Adlib, 52 years of Ibizan free fashion

The Adlib fashion catwalk, held this weekend in Ibiza, managed to make its 52nd edition one of the most applauded in recent years with Laura Sánchez, who paraded on this catwalk for the first time now 25, and Lídia Torrent as masters of ceremonies.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
12 June 2023 Monday 11:04
4 Reads
Adlib, 52 years of Ibizan free fashion

The Adlib fashion catwalk, held this weekend in Ibiza, managed to make its 52nd edition one of the most applauded in recent years with Laura Sánchez, who paraded on this catwalk for the first time now 25, and Lídia Torrent as masters of ceremonies. This year the event was attended by personalities such as Lourdes Montes, Fiona Ferrer, Paloma Lago, Elsa Anka, Eugenia Ortiz and Jessica Bueno, among others.

Lídia Torrent left First Dates (Cuatro) after seven years ready to take on any challenge in front of the camera. And there was general agreement that television is losing a first-class presenter: the heiress of Elsa Anka - admired for her daughter's work - led the parade of new designers Futur with the ease of a veteran . Lídia and Jaime Astrain have just christened their daughter and this is how she remembers the ceremony: "It was very nice to bring both families together, their friends, my friends... Bringing together the people you care about the most made it a super special moment". Elsa and Jaime agree that little Elsa must grow up accompanied by values ​​such as "kindness, respect, education, empathy, sensitivity and curiosity".

Fiona Ferrer, current ambassador of the Eivissa Luxury Destination brand, the best-known Tourism Promotion product club on the White Island, never misses the Adlib. Immersed in her fourth book, she takes time for a still secret fashion project and organizes exhibitions such as Sol and Mambo, with Aldo Comas, which can be seen these days at the Wellington Hotel in Madrid.

Lourdes Montes was very attentive from the front row to the creations of her Ibizan colleagues. He enjoyed the original proposals from the other arc of fashion, his flamenco style at the head of the Mi Abril firm: "They are two fashions with a long tradition but very different. I came with the preconceived idea that everything was white, lace and embroidery, but the experience delighted me and surprised me a lot." We ask her if she would see a man in cufflinks and trousers like Francisco Rivera wearing any of the designs presented, and she calmly admits that the most her husband would wear would be the beautiful linen shirts.