Editor’s letter: autumn 2021
The clothes. The politics. The attitude. The romance. The... Sopranos.
The clothes. The politics. The attitude. The romance. The... Sopranos.
Nostalgia ain’t what it used to be. We’re recycling eras so quickly in the 2020s that the 1990s might as well be a century ago. But if 2014 is already old hat, where do we go from here?
As the British house returns to New York City after 22 years, Sarah Burton finds a common thread in the spiritual properties of mycelium and the world coming together again for AW22.
Influenced by how our roots influence our identity, this season Riccardo Tisci put forward a new proposition for what dressing like a Brit could look like, nodding to community and rallying together in dark times.
Face It: May contain cowboy hats, Frozen, a toupée and, er, a naked OAP.
As the label gears up to unveil a secret new project, we look back at seven years of brilliant fashion piss-taking to predict what might come next. Invisible clothes, anyone?
Thea von Engelbrecht started Sylvanian Drama to cure her quarantine boredom. Now, her self-deprecating, darkly hilarious animal-themed videos have over one million fans to their name.
On Sunday, before the Euros 2020 final, Rose launched The Lost Lionesses – a virtual experience bringing together her spirited community and presenting an optimistic vision of the future.
Undeterred by stop-start lockdowns, the Japanese hairstylist opened up his London salon last year. Now, he’s redefining the city’s hairscape, one chop at a time.
“That place was people’s family,” says Dave Schubert, who spent much of his teenage years photographing his friends and the skaters who came and went from Washington DC’s legendary plaza. We managed to get hold of him – and the negatives.
After a non-stop year, the Italian house’s creative director turned to director Pier Paoli Pasolini for a collection that balances the old and new, past and present.
The newly-launched Changemakers Prize salutes the unsung heroes of British fashion, featuring hair stylist Cyndia Harvey, Iceberg brand ambassador Cozette McCreery and designer Patrick McDowell.
The photographer’s new book, While You Were Sleeping, presents unseen photos from London’s clubs between 1998 and 2000. Here, the great Geordie describes the dancefloor’s pre-millennial magic.
In photos: This season, the designer revels in characters found on the beaches of her Alméria hometown in a collection seeped in 3D techniques, distorted knots and sexy strappy swimwear.
“Boys at school would tell me they wouldn’t kiss me because of the mole above my lip – now it’s my favourite thing about myself.” Here, the singer-songwriter weighs in on her beauty routine.