CNN  — 

It is looking to be a fashion month like no other. The coronavirus pandemic has upended the traditional runway format, and in its place a mix of virtual and, in some cases, physical shows with limited audience numbers has started to roll out.

New York Fashion Week (NYFW) arrived first, running from September 13 to 17 ahead of London, Milan and Paris.

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A model walks the runway for Jason Wu Spring-Summer 2021.

Organizers adapted to circumstances by hosting a number of outdoor events, and Jason Wu opened the schedule with a runway show on the rooftop of Spring Studios in Manhattan. He showed his Spring-Summer 2021 collection to a socially distanced crowd of just 30 people, sending models such as Indya Moore down a plant-filled set inspired by the Mexican town of Tulum.

Harlem’s Fashion Row, a platform founded to promote diversity in fashion by supporting designers of color, also kicked off NYFW Sunday with a virtual showcase of collections by Black designers Kristian Lorén, Kimberly Goldson and Rich Fresh.

Returning designers include Anna Sui and Chromat, with digital presentations, while a number of notable NYFW regulars like Michael Kors didn’t participate this time around.

Courtesy Versace/Alfonso Catalano
Milan Fashion Week came to an optimistic close Sunday, having hosted significantly more in-person runway shows than either London or New York before it.
Courtesy Versace/Alfonso Catalano
Versace opted for a gesture of pure escapism. Perhaps the most notable casting decision of Milan Fashion Week came when the brand sent three plus-size models -- namely Jill Kortleve, Precious Lee and Alva Claire -- down one of its runways for the first time in its history.
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This was Silvia Venturini Fendi's last solo collection before British designer Kim Jones becomes the brand's new artistic director of womenswear.
Prada
And it was a first for Prada. The debut collaboration between Miuccia Prada, who now heads up her family's namesake business, and Belgian designer Raf Simons, who joined the brand as co-creative director earlier this year, was one of the week's most hotly anticipated shows.
Courtesy Valentino/Max Montingelli
Click through the gallery to take a look at more images from Milan Fashion Week.
Courtesy Valentino/Max Montingelli
Courtesy Valentino/Max Montingelli
Courtesy Versace/Alfonso Catalano
Courtesy Versace/Alfonso Catalano
Courtesy Versace/Andre Lucat
Moschino
Moschino
Moschino
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Courtesy Georgio Armani
Courtesy Georgia Armani
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Brett Dillig-Davies/A Cold Wall
Brett Dillig-Davies/A Cold Wall
Alberto Moncada/Prada
Prada
Oliver Hadlee Pearch/Missoni
Oliver Hadlee Pearch/Missoni
Burberry
Kicking London Fashion Week off with a twist, British legacy label Burberry held a live show in the woods, hosted on popular live-streaming platform Twitch, known primarily as a hub for gamers to meet, play and watch each other play.
Burberry
Chris Yates
Bora Aksu was one of the few designers that opted for a live physical runway show this season.
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Chris Sutton/Halpern
Halpern created a short film celebrating a group of key workers, including women in health care and transport, who have been on the frontline of the coronavirus pandemic.
Chris Sutton/Halpern
Click through the gallery to take a look at more images from London Fashion Week.
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Joyce Ng/Priya Ahluwalia
Joyce Ng/Priya Ahluwalia
Ben Broomfield/Molly Goddard
Ben Broomfield/Molly Goddard
Ben Broomfield/Molly Goddard
Ruth Ossai/Bethany Williams
Ruth Ossai/Bethany Williams
Ruth Ossai/Bethany Williams
Andrew Nuding/Simone Rocha
Andrew Nuding/Simone Rocha
Andrew Nuding/Simone Rocha
Andrew Nuding/Simone Rocha
Chris Yates/Art School
Chris Yates/Art School
Chris Yates/Art School
Manu Valcarce/Edward Crutchley
Manu Valcarce/Edward Crutchley
Harley Weir/Charlotte Knowles
Harley Weir/Charlotte Knowles
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Victoria Beckham
Victoria Beckham
Erdem
Erdem
Erdem
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Fashion designer Jason Wu opened New York Fashion Week with a runway show on the rooftop of Spring Studios in Manhattan. The show featured models such as "Pose" actor Indya Moore, who made her runway debut walking down a plant-filled set inspired by the Mexican coastal town of Tulum. Wu showed his Spring-Summer 2021 collection to a socially distanced crowd of just 30 people.
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Courtesy of TOM FORD
Inspired by a documentary about the fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez and the smiles of the '70s models Pat Cleveland and Donna Jordan, Tom Ford's collection exuded joyful elegance.
Courtesy of TOM FORD
Andrew H. Walker/Shutterstock
Two decades after Imitation of Christ was founded by Tara Subkoff and Matt Damhave, alongside Chloë Sevigny, the conceptual fashion collective is back. Their theatrical presentations, which took place simultaneously in New York and Los Angeles, featured a capella singers and a video screening.
Maxwell Turner
Maxwell Turner
Maisie Wilen/Clare Gillen
New York Fashion Week's debuts included Maisie Schloss, a former Yeezy designer. Instead of a runway show, Schloss's shimmery, kaleidoscopic new collection was photographed and art directed by Clare Gillen.
Maisie Wilen/Clare Gillen
Click through the gallery to take a look at more images from New York Fashion Week.
Ulla Johnson
Taylor Jewell/Ulla Johnson
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Arturo Holmes/Getty Images
Phelan Marc
Phelan Marc
Lia Clay/Chromat
Lia Clay/Chromat
JD Urban/Bibhu
JD Urban/Bibhu
@ashleyskywalker
@itenjifilms
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Christian Siriano's show was not part of official New York Fashion Week, and was held the day after the event closed, at a private location in Westport, Connecticut. Many of the models wore outfits and accessories with the 'Vote' message. Shoes were designed by Sarah-Jessica Parker's SJP line.
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Model Coco Rocha swims through the water at a private location during the Christian Siriano show in Connecticut.
Tomo Koizumi
Japanese designer Tomo Koizumi produced a lookbook of wedding-ready dresses in collaboration with wedding-dress store Treat, which used deadstock fabrics.
Tomo Koizumi
A mermaid silhouette bridal dress from Japanese designer Tomo Koizumi in collaboration with wedding store Treat.

Meanwhile, popular social media app TikTok is looking to engage Gen-Z audiences through its own online fashion month, partnering with labels such as Louis Vuitton, Alice + Olivia and Saint Laurent, among others, to livestream runway shows and present capsule collections.

To broadcast the virtual events at NYFW, the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) created Runway360, a digital platform to show new collections or other creative projects. And although the usually star-studded fashion week will be wholly different this year, the switch to virtual may also make for more sustainable presentations – a recent report by Ordre, which specializes in online showrooms, found that international fashion weeks emit the same volume of greenhouse gases annually as a small country.

Below are our five highlights from New York Fashion Week.

The end of sweatpants?

Many people are still spending a lot of time at home due to the global pandemic, but judging by some of the collections this season, designers are hoping that by spring 2021 our lives will demand glamorous ensembles.

Jason Wu kicked off NYFW with a summer holiday-themed runway show, with models breezing in donning beach-ready maxi dresses and tailored shorts, in tones of blue and terracota.

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Indya Moore walks the runway for Jason Wu during New York Fashion Week on September 13, 2020.

Wu wasn’t the only designer with an escapist mindset. Dreams of better times and of jetting off to far-flung oases were visible in several collections, from Badgley Mischka’s bright and luxurious gowns to Naeem Khan’s intricate hand-beaded tops and dresses.

Fashion with a message

Alongside the expected displays of opulence, some designers took advantage of digital platforms to share messages of activism and empowerment. NBA player Carmelo “Melo” Anthony launched a streetwear collection as an extension of his clothing and lifestyle brand, and as part of a new initiative, the Stayme7o Propel program, to support Black creativity.

Lia Clay/Chromat
Chromat Spring-Summer 2021.

Meanwhile, architectural swimwear and athletic brand Chromat, known for its diverse runway shows celebrating all bodies, released the film “Joy Run” by filmmaker Tourmaline. The fashion film, which shows masked models in neon sportswear, featured transgender track star Terry Miller, advocating for the fair inclusion of all genders in sports.

Sustainable fashion label Collina Strada is also supporting trans rights through its latest Spring-Summer collection. The designer Hillary Taymour is auctioning off 11 T-shirts to raise money for trans sex workers.

Fresh faces

NYFW’s digital format offers emerging designers a chance to shine without having to invest in expensive live shows. Ten new American brands showed this week, including former Yeezy designer Maisie Schloss, who created a collection for her label Maisie Wilen featuring larger-than-life boots and shimmery tinfoil-like yet fluid dresses.

Maisie Wilen/Clare Gillen
Maisie Wilen Spring-Summer 2021.

Another newcomer was the avant-garde mother-and-daughter wearable-luxury label Dur Doux, and Oak & Acorn, a Harlem-based sustainable denim brand that makes bold, genderless styles.

AKNVAS, meanwhile, took notes from Scandinavian minimalism and Caribbean beach style with vivid hues of orange, pink and green in effortless shirt dresses and cropped pants.

Designer Davidson Petit-Frère opted for a film to show off his slick menswear suits and debut his womenswear line, tapping actor Michael K. Williams of “The Wire” and “Boardwalk Empire” fame to star alongside “Den of Thieves” actor Ron J. Rock in the short flick “Destined.”

Imitation of Christ Returns

The digital approach offered a space for offbeat labels to flex their creative muscles, including the newly revived early-2000s collective, Imitation of Christ, founded by actress, artist and designer Tara Subkoff and designer Matt Damhave.

The conceptual fashion label, which was upcycling garments before the practice was a trend, made its NYFW debut almost 20 years after it staged a gothy ready-to-wear show in a New York City funeral parlor (Chloe Sevigny was famously involved in the label’s original iteration).

Maxwell Turner
Imitation of Christ Spring-Summer 2021.

This time around their theatrical presentations, which took place simultaneously in New York and Los Angeles, featured a capella singers and a video screening, while their Spring-Summer 2021 collection was rife with skateboarder style including eclectic mixed prints, vintage T-shirts and a sequined race track jacket.

Joyful finale

NYFW officially closed with designer and filmmaker Tom Ford presenting his Spring-Summer 2021 women’s and menswear lines through a digital lookbook.

Ford chose an optimistic slant, saying in a short film, “The last thing I want to see are serious clothes.” While still comfort-inducing, his soft shirts, 1970s-inspired jumpsuits and caftans had a fun and glamorous edge, with whimsical animal prints and florals. And his menswear collection was no less lively, with a series of silk pants in tropical prints.

Courtesy of TOM FORD
Tom Ford Spring-Summer 2021.

Inspired by a documentary about the fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez and the smiles of the ’70s models Pat Cleveland and Donna Jordan, Ford’s collection exuded joyful elegance.

He said in a statement that he had found it difficult to find meaning in new clothes during the early days of lockdown, but once restrictions eased he felt inspired to create for a “slightly more dressed world.”

Adding that it was still a “casual world” but “one where I actually felt like making a bit of an effort to get dressed,” he said.

This article was updated throughout New York Fashion Week, which ran from September 11–16, 2020.