Everything you need to know about AW22 at Milan Fashion Week
After the buzz of London, we greet our friends in Italy: Diesel, Fendi, Prada, Blumarine, Moschino, JW Anderson, GCDS, Palm Angels, Marni and Bottega Veneta. Get involved!
After the buzz of London, we greet our friends in Italy: Diesel, Fendi, Prada, Blumarine, Moschino, JW Anderson, GCDS, Palm Angels, Marni and Bottega Veneta. Get involved!
Far off travel was still strictly off limits for his latest resort collection, but Nicolas Ghesquière metaphorically took us on a trip to outer space and beyond.
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?
Disrupting the clean lines of the storied Spanish house, Anderson looks to renaissance paintings for something of a spiritual awakening. Maximal in effort, serene in result.
Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear at London’s V&A journeys through the complex history of modern menswear. The best bits? When fashion’s at its most radical.
If this year’s AW21 shows are anything to go by, men in skirts are here to stay – even if you’re not Harry Styles. But are we even close to seeing the average bloke in a knee-length number?
Staged on Hollywood Boulevard, Alessandro Michele’s latest collection was rooted in his yearning for something bigger and better while growing up in a squat on the outskirts of Rome.
Listen to eclectic hip-hop and indie beats from the FKA Twigs collaborator.
Upcycling 003: The designer is showing the world that sustainable fashion doesn’t have to be cause first, aesthetic second.
In the 2010s, the trap beat became one of the defining signatures of contemporary music. Simon Reynolds traces its migration from the streets of Atlanta to the pop charts, spawning scenes across the globe.
Since entering the grime scene, the rapper has skyrocketed to stardom, pissing off right-wing politicians and fighting for the rights of the British public along the way.
She writes her name in capitals and makes anxiety-addressing music with Australian singers. She's GRACEY and she's mega (as demonstrated by her soon to be chart-bothering new single Empty Love).
Frank Ocean got his first taste of the music industry as a songwriter in the latter half of the ’00s. Collaborators detail first impressions of a young Lonny Breaux, his studio ethic and eventual rise to worldwide success.
Review: Taffy Brodesser-Akner has enough empathy for everyone – whether they’re navigating marriage, identity, capitalism, gender norms, and the 21st Century measures of success we’re all taught to aspire to.
Now free from major label bullshit, the daring artist is no longer limited by anyone else’s fears.