Moschino Blazers
Early 2000s Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Jackets
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1980s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
1980s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
20th Century Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Jackets
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
1990s Blazers
2010s Italian Blazers
2010s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
2010s Italian Blazers
2010s Italian Blazers
2010s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
2010s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
1980s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
20th Century Italian Blazers
1980s Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
20th Century Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Blazers
Late 20th Century Italian Blazers
1990s Italian Jackets
21st Century and Contemporary British Jackets
21st Century and Contemporary British Jackets
20th Century Italian Jackets
2010s Czech Single-Breasted Jackets
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Contemporary Single-Breasted Jackets
21st Century and Contemporary French Jackets
1990s Italian Jackets
Late 20th Century Italian Cropped Jackets
1980s Italian Jackets
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Moschino Blazers For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much are Moschino Blazers?
Moschino for sale on 1stDibs
The Moschino story begins in the early 1980s, when Franco Moschino (1950–94), a freelance magazine illustrator and Gianni Versace collaborator, founded a label in Italy whose ethos was all about having fun.
Moschino initially pursued a degree in painting at Milan's Brera Academy of Fine Arts during the late 1960s, turning to freelance illustration to help pay his way through school. He found inspiration in Pop art, Dadaism and bold graphics. During the 1970s, he began to work for Gianni Versace’s now-legendary house as a sketcher and freelanced as a clothing designer with other fashion labels. In 1983, encouraged by Versace, he launched his own extravagant and excessive couture collection.
Moschino's expertly tailored, vibrant designs for casual wear and more, each adorned with loud, playful details, spoofed the chic high fashion of the day, and Franco's close relationship with fine art — as well as his eye for innovation — welcomed comparisons to Elsa Schiaparelli over the years. The label’s work essentially mocked the industry even as its hand fed Moschino, with the founder emblazoning shirts with slogans such as “Good taste doesn’t exist” or embroidering jackets with the phrase “Waist of money,” while the theatrical shows were positioned with an undercurrent of critique.
Today, the Metropolitan Museum of Art holds two vintage Moschino handbags in its collection: one shaped like a milk carton and the other an iron.
“Under all the surface witticisms, [Moschino] had a serious knack for running class pieces through a wringer of irony or Surrealism,” observed Vogue. “Chanel-isms were his favorite trope, though he also poked fun at Jean Paul Gaultier’s lingerie dressing and put out pasta bags in a parody of the Prada accessories craze.”
Accessories, jeans and the first men’s collection were presented at the Regal Palace in Milan in 1985, with his Moschino Jeans womenswear collection following in 1986. Then Moschino released Moschino for Women, its first fragrance, the next year in Europe.
In 1988, long before brands had considered the concept of a spin-off, Moschino bowed its cheeky diffusion line for men and women, Moschino Cheap and Chic, during the shows in Milan. The label thrived, adding its first stores in Italy and campaigning for eco-friendly fur. Its retrospective-slash-fashion show “X Years of Kaos” in the early 1990s benefited a children’s AIDS organization.
After Moschino’s untimely death at the age of 44 from AIDS complications, Rossella Jardini, his longtime friend and colleague, took the reins. She carried the torch for nearly 20 years, adding eyewear, watches and jewelry. American designer Jeremy Scott was named creative director in 2013.
Scott, who grew up on a farm and once unveiled a collection of evening dresses charred with burn marks, imbues all his work with a message of inclusion, be it his Fast Food collection in 2014 (hot dog dress included) or Moschino Barbie.
“I don’t care if the critics don’t like me,” Scott told Vogue. “I want to be the people’s designer, like Diana was the people’s princess.”
Find vintage Moschino clothing on 1stDibs.
Finding the Right Jackets for You
No matter if you’re preparing for a fashion event or a weather event — you’re going to need a good jacket.
What would become the modern jacket as we know it began as a strictly professional item. A lot of the vintage and designer jackets (and coat styles such as the Navy-inspired peacoat) in our closets were likely popularized by soldiers who battled aggressive climes with their regulation field jackets, bombers and parkas buttoned or zipped to the chin. Indeed, keeping troopers comfortable guided the design of the military surplus garments that have often become buzzy fashion trends. But now, jackets add far more than warmth to our wardrobe, and we hunt down outer layers branded with peerless fashion labels.
Fashion’s most iconic creations, despite their age, remain modern: Biker jackets originated in the 1920s, Balenciaga’s celebrated puffers are steeped in a tradition of down coats that began in the 1930s and your vintage denim jacket has come an even longer way, from California Gold Rush to wardrobe staple. Jeans bequeathed jean jackets during the 1880s, thanks to Levi Strauss, who crafted the former as a durable garment to be worn by miners and railroad workers. Later, jeans and jean jackets became synonymous with nonconformity and rebelliousness — with fashion legends such as actor James Dean in the 1950s and model Veruschka in the 1960s and ’70s leading the indigo-toned charge.
Another fashion rebel, Coco Chanel, used the classic tweed jacket to introduce more comfort and mobility into women’s daily lives. Debuting in 1954 and based on a cardigan, the groundbreaking Chanel jacket forever changed what women wear. The garment reacted against the fitted, constricting styles of Christian Dior’s New Look, which, as Chanel saw it, was making women dress like decorative objects.
On 1stDibs, find bold collections from cutting-edge contemporary designers who’ve taken the classic silhouette of the jacket to new heights or build out your array of vintage treasures (denim or otherwise) with dazzlers from Yves Saint Laurent, Gianni Versace, Moschino and more.