Rated by The Face: a weekly playlist
Featuring slick summer funk from Pink Sweat$, a lockdown love song by Koffee and a synthpop tearjerker from Troye Sivan.
Featuring slick summer funk from Pink Sweat$, a lockdown love song by Koffee and a synthpop tearjerker from Troye Sivan.
The actor is making his debut playing his dad, the imprisoned founder of cocaine traffickers Black Mafia Family. Next up: playing Maddy’s boyfriend in Euphoria… possibly. Where did it all go right?
THE FACE Fashion Editor Danielle Emerson links up with photographer Harley Weir to capture transgressive duo Fecal Matter (and a couple of goats) for our latest print issue.
In her new book What White People Can Do Next, the writer, academic and broadcaster pours her intellect and years of PhD research into a nuanced examination of race, capitalism and class. Get reading, get learning.
The Albanian-born, London-based designer further developed her minimalist, ’90s-influenced aesthetic with a series of extra sexy deconstructed looks.
The London label’s latest capsule references Elephant Man and Nina Simone, and wants to change the narrative around Black bodies.
Dubheasa Lanipekun’s debut short – part of the BBC and Arts Council England’s New Creatives initiative – hymns the chaos of adolescence, Black schoolgirl sisterhood and her 15-year-old-self.
The creative director presented his new collection with a self-directed short film, providing fresh glamour with an edge against the backdrop of Nice’s gorgeous vistas.
The founder of the ethically-focused fashion brand sits down with THE FACE to talk sustainability, activism and what we need to learn from the 2016 election.
Yeat has topped the US album chart thanks to the rabid young fanbase of his ecstasy-fuelled mutant rage rap. But is his bizarro persona all an act? THE FACE joins him on a tipsy adventure in Paris to find out.
Racists are exposing the absolute absurdity of their own prejudice, one poorly constructed argument at a time.
Closing London Fashion Week with a great big bang are two newcomers this season, HRH and Jawara Alleyne, while Maximilian, Goom and Nensi Dojaka evolve their designs in even more inventive ways.
Much of artist Jamie Holman’s work examines working class and football culture. Now he wants to challenge certain aspects with new pieces made in Pakistan.
Among the rap collective’s rugged, macho street raps, Plum has delivered prose with the precision of a silent assassin. Now, she’s ready to step out front with her solo material.
The two star as the “iconic Givenchy couple” for the brand’s SS20 campaign.
Nicolas Ghesquière references the low-brow, sci-fi and horror comics of the 1950s and ’60s in the new Louis Vuitton lookbook and it’s three-thumbs-up from us.