For his latest Vuitton collection, Pharrell Williams tapped his best bud Nigo to be co-creative director. And Bernard Arnault made it back from the Trump inauguration to see it.
Amid an uncertain political climate, designers at the latest menswear show in Paris sent messages of resilience and resistance down the runway. Among the key looks was a reimagined “hipster” for 2025.
Louis Vuitton men's creative director, Pharrell Williams, drew his audience to a rear courtyard of the Louvre Museum after dark on Tuesday for a fall-winter catwalk show, kicking off Paris Fashion Week with a line-up of jazzed up streetwear.
Now sitting at the top of the luxury pyramid, the longtime acolytes employed rich textures and sophisticated details to dandify their signature silhouettes.
NIGO dives into his personal experiences and relationship with Futura, Japan, Paris and beyond to inform the key motifs of this collection.
On Tuesday evening of Paris Fashion Week, the menswear set made the now-traditional pilgrimage from Auralee’s temple of elegance and grace to the Louis Vuitton Men’s show. The
Celebrities including Bradley Cooper squeezed into Louis Vuitton Tuesday night as the brand transformed the Louvre’s historic heart into a stunning stage for streetwear at Paris Fashion Week.Outside,
In this week’s fashion headlines, the FW25 season arrived with newcomers debuting and familiar faces returning, luxury shares saw a boost following positive results, brands announced new chapters, and new diffusion lines were introduced.
While TD Cowen acknowledges LVMH as a “great idea for the longer term,” it notes that the company faces hurdles in the near term, particularly in its Fashion & Leather Goods (F&LG) segment.
This season, Pharrell teamed up with Nigo, the creative force behind Kenzo, another LVMH brand, for a wrapped up dive into Japanese and street aesthetics. Together, they blended Pharrell’s ...
Paris Men's Fashion Week, which wrapped up Sunday, showcased Fall-Winter 2025-2026 collections that featured a revival of more elegant tailoring -- and fear about the return of Donald Trump.
The European corporate fashion business is known to be worried about the possible impact of a trade war between the U.S. and Europe under Trump.