21 proofs that embroideries will invade autumn

From head to toe, embroidery is emerging as an all-encompassing trend. Gucci bears much of the blame, but he's not the only one who has decided to include them in his collections for next season.

Nuria LuisTOP Photo: Imaxtree

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Gucci is the queen of the most unexpected combinations and has been strongly committed to embroidery for a couple of seasons. She's coordinated with sequins and puff sleeves in this jumper from the Fall 2016 collection.

  • Photo: Cordon Press

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    Anna Wintour predicted a few months ago the fever that stalks us. With this floral coat she went to see the Stella McCartney fall 2016 collection.

  • Photo: Tumblr coolchicstylepensiero

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    One of the firms that has made a strong commitment to embroidery on the catwalk is Vivetta. Portraits, flowers and symbols are combined in materials as disparate as chiffon or velvet.

  • Photo: Mango

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    If the celebrities have fallen for the Gucci denim jacket, low-cost firms such as Mango do the same with versions like this one, embroidered on the back (39.99 euros).

  • Photo: Net-a-porter

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    It's Gucci's fault that this fall you want to see embroidered denim hanging from your wardrobe. Michele has plagued with them skirts, pants and jackets in both the men's and women's collections.

  • Photo: Zara

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    Zara is one of the low-cost companies that bets the most on them. It includes floral drawings on shirts with classic silhouettes, very much in line with Tory Burch.

  • Photo: Imaxtree

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    Omnipresent in dresses and also in bombers, the novelty of the season seems to lie in wearing them in coats, like this one from Kenzo autumn/winter 2016.

  • Photo: Instagram @tessa_perlow

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    Tessa Perlow's embroideries are out of the ordinary. In addition to flowers, she includes more unexpected motifs such as bears, eyes or even crocodiles in her designs. She even dares to embroider Blondie. She sells her designs on Etsy.

  • Photo: Imaxtree

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    Fendi is encouraged with other combinations, such as embroidery with velvet, another of this fall's star materials.

  • Photo: Net-a-porter

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    Knitted sweater, by Anthony Vacarello (cpv)

  • Photo: Zara

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    Zara joins the embroidered coats, like this one with a retro air (99.95 euros).

  • Photo: Net-a-porter

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    Aquazzura includes these delicate motifs in her ballerinas and also in her heels, where she works them on suede (625 euros).

  • Photo: Net-a-porter

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    Natural symbols like the butterfly used by Alessandro Michele in his collections are "modern totems that complement the Gucci codes." In this case, he combines embroidery and lace in a sports-inspired shirt (980 euros).

  • Photo: Imaxtree

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    It's hard to disassociate Alexander McQueen from intricate lacework and embroidery, but this fall he has also decided to work it on stiffer materials like leather.

  • Photo: Danielle Clough

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    Instagram is witness to great needle and thread artists like Danielle Clough, who has collaborated with Gucci embroidering house slippers with birds.

  • Photo: Pull and Bear

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    Pants with floral motifs, from Pull and Bear (35.99 euros).

  • Photo: Imaxtree

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    Like McQueen, Fendi also works with leather and embroidery, but in his case, in small doses, like the bags he presented for this season.

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    The most discreet way to wear them is through small fonts, as in this Maje sweater (225 euros).

  • Photo: Net-a-porter

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    Jacket with embroidery, by Sonia Rykiel (890 euros).

  • Photo: Imaxtree

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    On velvet, from the Vivetta autumn/winter collection.

  • Photo: Net-a-porter.

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    In addition to swans, Stella McCartney goes to the tigers to embroider shirts and even track jackets.

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