Parklife: this season’s hottest looks for the great outdoors
Bums are out, inflatable octopuses are in for this shoot by photographer Lengua and stylist Ursina Gysi for the latest issue of The FACE.
Bums are out, inflatable octopuses are in for this shoot by photographer Lengua and stylist Ursina Gysi for the latest issue of The FACE.
Sexy knitwear, ice-cold menswear, saucy slogans and a designer that hasn’t even graduated yet… phew. This year is looking good.
Louise Trotter’s latest outing for the heritage label offers a rousing call-to-arms, expressed through lively silhouettes and innovative use of fabrics.
The whimsical designs of the artist-slash-designer merge with McCartney’s London spirit in a capsule collection celebrating youth, counter-culture and club kids.
In our latest print issue, skaters Simone Gozzetti and Beatrice Domond paired up for a photo story documenting their friends during the summer in Milan – young, wind-swept and freeee.
A whoopee cushion beauty story? Sure.
Artists Nathalie Nguyen and Dominic Lopez have built their very own world where digital clothes are worn by miniature dolls and humans alike. Now stocked at Marc Jacobs’ Heaven shop in LA, Happy99 is the real deal – both virtually and IRL.
Home to underground zines, books on British car boot culture and off-the-wall photography, co-founder Ja Bæblade talks us through his decade-long journey from bedroom bookbinding to proper publishing.
Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons’s second collection as creative directors sees the grandeur of cinematic glamour merge with a palpable optimism for a freeing post-pandemic world.
Based in London, the mysterious Japanese hairstylist has been busy subverting fashion campaigns all over the shop, using his work as therapy to create the coolest cuts.
This season, Virgil Abloh follows a stream of designers tapping into the digitally reliant world of today with a first-time co-ed collection feeling as present as ever.
Side Hustles: Model duo Breanna Box and Peter Dupont are raising the stakes in the homeware game, designing horny carafes and functional glassware – a creative pursuit found in the middle of lockdown.
The writer documented his time riding El tren de la muerte, or The Death Train, as it criss-crossed Mexico.
Once the R&B singer stopped caring about what people think, more success came knocking at the door.