Pellegrini

Guido (1945). Designer. A creator of fur and leather fashions from the years of the Dolce Vita until he became established between 1960 and 1970. He favored Persian lambskin in black-and-white, evoking Andy Warhol’s pop art, or in beige and brown zebra or tiger patterns. He infected his unisex jumpsuits and leopard-print creations with a kind of African fever. He interpreted the hippy style with ethnic folk creations such as a long breitswanz redingote with self-colored panels, a provocative and seductive garment more suited to a starlet than a flower child.