Meet the E‑Gees
Volume 4 Issue 001: The style movement sticking two fingers up at the influencers who saturate Instagram today.
Volume 4 Issue 001: The style movement sticking two fingers up at the influencers who saturate Instagram today.
Inspired by the work of David Wojnarowicz, JW Anderson’s AW20 collection encourages optimism in uncertain times.
Confused as to why people are obsessing over animals in the crypto world? Here’s the lowdown.
It’s not another teen movie. It’s a new age, twenty-something angst. Thanks to Heaven by Marc Jacobs, Beabadoobee, Brian Molko and Kathy Acker, ’90s nostalgia is totally rad again.
Volume 4 Issue 001: Pinning down the pied piper of Fairfax (and the most influential artist of the decade).
Having relocated from Paris to the countryside in Kent, Joe Mount shares his tips for rural living and domestic bliss.
Volume 4 Issue 001: The Mancunian MC on the pull, on the lash and on top of the world.
As their storied history attests, big trousers are so much more than a nostalgic fashion throwback. Styles’ brazen bloomers feel like a powerful sign of our times.
If you just loved football and TikTok, you’d be Cal the Dragon. But you’re not. He is. The clear-headed Notts lad is happiest when he’s saving shots in his gran’s garden and has plenty to say about online life.
An archival tribute to Oasis, 25 years on from the release of their groundbreaking debut album, Definitely Maybe.
Introducing ... FIMS! The Salford University course teaching tomorrow’s budding super-creatives – and they’re releasing an off-the-wall zine.
Some may rise, some may fall, but they will all be hammered on Discord and Reddit.
The left-field, London-based rap collective returned to Eastbourne for this tender new track from subsidiary group Elison 404. Watch exclusively via The Face.
One of the world’s most common cosmetic interventions is growing in popularity among younger people – so what does a lifetime of Botox really look like?
With comparisons to Rachel Zoe, the super-stylist who made boho happen in the early ’00s, Maeve Reilly is the positivity-spreading queen of celebrity street fashion.
The 1975 collaborator and prolific Dirty Hit artist beams in with lockdown love on a new single with beabadoobee and Jay Som.
The Face delved inside the south London singer's “busy brain” for top tips on ultimate relaxation and finding The One.