
Interview with Maria Giulia Prezioso Maramotti
By staging annual cruise shows, Max Mara has smartly positioned itself alongside the ultimate luxury marques like Dior or Louis Vuitton —whose show this year was in Avignon—even though its annual turnover is between one-fifth and one-tenth of those two French labels. That said, the Max Mara Group amassed annual sales in excess of €1.9 billion last year, so it is still a significant player.
While in Naples, the house organized private viewings in the city's famed Archaeological Museum; tours of remarkable churches; and a cruise to Lo Scoglio, the must-see restaurant near Positano — famed for a clientele that ranges from the Arnault family and Tommy Hilfiger to Remo Ruffini and endless movie stars. There was also a dinner in Bersagliera restaurant in the beautiful port of Santa Lucia, where Neapolitan musicians had Paltrow, assorted influencers and the occasional dashing editor on their feet in a conga line, banging tambourines to tunes like 'Volare' or 'Bella Ciao.'
This is why Fashion Network sat down with Maria Giulia Prezioso Maramotti, the third generation of the Maramotti family and granddaughter of founder Achille Maramotti.
Today, Maria Giulia is the omnichannel retail director of Max Mara Fashion Group and global brand ambassador of the brand – demanding positions she holds down with aplomb, while still bringing up a three-year-old daughter. So, here is her take on cruise, Naples, transitioning control from one generation to another, and what's next for Max Mara.
Fashion Network: Why are we in Naples?
Maria Giulia Prezioso Maramotti: As you know, we began this tradition of resort collections seven years ago. The idea is a mix of what our creative director, Ian Griffiths, wants to say and whether we want to do that in Italy or not. There's an element of celebrating lifestyle, which is very particular – not just in Italy but especially in Neapolitan culture, where roughness and reality contrast with great beauty in a fashion moment that is rather unique. When fashion is going back to tailoring, which is the basis of our brand. Plus, we wanted to show a city that is becoming more and more a destination for tourism and culture. It has become much safer than it used to be. Lots of people visit – with daily flights from New York and places like Canada or Philadelphia. The city has never been busier.
FN: Why is cruise so important to Max Mara?
MGPM: For many reasons. The phenomenon was born out of the idea of creating an experience of full immersion in the brand. It's one thing to do a show back-to-back with other brands in Milan, when editors are overloaded. So, instead of just 20 minutes to consider a show, you have about 48 hours to understand the brand. And you have more time to talk about product — a main driver for a brand like Max Mara.
FN: I was struck when you explained that, in Naples alone, your group has nine stores. What's the secret behind this great love affair between a northern Italian brand and the great capital of southern Italy?
MGPM: Naples is a city that serves as a reference point for the whole south of Italy. People from the provinces use Naples, as it's a bigger market than you think. So, we have many labels – like Max Mara Weekend, Max & Co. – serving different market segments, either in city-center freestanding stores or in Pompei Mall.
FN: You also displayed the Atelier collection in Naples in a beach club. It has remarkable couture-level coats – the leitmotif of your brand. Why is it here, and what is the thinking behind this special project?
MGPM: Our Atelier collection is like a development lab when it comes to the recruitment of new fabrics. Laura Lusuardi, who oversees it, has worked with many different designers at Max Mara — like Karl Lagerfeld or Giambattista Valli. Plus, Atelier allows her to recruit talent internally. It's a collection focused on creating the next shapes and offering the freedom to explore different materials and fabrics. It's a smaller collection, with less commercial pressure — and that is important. We sell it in our main flagships, and we practice stock rotation — bringing it to a store for two weeks and then moving it to another. It's our couture meets ready-to-wear.
Laura has been the rainmaker of another key project – our archive. It started as her passion for vintage. But then we built our new HQ in our hometown of Reggio Emilia, and we realized how many pieces we had. And the archive became a great guide to research and cultural relevance. After that, people began donating stuff – me, Laura, Franca Sozzani or Carine Roitfeld, who donated great looks. It's a blend of this and purchases made at markets or auctions, along with the Max Mara archive of all our collections.
FN: Three years ago, you became a mum with Mariasole, and last year, you launched the Max & Co. kids line. I've seen you describe Max & Co. as the enfant terrible of your group. So, tell us more about that project?
MGPM: If you look at our kids collection, it's an enfant terrible — with a little rebellion, but not too much. And my daughter is the muse. It's a license with Brave Kids, part of Only the Brave, and we are very happy with it.
FN: Apparently, your daughter is obsessed with fashion. Were you like that as a child? Do you see your daughter taking over one day?
MGPM: I was definitely obsessed with clothes as a kid, and I am still as a woman. Honestly, I don't know what Mariasole will want to do. The key thing is I'd like for her to find her own way.
FN: Last October, you received the Design Heritage Award from Fashion Group International in New York. How important is it that Max Mara gets these sorts of recognitions?
MGPM: It was a great acknowledgment, which we really appreciated. In an industry where longevity is a little undervalued and there is so much change, we represent the ability to maintain a certain continuity.
FN: If your grandfather, Achille Maramotti – who founded Max Mara in 1951 – were around today, what would he think of the group's growth and story?
MGPM: My grandfather passed when I was 21. I think he would have been very proud of what his children have achieved, primarily and proud that his grandkids are now part of that. He believed in maintaining things of a certain quality, making garments with carefully chosen, great fabrics. He was not someone who was nostalgic at all — he was happiest when looking at contemporary fashion. So, I think he would be very happy.
FN: Often, handing over a family business to the next generation can be tricky. Why do you think that Italians seem to handle that better?
MGPM: Two reasons – Italians don't look at fashion as primarily part of the financial world. Italian entrepreneurs are all about obsession with products. That comes from close proximity to their companies, which means they can choose good partners to make very good products. They know their company extremely well, as they are very present. Of course, when you get to a certain dimension, you need to add outside management, but as you know your company inside out, you can usually choose pretty well.
Secondly – as a lot of Italian companies are family-run, your parents teach you a lot. You live and breathe the company, and that is something you cannot teach. Of course, there have been a lot of great Italian brands bought by French giants, but quite a lot of us are still independent!
MGPM: The answer is that it's very difficult to create really great women's fashion, so we are going to stick to what we know. As for hotels, let's say we are a little more conservative than our colleagues and won't go there. But we did sign a license with Shiseido last year and will have a great new scent next year. So, stay tuned.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
LeMonde
3 hours ago
- LeMonde
Channel crossings by migrants in small boats are on the rise
The sea was calm and smooth. In the distance, a black spot. Soon, dawn revealed an inflatable dinghy barely 10 meters long. At least 30 men were seated on either side, straddling the tubes. They stretched out their legs to avoid touching the water. Some wore life jackets; others did not. In the Dover Strait on Tuesday, July 1, 440 migrants would cross to the United Kingdom aboard eight small boats. The one mentioned earlier looked full. Yet it moved along the coast, drawing closer to the beach at Malo-les-Bains, in northern France. Guests at the Radisson were still asleep when, in front of the luxury hotel, a group of women, men and children waded waist-deep into the sea. Not everyone would manage to board. As police officers approached, the dinghy departed. Slower, heavier. The vessel sank a bit deeper into the water. Some cries symbolized the tension on board, the fear. At a speed of about 4 knots (7.4 kilometers per hour), the small boat headed for Dover, over 60 kilometers away, on the other side of the strait. A ship monitored the dinghy's hesitant journey from a distance. This was the Minck, one of the boats chartered by the French government for operations in the Channel. If the migrants did not request assistance, the Minck would simply "escort" them to British waters, where UK authorities would take over.


Fashion Network
6 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Copenhagen, São Paulo and Los Angeles: Veja continues its international expansion
Twenty years after its creation by the duo Sébastien Kopp and François-Ghislain Morillion, Veja, the French brand of sustainable sneakers, is accelerating the development of its international store network. The program includes three new strategic addresses: Copenhagen in Denmark, São Paulo in Brazil, and Los Angeles in the United States. On June 11, Veja opened a store in São Paulo, symbolizing its historic attachment to Brazil, where it sources its raw materials, such as organic cotton and Amazon rubber) and manufactures its products according to fair trade principles. Across the Atlantic, the brand has just inaugurated its first outlet on the West Coast of the United States, in Los Angeles, at 1108C Abbot Kinney Boulevard in the Venice district. The choice was not made by chance: "This mythical neighborhood is one of the few places in Los Angeles where people still walk," explained the brand. In addition to sneakers, the minimalist, mineral boutique, which has taken the place of a former dairy, houses a shoe-making workshop. In the near future, the brand will open its first boutique in the Scandinavia at 40B Pilestræde, on the corner of Svaertegade in central Copenhagen. It's a natural fit for Veja with a clientele attentive to environmental issues and clean design. In almost twenty years, Veja has established itself as one of the pioneering brands in the sustainable fashion sector. By 2023, it had passed the 200 million euro sales milestone, rising to 245 million euros by 2024. The company, still independent, is 100% owned by its two founders. Today, Veja distributes its products through almost 3,000 retailers worldwide, twice as many as five years ago. The breakdown of its sales in 2024 reflects the diversity of its sales channels: 70% wholesale, 20% e-commerce, and 10% via its dozen own boutiques. Last May, Veja enriched its product offering with the launch of a new model: its first sandal, christened "Etna". Inspired by the classics of the tropical wardrobe, this sandal is designed with a thick, light, and grippy Amazonian rubber sole, and an insole in EVA green, a flexible material derived from sugar cane. This launch, which is also marked by a collaboration with French brand Homecore, symbolizes Veja's ambition to diversify its offering while remaining true to its DNA.


Fashion Network
6 hours ago
- Fashion Network
LVMH to sell Santa Barbara's El Encanto hotel for $82.2 million
French luxury giant LVMH Moët Hennessey Louis Vuitton SE is selling its only US hotel, the El Encanto in Santa Barbara, California. The 90-room property — in a coastal getaway northwest of Los Angeles — is being purchased by a partnership of brothers Justin and Tyler Mateen and Culver Capital, according to representatives for the buyers. The price is $82.2 million, they said. 'We look at it as we're buying 20% of the class A luxury hospitality market in Santa Barbara, which we believe is a growing market,' Tyler Mateen said in an interview Monday. The sale price per room — about $900,000 — is comparable to other recent resort transactions in coastal California, where strict government regulations and a scarcity of land create high barriers to entry, according to Alan Reay, president of Atlas Hospitality Group, a hotel brokerage based in Newport Beach. 'It may look expensive today, but 10 or 20 years from now it looks like a good deal,' Reay said. A spokesperson for LVMH declined to comment on the transaction but said LVMH-owned Bvlgari Hotels & Resorts plans to open a hotel in Miami Beach, Florida, in 2028. The El Encanto's new owners say they plan to manage the property themselves, meaning it will no longer be part of the Belmond chain, a group of resorts that LVMH purchased in 2019. 'This property embodies the essence of California living and offers an experience like no other hotel on the Central Coast,' Garrett Cayton of Culver Capital, and the co-owner of The Discerning Travellers luxury travel agency, said in a statement. The Mateens have a growing portfolio of real estate and technology investments. Justin Mateen was a co-founder of the dating app Tinder. The brothers paid $69 million last month for a shopping center on Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles, and last year bought an office and retail complex on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills for $211 million.