Inside the ecstasy factory making pills bound for Parklife festival
Most pills are made in the Netherlands, but there’s also a cottage industry in the UK, with people knocking out pingers in spare bedrooms, garages and lock-ups.
“I kinda miss the time where pop music was really volatile and crazy. I miss the Paris Hilton days. Everybody is so worried about everything right now, how they’re perceived, if this art they’ve created is going to offend”
Most pills are made in the Netherlands, but there’s also a cottage industry in the UK, with people knocking out pingers in spare bedrooms, garages and lock-ups.
The city’s world-renowned clubs and galleries attract liberal-minded young people from all over the world. So why are pro-Palestine artists choosing to boycott them?
Rated by The Face: a playlist featuring Tyla, Skaiwater, Varg2tm and Two Shell & FKA twigs.
There have been sold-out screenings across Europe and the States and there's a full-blown trilogy in the works. The film’s directors Rebekah Sherman-Myntti and KJ Rothweiler tell us how they pursued their dreams on a shoestring budget.
100%: She came from Norway and had a thirst for club music! We quiz the rising DJ and producer on her love of liquorice, her hatred of damp towels, and a little bit about her music because why the hell not.
Fashion news of the week: Plus, silence from Coperni, Chanel’s new podcast, Palace and Gap, Supreme and Dr. Martens, Celine's new ambassador and new stores from LN-CC and Kiko Kostadinov.
She shares her name with a brand of American hot sauce. But the only thing hot around here, folks, is The White Lotus star’s new movie, Immaculate.
On this week’s special episode of The Face Podcast, we comb through the key releases of Q1.
“I kinda miss the time where pop music was really volatile and crazy. I miss the Paris Hilton days. Everybody is so worried about everything right now, how they’re perceived, if this art they’ve created is going to offend”
As the British-Yemeni designer prepares to show her latest collection at London Fashion Week, THE FACE heads to her hometown of Sheffield to discuss culture, community and spreading a message through clothes.
Talk of Scotland’s drug deaths crisis is nothing new. But as new policies are introduced, those affected believe there’s reason to be hopeful.