Gucci might be the hottest brand in the world, which means that its favorite maximalist trends —all-over prints, endless logos, animal iconography, embroidery—trickle down to the rest of the fashion world. To that list of Gucci-inspired trends, we can now add "a replica of your own severed heads." At the brand's Fall-Winter 2018 show in Milan, Gucci designer Alessandro Michele sent models down the runway carrying duplicates of their own decapitated domes. This was because the event centered on cyborgs, according to the show's notes.

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"Gucci Cyborg is post-human: it has eyes on its hands, faun horns, dragon's puppies [Sorry, did we forget to mention the hyper-real dragon puppies some of the models were cuddling up with?] and doubling heads," read the notes distributed to the show's attendees. Michele's Gucci Cyborgs and House of Horrors props were meant to represent "a figure that can overcome the dualism and dichotomy of identity," according to the notes, which quoted Donna Haraway's 1984 essay "A Cyborg Manifesto." (And it will also make a killer Halloween costume if you're going to a party with a bunch of fashionable people.)

Michele worked with Makinarium, a Rome-based special effects company, to make the heads, horns, and dragons, according to Vogue. Makinarium co-founder Leonardo Cruciano told Vogue that the collection of props took a full six months to make, and required 3D scans of the models' heads to create the replicas. "[Michele’s] a true artist, with a real passion, a fantasy so intense and inspiring, it pushes you forward," Cruciano told Vogue.

And while we couldn't find a shop that would make a personal cast of your own head, we've got a solution: you can buy a generic one from a place like Los Angeles' Grave Digger Props. When I called, Grave Digger Props's Melissa Ramirez tells me that I can buy a severed head for $115 and make slight adjustments—a wig is included in the cost, but it costs extra if you want to add wounds. $115 is pretty competitive, when we're talking jumping on the Gucci train.

And if you're not ready to commit to this particular trend, the label also sent blazers with New York Yankees logos on them. Definitely cool—and distinctly less terror-inducing.