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The usual pandemonium outside the Dolce & Gabbana show was cranked up to 11 this afternoon. Three days ago, Kim Kardashian touched down in Milan and posted a pic of herself disembarking a PJ with the hashtags #CiaoKim and #DolceGabbana. The designers have been linked to the Kardashians since this past May, when they wardrobed  Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker’s wedding in Portofino. At a press conference this morning, Kim said that today’s collaboration came about when Dolce and Gabbana discovered that the clotheshorse brought her own collection of vintage D&G to the nuptials, including “some pieces that even they didn’t have in their own archives.”

The proposal went something like this: Kim would act as curator, selecting pieces from past collections, specifically the 20-year period between 1987 and 2007 (conveniently spanning the Y2K years that are trending at the moment), and the designers would rework those pieces for today, but subtly, so that the links between then and now are obvious enough for the social media audience, where so much of fashion communication plays out in 2022.

The benefits for Dolce & Gabbana are plenty. The Kardashian-Jenners in attendance today boast a combined 652 million followers. As for Kim, hooking up with Dolce & Gabbana doesn’t just burnish her high-fashion image, but thanks to the internet’s capacity to flatten time, it somehow also stretches her influence. She became a household name in 2007 when Keeping Up With the Kardashians began airing, but with this partnership she’s put her stamp on two extra decades. Damn, she’s good at the fame game.

Explaining her affinity for the brand at the press conference, Kim said, “Yes, I have this futuristic alien Barbie personality, which I like. But in my soul I feel very sensual Italian mob wife at the same time. I don’t know if that’s appropriate to say.” Of course, Dolce & Gabbana has worked the sensual Italian wife trope to its own ends, as editorials and ad campaigns of D&G favorites from back in the day—including Eva Herzigova and Helena Christensen, who sat in the front row—attest.

On the runway, corsets, wiggle dresses, and lingerie sets were stitched with labels at the hip or wrist identifying the year they were first presented. At the same time, other pieces served Kim’s own interests. “It’s very Skims-y,” a seatmate said, nodding at a stretch-jersey number circa 1990 and a new one made in its image. For those of you living under a rock, Skims is Kim’s $3.2 billion shapewear brand. Presumably, all of this is future content for Hulu’s The Kardashians show, too; season two premiered a couple of nights ago.

All the top fashion brands are getting into the entertainment business. Dolce & Gabbana has always been an early adopter. With Kim’s help it just raised the stakes.