Saint Laurent SS22: an all killer, knife-edge affair
Angular cuts! Meticulous craft! Austere lines! The influence of Paloma Picasso makes for a deadly, razor-sharp collection by Anthony Vaccarello.
Angular cuts! Meticulous craft! Austere lines! The influence of Paloma Picasso makes for a deadly, razor-sharp collection by Anthony Vaccarello.
The French house’s AW21 menswear collection references the day-dreaming haze of, well, right now – when the closest we’ll get to freedom is bouncing wall-to-wall around our living rooms.
Designers like Brogan Smith, Shulian Nell, Melted Potato and Marland Backus are at the forefront of a movement which embraces sensuality, loudness and excess in all its glory.
Making clothes for men to move, the innovative designer places emphasis on reimagining the needs and wants of his wearer. This season, he takes his vision to new heights, with a personal narrative.
In an experimental AW21 collection titled Superimpose, the menswear designer explores the offbeat works of Man Ray, Erwin Wurm and Jean Cocteau for pieces that defy gravity and play to her strengths.
Models practiced extreme social distancing at Anthony Vaccarello’s first off-schedule show set in a dramatic desert landscape, complete with equally as dramatic looks.
Creative director Sergio Zambon remembers his hedonistic past in some of London’s most-loved (and now closed) nightlife venues for the house’s optimistic offering, titled 2 Moncler 1952 Man.
The cult clothing shop, in the city’s Northern Quarter, is closing after 20 years. But as its co-founder tells us, there’s still plenty to look forward to in Oi Polloi’s future.
Kicking off PFW with a bang, Vuitton’s new creative director picked up where the late, great Virgil Abloh left off with heavy codes of streetwear and an air of childlike wonderment. Plus the splashiest front row, like, ever.
Yesterday, the Irish designer presented a collection designed in collaboration with Mulberry at London’s V&A museum, filled with luxurious fabrics, plenty of draping and a nod to legendary Renaissance art.
In Faceless Techno, photographer Yis Kid documents, lo-fi style, what the city’s techno community are wearing, in all their scantily-clad glory.
In Gimme an S, Cooke and his partner, Jake Burt, interrogate the mythology of Britain’s shopping habits, with a sexy, irreverent and typically playful collection.
The fashion tide appears to have turned against Kanye West. Yet his opinions have always been clear for anyone unwilling to turn a blind eye.
He came from Graz, he had a thirst for flea markets. Now Christoph Rumpf is the winner of the prestigious Hyères Festival fashion prize.
Chris Tordoff, founder of @fruits_magazine_archives, handpicks the freshest images from the cult mag exclusively for THE FACE, in honour of our cover star, Beabadoobee, who was photographed by FRUiTS founder Shoichi Aoki.
Whether on shelves or part of wardrobes, dolls and trinkets are having a major moment right now. What is there to play for?