The neon trend is here to stay, according to the spring/summer 2019 catwalks

Get ready for your wardrobe to beam brighter than the sun 
1/63
Sabrina Carder8 March 2019

The spring/summer 2019 catwalks saw several retro trends re-emerge. There were tie-dye cycling shorts and shoulder padded power suits, but the one eighties trend that there really was no escaping from was neon.

Fluorescent shades already hit the fashion scene last year, hitting micro-trend status largely thanks to the Kardashians. But, those of us who thought the in-your-face look was nothing more than a passing Instagram trend are about to be proven wrong. The SS19 catwalks of New York, London, Milan and Paris confidently championed lime green, blinding yellow, extra hot pink and flame orange.

Proving that the trend is going to be sticking around for quite some time. Here's how to wear it in the coming months.

Seriously Statement Streetwear

House of Holland at London Fashion Week
SplashNews.com

If you're looking for a beginner's guide on how to style bright hues, start with a casual streetwear aesthetic.

The catwalks were full of ensembles that either had subtle pops of neon or were beaming head-to-toe creations.

While Blumarine, Natasha Zinko, Jasper Conran and Annakiki all dipped their toes into unmissable day looks, it was House of Holland that served up the biggest dose of inspiration with a collection filled with everything from three-piece tracksuits to casual suits and day dresses.

Jeremy Scott at New York Fashion Week
Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows

New York Fashion Week also saw Jeremy Scott put his signature quirky spin on the trend for Moschino, sending cartoon graphics and artsy paint prints down the catwalk.

Off-White at Paris Fashion Week
SplashNews.com

It was streetwear pro Virgil Abloh, though, who perfectly fused neon hues with streetwear silhouettes for Off-White, adding a trendy snakeskin print that is bound to get even dubious fashionistas onboard.

Elegant Eveningwear

Emilia Wickstead at London Fashion Week
PA Archive/PA Images

Designers have even put a sophisticated high fashion spin on neon shades in order to make them evening-appropriate.

Rochas, Emilia Wickstead, Gucci and Versace served up elegant evening gowns in vivid colours - a sure way to stand out from the classic LBD.

Emporio Armani show during Milan Fashion Week
Getty Images

Armani championed several evening ensembles in lime green, with an acid green, high shine suit attracting the bulk of the attention.

Julien Macdonald at London Fashion Week
PA Archive/PA Images

During London Fashion Week Julien Macdonald put a neon twist on his signature cut-out dresses and Ashish drew upon rave culture by emboldening striking zesty hues with sequins.

Boss It For The Beach

Cushnie during New York Fashion Week
Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows

The catwalks gave us a not-so-subtle hint that lime green will become a 2019 summer staple.

Marta Jakubowski at London Fashion Week
PA Archive/PA Images

Rejina Pyo had everything from lime green linen shirts to coordinating bags and sandals. Meanwhile, Marta Jakubowski offered large lime sun hats and at Fendi we fell in love with a striking neon handbag.

Valentino at Paris Fashion Week
Getty Images

Vacation clothing was also out in force. From semi-transparent beach dresses at Cushnie and Prabal Gurung to Altuzarra and Valentino perfectly mixing fluorescent tones with flower power prints.

Be prepared to shine brighter than the sun this summer.

Create a FREE account to continue reading

eros

Registration is a free and easy way to support our journalism.

Join our community where you can: comment on stories; sign up to newsletters; enter competitions and access content on our app.

Your email address

Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number

You must be at least 18 years old to create an account

* Required fields

Already have an account? SIGN IN

By clicking Create Account you confirm that your data has been entered correctly and you have read and agree to our Terms of use , Cookie policy and Privacy policy .

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in