T his Paris Fashion Week Men's, which concluded last weekend, consisted of several Paris debuts. London designer _J.L-A.L_ as well as Brooklyn's Kody Phillips and Willy Chavarria
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.
Dior men’s artistic director Kim Jones kept embellishments to a minimum for his winter 2025-2026 catwalk show, putting the focus on silhouettes, including long, cape-like coats and cropped leather jackets.
The Paris Fashion Week Menswear FW25 edition is set to take place in Paris, the romantic city and the generally acknowledged world's fashion capital.
Williams teamed up with Japanese fashion designer Nigo, currently creative director of another LVMH-owned (LVMH.PA), opens new tab label, Kenzo.
And he was matter-of-fact as ever as he walked through the collection, a radical break from his recent explorations of casual, streetwear-curious splendor. “I've just done really pure Dior,” he remarked, a center of relative calm in the bustling studio.
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.
LVMH’s sales of fashion and leather goods declined in the fourth quarter, casting doubt on the prospects for a quick recovery in luxury demand. Read more at The Business Times.
Princess Charlene rocked a seriously daring cut-out midi dress dripping in crystals and sported her signature platinum blonde pixie cut. The royal, then in her thirties, looked phenomenal in the glitzy number which showed off her toned midriff.
Peter Copping’s debut at Lanvin, Willy Chavarria’s Paris premiere and Jacquemus’s return to fashion week — plus, the events and changes to note as you head to the French capital.
PARIS — LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton said it was confident heading into 2025 after revenues were broadly flat in the fourth quarter, with its key fashion and leather goods division curtailing its declines.
LVMH has made a good start to 2025, CEO Bernard Arnault said on Tuesday, after the luxury bellwether reported better than expected fourth-quarter sales that will add to hopes the sector has turned a corner.