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There’s a cool clarity to Bryan Conway’s new collection for Tiger of Sweden that is absolutely refreshing. Whereas in the past it has felt like the designer was hesitating at the edge of the diving board, for spring 2025 he dove unhesitatingly into things while also bringing the work closer to home. Consider an irresistible wrinkled suit in a cotton fabric that has some metal in it to retain its well-worn feeling. It is based on the first tailleur Conway made when studying in London. Back then, the designer said, he’d “just got over my Hedi Slimaine for Dior phase and I got out of those skinny jeans I used to wear.” The remit then, as now, is for ease with sophistication. The combination of wool-silk pajama-like pants with a drawstring and a slightly leaner jacket (a general trend this season) feels just right. And the jacket’s exaggeratedly wide lapel is suggestive of both the transitional period Conway had in mind (the ’60s segueing into the ’70s) and that of a boy becoming a man.
Collection
There’s a cool clarity to Bryan Conway’s new collection for Tiger of Sweden that is absolutely refreshing. Whereas in the past it has felt like the designer was hesitating at the edge of the diving board, for spring 2025 he dove unhesitatingly into things while also bringing the work closer to home. Consider an irresistible wrinkled suit in a cotton fabric that has some metal in it to retain its well-worn feeling. It is based on the first tailleur Conway made when studying in London. Back then, the designer said, he’d “just got over my Hedi Slimaine for Dior phase and I got out of those skinny jeans I used to wear.” The remit then, as now, is for ease with sophistication. The combination of wool-silk pajama-like pants with a drawstring and a slightly leaner jacket (a general trend this season) feels just right. And the jacket’s exaggeratedly wide lapel is suggestive of both the transitional period Conway had in mind (the ’60s segueing into the ’70s) and that of a boy becoming a man.
Collection
For Maggie Marilyn’s Maggie Hewitt, the last few years have been about resets and new beginnings. She’s in the middle of the changes begun during Covid, and she recently gave birth to her first child. “The first years of Maggie Marilyn we had such rapid growth; Net-a-Porter was one of our first stockists, we got shortlisted for the LVMH Prize, then we quickly picked up a lot of international retailers,” she explains, seated at a table inside her bright Sydney showroom. “Everything felt like it was spinning so fast, and it wasn’t sustainable at all, not for the environment sure, but also for me, for my team, and for longevity and building something that was really going to be around for a long time.”
Collection
Years in the making, the opening of Acnes Studios HQ in Paris was decidedly worth the wait. There will be more to reveal soon; let’s just say the building, located in the 10th arrondissement, gives off a carefully calibrated clash of opulent and raw, with the spaces as well-suited to a party or photo-shoot as today’s showroom.
Nigerian Singer Rema Brought “Cozy Style”—And an Epic Chain—To the Louis Vuitton Show
Yesterday in Paris, Pharrell Williams debuted his new spring 2025 men’s collection for Louis Vuitton—and the show brought out a star-studded crowd, including stars like Sabrina Carpenter and Central Cee in the front row. There was one celebrity, however, who marked their very first Vuitton show: That would be Rema, the Nigerian singer and rapper who first burst onto the scene with his earwormy-track “Calm Down.” The star says he was excited to make his front row debut. “It’s a great honor. I like the [brand]’s quality of design and the color palettes,” he says, adding that his favorite part about hitting up fashion week is always the mix-and-match opportunities. “What’s exciting about hitting fashion week is first off meeting people, and then secondly just getting inspired by how people like rock their fits,” Rema says. “Everyone just has a mood, and a sense to come out with style.”
Collection
Commission’s Dylan Cao and Jin Kay took a break last season in order to align themselves with the menswear calendar. This kind of reset brought them back to a familiar question they’ve been investigating for a number of years now—What is Americanness, specifically within the context of being an immigrant? They were “looking at first generations that came here before us in the ’50s, ’60s, and ’70s, and how they tried to assimilate, whether by dressing up using elements of American preppiness or wearing a nine-to-five suit 24/7 to show that they’re ‘excellent’,” Cao explained in their midtown studio.
Something Borrowed: Why These Brides Are Renting Out Their Wedding Dresses After Their Big Day
Whether it’s buying a vintage dress, re-selling it afterwards, or even upcycling their gowns, brides are increasingly taking a more circular approach to wedding fashion. It’s why a growing number are also choosing to rent out their dresses post-wedding, so that it isn’t just worn for one day only before being consigned to the back of their wardrobes.
Model Blanca Padilla’s Wedding at a Menorcan Farmhouse Had Guests Dancing Under a Full Moon
Spanish model Blanca Padilla has traveled the world for her work, but she discovered the love of her life—Alejandro García—as a teenager back in her hometown. The couple decided to spend the rest of their lives together thousands of miles away on the beaches of Malibu in 2022. And after nine years as a couple, Blanca and Álex returned to their home country of Spain to tie the knot at a multi-day celebration in Menorca on May 25, 2024.
Collection
This season, the Isabel Marant man is out and about, and true to form he’ll always skip a flashy scene in favor of a tried-and-true watering hole, someplace slightly crunchy with peeling paint, a sticky floor, live acts, and zero pretense. “It’s a little craftsy and graphic, but there’s...
Collection
Daisuke Obana doesn’t generally give titles to his N.Hoolywood Test Product Exchange Service collections, but in an email exchange he said if he had to name this one he might go with Rescue Operations. This helps frame the lookbook narrative in which the models are imagined “handling relief supplies dropped from a helicopter.” On a philosophical level, N.Hoolywood TPES, is its own rescue operation, as it is based on vintage military gear from the designer’s collection, and the pieces retain details, and sometimes the functionality, of the originals.
Collection
After a brief hiatus, Études is back with its original “Studio” tacked back onto its name. It also has a “renewed temporality,” as founders José Lamali, Jérémy Egry, and Aurélien Arbet put it (today’s outing was a two-fer, numbered 24 and 25, for this winter and next summer).
Collection
“This is the fourth unfolding of a new development for Canali, born with our fall/winter 2023 collection, which aims to provoke evolution on the basis of its founding values: quality of materials, constructions, and a trendy addition that is never the subject, but rather a form of completeness.” So said Stefano Canali, third-generation custodian of the family business at a Milan Fashion Week presentation. Marking its 90h anniversary, the Italian brand presented in the courtyard of Palazzo Bovara a menswear collection based on a total look that revolves around the concept of the jacket, dissected from the traditional one to the Sahariana.
So Long, Auburn Curls: Julia Roberts Is Now A Blonde
A dazzling smile, big brown eyes, and a mane of auburn… wait, did Julia Roberts just go blonde? Having swapped her signature hair color for a summer-ready, buttery shade of blonde, the actor debuted a new look at a Hollywood fundraising gala over the weekend, whilst hanging out with the likes of US President Joe Biden, former President Barack Obama, and her longtime friend George Clooney.
18 Must-See Films That Celebrate Paris
Its rooftops, its streets; its neighborhoods, monuments, Metro—Paris can’t help but be cinematic. Ahead of Vogue World: Paris, here are just some of the films that have beautifully showcased the City of Light, from Amélie to Belle de Jour and Charade.
The Christie’s Vivienne Westwood Auction Is Underway. Here’s What the Vogue Staff Is Coveting
It’s been almost a year and a half since Vivienne Westwood passed away at the age of 81, but the designer continues to make waves. In life, Westwood was guided by an unwavering moral compass, speaking out against everything from climate change to nuclear disarmament to unlawful detainment. Her design career reflected her values, releasing collections that parodied the British monarchy and provocative T-shirts that denounced fascism.
The 30 Day Rule That Can Help You Conquer Destructive Habits
Products are independently selected by our editors. We may earn an affiliate commission from links. Whether it’s junk food, our phones, alcohol, or even love, most of us are addicted to something. “There is a lot of stigma around the word ‘addiction’, but we all use things to change the way we feel,” Talitha Fosh, author of the new book Hooked: Why we are addicted and how to break free, tells me. Addiction exists on a spectrum, and there are (obviously) varying degrees of severity, but Fosh’s book serves as a good manual for those seeking to understand the mechanics behind the disease.
Dua Lipa’s Crucifix and Bikini Combo Is a Recipe for Mediterranean Summer Style
In the summer of 2023, many Americans traveled to coastal towns in Europe and posted TikToks hashtagged with things like #europeancore or #eurocore. More often than not these videos would highlight the most picturesque moments from their travels: terrace dinners on Greek islands, cliff diving in Positano, Santorini rooftops, and “Gatorade-coloured” beaches along the coast of the South of France.
Kaia Gerber’s Chocolate Glaze Hair Is One of 2024’s Biggest Colour Trends
This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from. Hot brunette summer is in full swing, and Kaia Gerber is living it. Having gone a deeper shade of brunette in the last few months, the model attended the Los Angeles premiere of The Bikeriders with what can only be described as perfect hair.
Naomi Campbell’s V&A Exhibit Is a Blockbuster Tribute to a Spectacular—And Singular—Fashion Career
“It wasn’t about me. It was about the clothes.” That’s a statement from Naomi Campbell, which—in light of the subject of the V&A’s latest fashion exhibition—doesn’t exactly follow through. In recent years, the South Kensington museum has enjoyed record-breaking success with retrospectives dedicated to legendary designers (see 2023/2024’s “Gabrielle Chanel. Fashion Manifesto” and 2019’s “Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams”), but never before has it dedicated an exhibition to a single model, one whose teenage success was so meteoric—and whose image-making is so iconic—she’s referred to by her first name only.
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Vogue places fashion in the context of culture and the world we live in—how we dress, live and socialize; what we eat, listen to and watch; who leads and inspires us. Vogue immerses itself in fashion, always leading readers to what will happen next. Thought-provoking, relevant and always influential, Vogue defines the culture of fashion.
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