Giorgio Armani just made it official: you no longer have to scour vintage resale sites to get your hands on a piece of the brand’s most coveted archive. During Milan Design Week 2026, the Italian fashion house unveiled the second chapter of Armani/Archivio, a project that does something the industry rarely does: it faithfully reproduces the originals and puts them back on the market.
What Is Armani/Archivio?
Armani/Archivio was first launched in 2025 to mark the 50th anniversary of Giorgio Armani‘s founding. The platform was designed as an interactive archive — a way of collecting and organizing the house’s historic collections and making them accessible in a format that merges heritage and innovation. The second chapter, which opened on April 22, 2026 at the Giorgio Armani boutique on Via Sant’Andrea 9 in Milan, takes that concept further by moving from digital browsing to physical ownership.
13 Looks, Faithfully Reproduced
At the heart of this new chapter are thirteen men’s and women’s looks drawn from Giorgio Armani collections spanning 1979 to 1994, a period widely regarded as some of the most defining years in modern fashion history. The selection includes the kind of pieces that vintage hunters have been seeking for decades: the ideal Armani jacket with its 1980s shoulder structure, a classic ’90s button-up, and a bomber jacket that defined a generation. Each piece has been reproduced with the same attention to detail as the originals, available through the brand’s direct channel, select Giorgio Armani boutiques, and a tight network of international partners.
The Campaign: Eli Russell Linnetz Meets the Archive
To accompany the launch, Armani brought in Eli Russell Linnetz, the Los Angeles-based creative director, designer, and founder of ERL, a label worn by Justin Bieber and Kim Kardashian, to photograph and style the campaign. Linnetz worked directly with all thirteen looks, bringing a contemporary visual lens to pieces that are, in some cases, over 40 years old. The result is a campaign that treats the archive not as a museum exhibit, but as a living wardrobe with something urgent to say right now.
An Invitation Only Week in Milan
To mark the occasion, Giorgio Armani hosted a series of invitation-only talks throughout Milan Design Week at the boutique on Via Sant’Andrea. The launch formed part of a broader Armani presence at Fuorisalone 2026, which also included Armani/Casa’s ORIGINI presentation at Corso Venezia 14, a full week that positioned Armani as one of the most thoughtful voices at the intersection of design, fashion, and memory.
