Marco Coretti


Marco Coretti is an Italian fashion designer. After studying arts he moved to Paris, where he trained as apprentice and then worked as assistant to some haute couture ateliers.
In 1997, he returned to Italy, where he created his first couture accessories and shoes line, gaining immediate interest from both press and celebrities such as Sophia Loren and Madonna.
In 1999 the launch of his own brand followed spotting the 'extreme white' collection in the Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana fashion week: he was praised for the launch of the 'new-chic' style.
Among the many national and international magazines to celebrate his creativity, in 2001 Milano Finanza fashion dedicated its cover to the young designer. During the same year, he was mentioned worldwide un th fashion press after Béatrice Dalle destroyed a black dress of his worth thousands of euros while closing the runway at the Rome's fashion week.
In 2004 he became creative director at Sorelle Fontana, one of the oldest Italian fashion houses; on the following year he was chosen by the Municipality of Rome and AltaRoma as art director of The Ages of Fashion, a project meant for the recovery of Italian haute couture.
His passion for haute couture and the arts in general has led him to collaborations with renowned artists such as Carla Accardi, Luigi Ontani, Paola Gandolfi and famous photographers as Gian Paolo Barbieri, Michel Comte, Alberta Tiburzi and many others. In 2010 he created the costumes for the Mvula Sungani's show for celebrating the 50th anniversary of the dancer Raffaele Paganini. Famous models such as Nadège, Debra Shaw, Maria Carla Boscono, Mădălina Diana Ghenea have run the catwalk with his dresses and topmodels such as Linda Evangelista and Carol Alt have modelled for his campaigns.
In 2013, he became the first fashion designer ever to create a new packaging of a pasta.