Giorgio Armani Rhinestone and Poured Glass Brooch
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Palm Desert, CA
A dazzling brooch by Giorgio Armani featuring three faceted poured glass opalescent pear shaped
Giorgio Armani Rhinestone and Poured Glass Brooch
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Palm Desert, CA
A dazzling brooch by Giorgio Armani featuring three faceted poured glass opalescent pear shaped
$550
H 3.75 in W 14.5 in D 12.25 in
Large Mid-Century Italian Giorgio Armani Eye Glasses Factice Shop Display Piece
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Nuernberg, DE
This is a rare and unique item! The Armani Eyeglasses Factic for display in a shop comes with its
Metal
Rare and Vintage 1980s Giorgio Armani Bracelet
By Giorgio Armani, Coppola e Toppo
Located in Hyattsville, MD
Fabulous vintage bracelet by Giorgio Armani. Made of fire polished Czech crystals and rhinestones
Glass
Big Size French Georgio Armani Glasses Tortoise Shell Case
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Mexico City, CDMX
features a pair of large wire rim glasses. Both the case and glasses are marked Georgio Armani. Originally
Glass
Unavailable
H 4 in W 18 in D 7 in
LARGE Tabletop Vintage Armani Glasses Shop Display in Tortoise Shell Case
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Here is the fabulous Armani glass display that you have always been searching for! This incredible
Metal
Giorgio Armani Frame glasses
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Capri, IT
Giorgio Armani Frame Gold tone hardware
Giorgio Armani Black Glass Chandelier Prism Brooch, 1990s
By Giorgio Armani
Located in New York, NY
Presented is a large chandelier prism brooch by Giorgio Armani from the 1990s. Seven faceted black
Base Metal
Sophisticated Smoky Quartz and Glass Bead Necklace by Giorgio Armani
By Giorgio Armani
Located in New York, NY
Giorgio Armani.
Quartz
Sold
H 4 in W 18.5 in D 6 in
Large Mid-Century French Georgio Armani Faux Tortoise Shell Glass Case Factice
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Fayetteville, AR
of large wire rim glasses. Both the case and glasses are marked Georgio Armani. The case measures
Wire
Vintage Giorgio Armani Giant Store Display Glasses
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Toronto, ON
These fun and fabulous Classic vintage Armani frame glasses were probably made for promotional or
Metal
Giorgio Armani 1990s Black Resin & Glass Charm Necklace
By Giorgio Armani
Located in New York, NY
An excellent example of Giorgio Armani jewelry design from the 1990s. The necklace is comprised of
Base Metal
Giorgio Armani Pale Blue Glass Beaded Shoulder Bag — c. 1990s
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Boca Raton, FL
A luminous and ethereal design from Giorgio Armani, this vintage shoulder bag reflects the
Giorgio Armani Moonglow Green Tint and Smoky Green Glass Clip On Drop Earrings
By Giorgio Armani
Located in London, GB
Lovely Giorgio Armani clip on drop earrings, featuring round green tinted balls and smoky green
Vintage 90s Giorgio Armani Collezioni Size 6 White Glass Beaded Cocktail Dress
By Armani Collezioni, Giorgio Armani
Located in San Diego, CA
Size 6, and 5’8 feet tall Elegant vintage 1990s Giorgio Armani Collezioni white / ivory cocktail dress
Giorgio Armani Art Deco Glass and Rhinestone Bee Brooch
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Palm Beach, FL
deco style brooch! Celebrated fashion designer Giorgio Armani creates costume jewelry with simple
Sold
H 9.5 in W 18.5 in D 6.5 in
Giorgio Armani Oversized Wire Rimmed Glasses in Faux Tortoise Shell Case
By Giorgio Armani
Located in Tucson, AZ
Giorgio Armani wire rimmed glasses in faux tortoise shell case. Probably used as store display
$1,116,715
H 83.86 in W 45.28 in D 83.86 in
A pair of Spanish-colonial Viceregal mother-of-pearl inlaid bureau-cabinets
Located in Amsterdam, NL
Viceroyalty of Peru, Lima, 18th century, circa 1720-1760 Each with a moulded giltwood cornice and on a foliate carved giltwood base, possibly later and English. The cabinets, with s...
Mother-of-Pearl, Teak
Fashion may be a fluid industry that evolves with the times, but few designers were gutsy enough to break with the norms and endeavor to revolutionize it the way Piacenza, Italy, native Giorgio Armani did.
When he established his brand with his personal and professional partner, architect Sergio Galeotti, in 1975, Armani created jackets, evening dresses and other clothing that sharply departed from the form-fitting designs that his competitors were producing. Working with a subdued color palette and light fabrics, Armani instead pioneered power dressing. By the early 1980s, the designer was lauded for his sleek but relaxed-fit shirts in washed greens and beige tones for men and elegant, broad-shouldered suits for career-minded women. His collections were intended to fit naturally but confer a sense of confidence on the wearer, and the designs were just as luxurious as the garments that were gliding down Milanese catwalks at the time.
Armani, a shipping manager’s son, spent his childhood wanting to become a doctor, and he even studied medicine briefly at the University of Milan before dropping out and joining the army. In the late 1950s, he was hired as a window dresser at the Milan department store La Rinascente before moving into the role of menswear buyer. When he realized that his calling was in fashion design, not buying, he left La Rinascente to train at Nino Cerruti’s atelier and eventually began to take on what became a wealth of freelance design work.
At Galeotti’s urging, Armani opened his own design office in 1973, and two years later, he established his eponymous label of ready-to-wear for both men and women that challenged fashion’s traditional silhouettes and the conventions of tailoring.
“I was the first to soften the image of men and harden the image of women,” Armani has said of his early years. The designer dressed men in soft textures such as silk and linen that were traditionally relegated to feminine garments and designed power suits for women — an audacious and undeniably androgynous take on high fashion that was well received by critics. He won the Neiman Marcus Fashion Award in 1979 and launched a diffusion line called Armani Collezioni that year. While his collections for men and women gained legions of admirers in Europe, it wasn’t until the premiere of the film American Gigolo — featuring heartthrob Richard Gere exclusively outfitted in a crisp, sleek and sexy Armani wardrobe — that the brand took off in the United States.
Until his passing in 2025, Armani was still designing ready-to-wear collections, and the luxury house had also expanded over the years into home decor, hospitality and more. In February 2020, at the onset of the Covid-19 crisis, Armani was the first fashion house to close its runway shows to the public in order to limit exposure. In early 2022, the brand was among the first to cancel men’s and haute couture shows scheduled in January.
Find vintage Giorgio Armani clothing on 1stDibs.