purple with crimson. (more…)

Pierre Eyewear

Spectacles inspired by Italy’s iconic Vespa

French designer Pierre Cariven of Pierre Eyewear has come up with this charming idea for launch in Italy this week…a pair of spectacles inspired by the vespa! Pierre is a vespa fan and formerly owned a black PX125. This frame is of course a collector’s item…and not the first that Pierre has created. Other exotic shapes include a Porsche (the 911 specifically) and a salamander….you can view these and other exciting models including some cute, very-wearable “Vichy Limited” Brigitte Bardot inspired creations on the website www.pierre-eyewear.com CN

Trussardi, Milan

Spring/summer 2011, a new collection of sunglasses and spectacles from the Italian lifestyle brand

Trussardi’s new sunglass collection is one of a great long list of brands I hope to get to see at the international optics fair Mido  this week (www.mido.com). I’ve not yet had the chance to see this collection up close, but from what I hear, it answers the checklist of special qualities found in the Trussardi fashion collections…craftsmanship, luxury materials, and an ability to interpret retro in a beautiful, contemporary way. The model pictured above (Tru Trussardi TR12805) is a classic shape, with a leather detail laid on the temple. It’s very understated but gives the frame a unique appeal. I would love to be wearing this one as a matter of fact!!

Café Trussardi – I shall also be visiting the Café Trussardi this week for a press event. If you are in the centre of Milan, it’s really a beautiful place to call in; it offers a Milanese café experience of the highest order, and it’s near the La Scala Opera House. Apart from the outstanding location, I am told the coffee and particularly the ‘macchiato’ is one of the best in Milan, quite a feat in a city which has an enticing café near every street corner. CN

www.trussardi.com/trussardi_cafe.html

Trussardi Spring/Summer 2011

Respectable Spectacle Case

At Christmas I was given a leather iphone pouch which has been a very useful gift for keeping my phone clean, well protected and discreet. I recently discovered that the designer of these covers also produces spectacle cases in soft colourful felts, either for use on their own, or with a hard case for extra protection. Susie Brown, the designer behind this Edinburgh-based home and accessories brand uses ethically sourced materials for all her products. I like the simple graphic decorations on the soft pouches which, for spectacles, include an aviator and a cats eye design. For a unique handmade product, these are very reasonable at £15.00 and make excellent presents. CN

http://www.notonthehighstreet.com/susiemaroon/product/respectable-spectacle-s-soft-case