Founders say they don’t want ‘a Japanese designer to start designing Dolce & Gabbana’ and reveal they’ve refused offers for the brand

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

Italian fashion designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana say the Dolce & Gabbana label will die with them.



“Once we’re dead, we’re dead. I don’t want a Japanese designer to start designing Dolce & Gabbana,” Gabbana, 55, said in an interview with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.

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The veteran fashionistas launched their brand in 1985 and continue to work together despite breaking up as a couple in 2004.

“When we split up, we said to ourselves that it was better to divide up everything, because if I took a blow to the head the next day he would have found himself dealing with someone not involved in the industry, like for example my cousin, who could ruin the business,” Gabbana said. “We have created a trust neither of us can touch.”

Dolce, 59, added that the pair had refused “every offer to buy the brand”.

“You can have all the money in the world, but if you are not free, what do you do? You don’t go to the grave with a coffin stuffed with money,” he said.

After decades building up their fashion house, which is famed for its sultry womenswear, Gabbana admits he “doesn’t have time” to spend their fortune.

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“I’m too busy working. I don’t care about becoming richer – my goal is to be successful,” he said.

The two men said they still share an exceptional bond, even though they are no longer romantically linked.

“Even today, what is mine is his, and what is his is mine ... Our new partners know that’s how it is, whether they like it or not,” Dolce said. “If a love is born when you are young – for me it was the first experience, for him the first love story – it is pure, total.”