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Who Attended Milan Fashion Week and Got a Perfect 10?

“Judging is an instinct.” “You’re already giving a score to this look in your mind, just express it.” So droned the Voice of God at the Sunnei show over the weekend as Milan Fashion Week drew to a close. Well, who doesn’t know truth when they hear it?

Every member of the audience was handled a group of paddles bearing numbers from one to 10, and instructed to rate each look as it appeared, in the sort of fashion meta-commentary on the modern condition that the brand’s designers, Simone Rizzo and Loris Messina, have made their signature.

This season the subject was the court of public opinion that is the social media sphere, where everyone is free to weigh in on everything. And as usual, while the clothes illustrating the issue were good (Sunnei is essentially grunge for the thinking person), even better was the point.

Sometimes that can be hard to find under the plethora of “real clothes,” razzle-dazzle showmanship and archive-diving that currently seems to be the default in fashion.

The results were fun. Ms. Cerf de Dudzeele offered up classics with labels that read — in typical Moschino irony — “classic pant” and “classic jean”; Ms. Karefa-Johnson riffed on cowboys and granny crochet; Ms. Grand created a “Loud Luxury” lineup of body suits painted with body parts; and Ms. Liu, a “protect me from the fashion system” tee that she mixed up with ruffled meringues.

But the looks were more about the legacy of Franco Moschino himself, rather than the world outside — which was always his subject. As such, they were also a reminder of just how much of a difference a creative director with something to say can make. That content creation, a buzz phrase of today, is about more than just producing filler for the voracious viewing maw.

When it comes to clothes, it’s actually another term for design.

They started out simply, in neat black suits and a little black dress, the straps just beginning to unpeel from the shoulders, and then built in increasingly wild amalgamations of texture and type: three-dimensional knits tracing new body topographies; a leather dress that cross-referenced panniers and tribal fringe; a halter covered in tiny blue scales that segued into silk strands that shifted over a pen-and-ink print like water.

Some were plain old weird (fishnet dresses with balls of fluff sprouting all over like seed pods) but many more were eye-poppingly good. “Let’s go somewhere” went the soundtrack, and the whole show was like an argument for appreciating process and the sheer allure of exploration, rather than any single destination.

Two models walk along a runway in openwork dresses accented with several large pompoms.

Heading off into the unknown is an increasingly endangered concept. Luke and Lucie Meier are flirting with it at Jil Sander, expanding the bounds of what that brand can be with smart experiments in volume, matching skinny ribbed knits with stiff balloon skirts and turning big shirts back to front (though the cat and dog prints were a little random), but it’s early stages. You get the sense that Maximilian Davis could do really interesting things at Ferragamo — see his finale gown, with its layers of black chiffon trapped under a breastplate of glossy leather, with sections that looked as if they had been eaten away — though he is still being overly tethered to the leather legacy.

It had a chaotic, end-of-the-world energy that is reflected in Mr. Martens’s clothes, which increasingly seem like couture for the climate apocalypse. He does things with surface treatments that don’t seem possible: corrodes jersey and denim into sheer nylon and tulle (Renzo Rosso, the owner of Diesel, is trying to patent the process); shreds deadstock jeans into party dresses; melts and molds old blockbuster movie posters into jackets. “Kill Bill” as outerwear. Why not?

The result viscerally conveys the beauty in devastation. Another way to say, perhaps, that judgment day is coming.

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