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Ananya Panday Left Farah Khan's Set In Tears; Director Says, "Whichever Heroine I Make Cry…"
Bollywood

Ananya Panday Left Farah Khan’s Set In Tears; Director Says, “Whichever Heroine I Make Cry…”

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Ananya Panday celebrated her 27th birthday on October 30, 2025, surrounded by laughter, memories, and a few emotional moments. Over the years, the Gehraiyaan actress has made a mark for herself in Bollywood with performances in films like Kho Gaye Hum Kahan and Kesari Chapter 2.

Farah Khan’s Birthday Banter With Ananya Panday Steals The Show

Her birthday took an amusing turn during a recent appearance on Kajol and Twinkle Khanna’s upcoming talk show, where filmmaker Farah Khan shared a funny yet heartwarming moment with her. While chatting about her early career days, Ananya recalled, “I was fully confident… but then I left the set in tears,” remembering how nervous she once felt as a newcomer. Farah quickly added with her signature wit, “Whichever heroine I make cry ends up becoming a big star!” — leaving everyone, including Ananya, in splits.

The conversation reminded Farah of another incident from Deepika Padukone’s debut film Om Shanti Om (2007). Farah revealed that she had once scolded Deepika on set, which made her cry, but added that it came from a place of belief. “I knew she had it in her. I wanted her to give her best,” Farah said, praising Deepika’s growth since then.

As Ananya steps into another year, her career continues to flourish. After her recent role in Kesari Chapter 2 alongside Akshay Kumar and R. Madhavan, she is set to reunite with Kartik Aaryan in Tu Meri Main Tera and also star in Chand Mera Dil. With exciting projects ahead, Bollywood’s Gen-Z star seems all set for another big year.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Farah Khan Drops BTS Pics With OG Villains Shakti Kapoor, Ranjeet And Gulshan Grover; Recalls Her Ghafoor Experience In Aryan Khan’s The Ba***ds Of Bollywood

Manisha Karki

Manisha has established a reputation for insightful and engaging storytelling with over six years of expertise in the industry. With a deep passion for cinema, she brings a unique perspective to her coverage, making it a trusted voice in the entertainment world.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Ralph Senensky
TV & Streaming

‘Star Trek,’ ‘Waltons’ Director Was 102

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Ralph Senensky, the prolific TV director who called the shots for the emotional return of Ellen Corby on The Waltons, the three-part pilot for Dynasty and, before he was fired, 6 1/2 episodes of the original Star Trek, has died. He was 102.

Senensky died Saturday in a hospital in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, his niece, costume designer Lisa Lupo-Silvas, told The Hollywood Reporter. “He was 100 precent sharp until the end,” she said. “He may have been 102, but he had a mind like he was 30.”

The Iowa native also helmed multiple episodes of Dr. Kildare, Naked City, 12 O’Clock High, The Fugitive, The F.B.I., Ironside, The Courtship of Eddie’s Father, Dan August, Nanny and the Professor, The Partridge Family, Barnaby Jones, Insight, Hart to Hart and The Paper Chase.

And in 1963 for the ABC medical drama Breaking Point, he handled one of the earliest gay storylines for television.

Among Star Trek fans, Senensky is synonymous with some of the best episodes of the Paramount/NBC series. Season one’s “This Side of Paradise” is regarded as one of the early standout Spock installments, and season’s two “Metamorphosis,” another installment that premiered in 1967, was his personal favorite.

For the third season, he embarked on 1968’s “The Tholian Web,” which saw Kirk (William Shatner), Spock (Leonard Nimoy), McCoy (DeForest Kelley) and Chekov (Walter Koenig) don shiny silver spacesuits as they investigate a crippled sister ship.

There was trouble ahead, however. Those zipper-less suits meant the actors had to be sewn into their costumes, then unsewn when they needed a bathroom break. By the third day of shooting, Senensky was four scenes behind schedule when he was called into producer Fred Freiberger’s office and fired.

On the pages of The Hollywood Reporter, Paramount executive Douglas S. Cramer announced that Herb Wallerstein would finish things up. Senensky got zero credit for his work.

“The article pointed out the studio’s intent to curtail the problem of films not being completed as scheduled,” Senensky reflected on his website. He said he received a phone call from Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, who was “outraged, apologetic and sympathetic.”

Over five years starting in 1973, Senensky directed 12 episodes of CBS’ The Waltons, perhaps none more moving than “Grandma Comes Home,” the sixth-season finale that aired on March 30, 1978.

The episode marked the return of Corby as Grandma Walton to the show after she had suffered a stroke in 1976. Writers incorporated her illness into the series, and she received top billing in the credits that week, with an Emmy nomination to soon follow.

In a 2011 chat for the Television Academy Foundation website The Interviews, Senensky noted that he spaced out Corby’s scenes across multiple days and only filmed in the morning to make it easier on her.

“They gave me two cameras at all times,” he said, “so when I was shooting her, I could shoot the over-the-shoulder and close-up all in one take.”

In the most powerful sequence, Grandma Walton — feeling as though she’s become a burden on the family — breaks down in tears opposite daughter-in-law Olivia (Michael Learned) as they snap beans on the porch.

Ellen Corby on The Waltons.

Courtesy of Everett Collection

When the dallies were shown in a screening room the following day, the director and those watching became emotional. From the back, Waltons creator Earl Hamner Jr. yelled, “Senensky, you son of a bitch!”

“It was the nicest words anybody ever called me,” he said.

The show’s iconic close of the family wishing “Good night” to one another was tweaked to have Corby say, “Good night, everyone” as the screen fades to black.

“How this performance came out of her in the condition she was in was truly a miracle,” Senensky said. “What she should have won was an award for a Profile in Courage.”

The older of two boys, Ralph Abbott Senensky was born in Mason City, Iowa, on May 1, 1923. His father, William, co-owned a clothing store, and his mother, Jenny, was a homemaker.

At Mason City High School, Senensky served as editor of the one-page weekly Cub Gazette and worked as a director’s assistant on school productions.

Shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, he registered for the draft at age 18 and was stationed in Belgium. Upon his return, he did four years of community theater, studied at Northwestern and enrolled at the Pasadena Playhouse.

He eventually got his foot in the door at CBS in Los Angeles in 1955 typing radio scripts, became secretary for Playhouse 90 producer Russell Stoneham and was promoted to production supervisor. In that role, he visited Norman Felton daily, and the CBS executive producer recognized his name from a James Powers-written THR review of a play that Senensky had directed.

When Felton moved to MGM to launch Arena Productions, Senensky followed and made his TV directorial debut in 1961 on the first season of Richard Chamberlain‘s Dr. Kildare.

While working in November 1963 on the ABC crime series Arrest and Trial on Skid Row in Los Angeles, production was abruptly shut down when it was announced that President Kennedy had been assassinated.

“I remember sitting in the back seat of a car with bodies on either side of me,” Senensky recalled. “Mickey Rooney [a guest star] was in the front seat with bodies on either side of him, with the radio on, and all the inhabitants of Skid Row were around. It was like being in church as we heard the news report.”

Four months earlier, Senensky had helmed the Breaking Point episode “The Bull Roarer,” which starred Lou Antonio as a shy construction worker who questions his sexuality while dealing with his macho, dominating brother (Ralph Meeker).

The pivotal role on the Ben Casey spinoff was originally given to Dean Stockwell, but he had a change of heart after reading the script. Senensky then suggested Antonio, whom he had directed on ABC’s Naked City.

Breaking Point was produced by George Lefferts, whose contract stipulated he could choose a handful of topics usually ignored by the industry. The agreement came in handy when ABC censors objected to parts of the script.

“I think that was a historic moment in television,” Senensky wrote. “I am 99 and 44/100 percent sure that was the first time the word ‘homosexual’ was uttered in a drama in an American television show.”

Also in 1963, he directed Burgess Meredith in the hourlong Twilight Zone episode “Printer’s Devil” and two episodes of ABC’s Route 66.

In the ’70s, Senensky worked on telefilms including 1974’s Death Cruise, starring Richard Long and Polly Bergen; 1975’s The Family Nobody Wanted, starring Shirley Jones; and 1978’s The New Adventures of Heidi.

He directed just one feature, Harper Valley P.T.A. (1978), starring Barbara Eden, but he left two weeks before completion and was replaced by Richard Bennett.

Senensky then helmed the first three episodes of Aaron Spelling’s Dynasty that aired back-to-back-to-back on ABC on Jan. 12, 1981.

His final screen credit, after an absence of 27 years, was as director of the short film The Right Regrets (2013), written and produced by friend and actress Marlyn Mason.­

“Ralph was a walking encyclopedia on film history,” Mason told obituarist Eve Golden. “Watching an old classic with him was equal to a semester at Harvard. … He chose to stay in the world of television, but when you look at his work, you feel you’re looking at a feature movie.”

In addition to his niece, survivors include his brother, Ervin; his sister-in-law, Audrey; and his great-nephew, Julien.

Despite directing nearly 200 TV episodes over 25 years, Senensky realized he primarily will be remembered for those 6 1/2 Star Trek shows. (He also helmed “Obsession,” “Return to Tomorrow,” “Bread and Circuses” and “Is There in Truth No Beauty?”)

Shortly after wrapping “This Side of Paradise” — he earned $3,000 for his first Star Trek gig, he said — he received a letter from Nimoy.

“It was not only a special Spock experience, but it was special for me as well in that I felt safely in the hands of a capable and sensitive director,” Nimoy wrote. “Unfortunately, a rare experience in TV.”

Mike Barnes contributed to this report.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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The 37 Products Fashionista's Beauty Director Would Buy From the Sephora Sale
Fashion

The 37 Products Fashionista's Beauty Director Would Buy From the Sephora Sale

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84


Attention, beauty shoppers: The Sephora Savings Event is officially here. This fall, the beloved retailer is discounting its products from Oct. 31 through Nov. 11 for all Beauty Insiders (and if you’re not already a member, sign up is free!). Shoppers will score deals on all product categories, …

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November 1, 2025 0 comments
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'Hedda' Director Nia DaCosta — Filmmaker Interview
TV & Streaming

‘Hedda’ Director Nia DaCosta — Filmmaker Interview

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Nia DaCosta has had a version of Hedda Gabler living, or perhaps lounging, in her head for a long time. The writer and director first started thinking about a film adaptation of the Henrik Ibsen play in 2012, while she was getting a masters in the UK, and first took a stab at writing it in 2018, after the release of her debut feature “Little Woods.” But even as DaCosta dove into worlds fantastical and strange in “Candyman” and “The Marvels,” every six months or so, she’d take “Hedda” out of the drawer to fiddle with it. 

On a recent episode of the Filmmaker Toolkit Podcast, DaCosta told IndieWire that continuing to play with the script wasn’t just about calibrating the levels of performance, repression, and passion simmering just beneath the characters’ exteriors. Her approach to film adaptation requires looking closely not just at the text and how it can matter to the times we’re in, but why it matters to the person doing the adaptation. 

Pascal Bonitzer's Auction

“It’s what keeps classical works alive. You have to adapt it not just for the time but for the person that you are and for whatever impact — emotionally, psychologically, existentially — it had on you, because that means something,” DaCosta said. “I think if you can transfer not just the play and what it means but also your reaction to the play and how you feel about the play to your version of it, I think that’s super important.” 

DaCosta’s “Hedda,” then, uproots from Norway to a post-war English manner, indulging in all of the gloss and repression of the era and pinning the characters in emotional hedge-mazes of their own making — as well as, of course, a literal hedge-maze that is not as great a makeout spot as it might at first appear. Offstage events get to be shown and experienced vividly through cinematographer Sean Bobbitt’s buzzed but still sharply observant roving camera. Tessa Thompson’s Hedda gets to be imperious at the very instant she enters a room, taking up a queen’s share of the frame in costume designer Lindsay Pugh’s dresses and expertly navigating the hidden corners of production designer Cara Bower’s sets. 

DaCosta is always adjusting the dials, whether it’s through the visual language and the amount of light we see lining up with Hedda’s whims or through the blocking and pacing of the film’s shifts between humor, desire, and darker character impulses. “You have to really be clear with the cast and crew about what the tone is for each scene in each moment and how we’re shifting into the next gear. That’s all calibrating, modulating, in rehearsals, on the day, in the edit,” DaCosta said. 

But every shift in the tone of the film arises out of DaCosta’s feeling about the protagonist. “I think she’s funny. I think she’s horrifying. I think she’s vicious. I think she’s vulnerable,” DaCosta said. “So we can go from farcical, like, chandelier falling and Eileen [Nina Hoss] getting into a fight in the conservatory, but it’s all fueled by real emotion. I think it’s so important to be able to do that.” 

HEDDA, Tessa Thompson (center), 2025. ph: Matt Towers /© Amazon MGM Studios /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Hedda’©MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

It’s important to DaCosta because for however heightened and glamorous a setting as the film builds, the director wanted to balance it with the real, eternally relatable experience of wild shit going down at a party. 

“The tone shifts were me trying to mirror, like, when you’re at a party and the lesbian drama’s happening somewhere, it seeps into the rest of the party and you’re like, ‘Oh no.’ It goes from being super fun to being, ‘Oh god, who just came out of the bedroom with — oh, that’s not good. Oh my God. Oh, what happened? That’s hilarious.’ You know? It just is the way we are, and I knew that for ‘Hedda’ it had to feel as dynamic as real life,” DaCosta said. 

Real life on film, however, requires a lot of rehearsal. “ I studied writing at a drama school because I wanted to work with actors — to learn more about how they work, what their whole deal is, what’s wrong with ’em,” DaCosta joked. “I realize that what’s so beautiful about theater and what I love actually about telling stories is the collaboration… you know, I’m the coxswain at the head of the boat, making sure we’re going in the right direction, telling everyone, ‘OK, go fast, go slower,’ et cetera. And rehearsals, for me, are about making sure the script is right. Then my DP and I are blocking everything out with the actors.” 

HEDDA, Nina Hoss, 2025. © Amazon MGM Studios /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Hedda’©MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

DaCosta’s found that in slowly bringing the cast and crew together, starting with Bobbitt but then sometimes camera operator Simon Wood or others, a collaborative process can emerge to help the company adapt to the space and come up with exciting character work that just feels real. 

“We got to rehearse in the house with all the set dressing in the house for two weeks before we started shooting, so it was the ideal thing. For example, the scene with Eileen walking in with her dress wet and exposed, talking to the men, I want her to really play the room and use the whole space. So we were like, ‘OK, maybe she makes the martini here, and then, should she light a cigarette here?’” 

But the process of working all of that out helped DaCosta and her cast know exactly when and where Eileen should light a cigarette for maximum impact. “We [decided that] should have this moment with her and George [Tom Bateman], and George being so enraptured by her. Let’s bring her next to George. Oh he can’t light a cigarette. Let’s have that be a moment. Let’s have her light it.  And then, [the scene is] slow building and it’s just so fun and gratifying.” 

To hear Nia DaCosta‘s full interview, subscribe to the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.

“Hedda” is now playing in theaters and streaming on Prime Video.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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600px (w) x 500px (h)
Events

Togather appoints ex-DICE UK Managing Director Amy Oldham as Chief Commercial Officer

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Togather, the UK’s largest live events operator, has appointed former DICE UK Managing Director Amy Oldham to lead its commercial operations as Chief Commercial Officer (CCO).

Oldham has previously served as Commercial Director at KOKO Studios and Head of Festivals & Events at Global, bringing over fifteen years of experience in building creative partnerships in the live events industry.

Oldham will lead Togather’s Commercial team, which has already delivered major events including Gala Festival, Pride in London, The Royal International Air Tattoo, Windsor Great Park Illuminated and Brighton on the Beach.

Founded in 2018, Togather is known for connecting high-quality food and beverage suppliers across the UK to events — from large corporate gatherings to the country’s biggest cultural festivals.

A major part of Oldham’s role will involve developing Togather’s live event offering for clients, following the 2025 launch of Live 360, the industry’s first AI-driven supplier matching platform. Her focus will be on expanding Togather’s service — which raises F&B sales by an average of 30% per year — across a wider range of locations, including festivals, stadia, and cultural events.

“Togather is transforming how people create and experience live events –  making them better for everyone. I’ve admired the team’s growth for years, and to now be part of that mission is incredibly exciting,” said Oldham. “Our focus is on helping more organisers and partners unlock the full power of Togather’s platform and services — scaling our impact and bringing unforgettable experiences to even more people. I’ve been fortunate to be part of some of the most game-changing events companies in the country, and I’ve no doubt we’ll achieve the same at Togather.”

Togather CEO Digby Vollrath added:

“We’re thrilled to have Amy’s skills and experience on board. Her experience perfectly aligns with what we’re striving to achieve at Togather, and she has the infectious personality and drive for perfection that it takes to succeed in this industry. I’m looking forward to seeing what the next few years hold”

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Jonas Akerlund to director Bjorn Borg biopic
TV & Streaming

Jonas Akerlund to director Bjorn Borg biopic

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Swedish tennis sensation Björn Borg is getting the biopic treatment. Borg’s best-selling memoir “Hjärtslag” (Heartbeat) has been picked up for adaptation by indie giant Banijay Entertainment, with Nordic subsidiary Jarowskij/Yellow Bird and Mastiff Sweden handling the production.

Jonas Akerlund, the Swedish director of Polar, Lord of Chaos, and Netflix series Clark, as well as countless music videos for the likes of Madonna, Beyoncé and Lady Gaga, is attached to direct.

The screen adaptation will trace Borg’s meteoric rise to tennis superstardom, capped by his unprecedented five consecutive Wimbledon men’s singles titles, and his shocking decision to retire at the top of his game, at just 26 years old. The story will go beyond the court, looking at Borg’s private life, from his childhood to his years of financial struggle, to his post-tennis reinvention.

“Everyone knows Björn Borg for his legendary moments on the court, for his fierce, unparalleled power as an athlete and icon,” said Akerlund in a statement. “With his book, we finally dipped a toe into his enigmatic mind. But with this project, we’re cannonballing into the deep end.”

“I’ve spent my entire life in matches — both on and off the court,” added Borg. “Jonas wants to explore both sides, and I feel the time is right for that. He has the eye, the energy and the courage to tell my story in his own way.”

At his tennis peak, Borg was famous for his on-court rivalry with U.S. tennis star John McEnroe, a rivarly at the core of the 2017 feature Borg v. McEnroe from Danish director Janus Metz.

Jarowskij/Yellow Bird is a high-end drama series producer best known internationally for its Millennium crime trilogy series, the original version of the The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo franchise. The group is currently working on a reinterpretation of the iconic Swedish detective series Wallander. Mastiff Sweden is best-known for reality TV formats, including Swedish adaptations of Survivor and Love Is Blind, as well as serving as a local production partner on multiple Netflix adaptations. The company recently launched a new culinary showdown format, 100 Knives, co-developed with Banijay Americas label Bunim/Murray Productions.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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40 Fall Items to Make a Closet Chicer, According to a Shopping Director
Fashion

40 Fall Items to Make a Closet Chicer, According to a Shopping Director

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Welcome to Retail Therapy—Who What Wear Shopping Director Bobby Schuessler’s digest of everything that matters in shopping. He spends his days uncovering special gems to elevate a wardrobe, and it’s all curated right here for you, dear readers. Think of Bobby as your personal shopper, and this is the exclusive list of items that get a yes from him, period.

I’ve been in my fashion happy place the last few weeks now that fall, my favorite season, is officially here. The new collections continue to drop, filled with the types of pieces that make this season the standout (i.e., gorgeous sweaters, dreamy jackets, and stylish boots). I’ve been curating edits of my favorite picks on Who What Wear, but I wanted to provide another fall shopping list for you right here that’s filled with pieces I think will make your wardrobe feel instantly chicer. You’ll find everything from beautiful coats (like the Banana Republic faux-fur stunner I’m wearing here) to elegant accessories to trend-forward knits. Happy shopping. Xx, B

Banana Republic Sweater

Banana Republic

Midweight Cashmere Crew-Neck Sweater

Fashion people—myself included—rave about Banana Republic’s cashmere because of the quality and how soft it is. This silhouette is slightly oversize and would look gorgeous styled with a suede jacket, jeans, and cute flats.

Styling Pieces

Faux Suede Belted Blazer

ZARA

Faux Suede Belted Blazer

Luna Pieced High-Waist Tapered Jeans

AGOLDE

Luna Pieced High-Waist Tapered Jeans

Nordstrom, Maddox Ballet Flats

Nordstrom

Maddox Ballet Flats

Open Edit Skirt

Open Edit, Lace Trim Satin Midi Skirt

Open Edit

Lace Trim Satin Midi Skirt

A lace-trim skirt is a staple among style setters. This pick from Nordstrom’s in-house label Open Edit is very pretty. Side note, I love the idea of teaming one with a chunky sweater for contrast.

Styling Pieces

Open Edit, Twist Reversible Sweater

Open Edit

Twist Reversible Sweater

Romy Shoulder Bag in Gray, Size Os

Romy Shoulder Bag in Gray, Size Os

Sam Edelman Sylvia Boots

Adidas Sneakers

adidas, Sl 72 Sneakers

I couldn’t produce a fall shopping list without including an It pair of sneakers from Adidas. The SL 72s are fan favorites, and I’m feeling this baby-blue hue right now to wear with a casual ensemble.

Styling Pieces

BP., Stripe Cotton Blend Rugby Shirt

BP.

Stripe Cotton Blend Rugby Shirt

Gap, High Rise Stride Wide-Leg Jeans

Gap

High Rise Stride Wide-Leg Jeans

jcrew, Broken-In Barn Jacket™ in Brushed Chino

J.Crew

Broken-In Barn Jacket™ in Brushed Chino

Zara Coat

Zw Collection Wool Blend Cape Coat

ZARA

ZW Collection Wool Blend Cape Coat

Wow. This cape coat is a moment. It’s elegant, regal, and chic. YES. Consider pairing it with a sleek pair of trousers and of-the-moment sock boots for a streamlined silhouette.

Styling Pieces

Miller Watch in White, Size Os

Trent Trouser

ANINE BING

Trent Trousers

Clara Sock Boot

Coconuts by Matisse

Clara Sock Boots

Steve Madden Boots

Steve Madden, Dantelle Knee High Boots

Steve Madden

Dantelle Knee High Boots

If you’re looking for a pair of suede knee-high boots, here you go. The lower heel is noteworthy, and the color is that perfect shade of chocolate brown. Picture this under-$200 pair styled with the faux-fur coat I’m wearing above. Divine.

Styling Pieces

Faux Fur Long Coat

Banana Republic

Faux Fur Long Coat

Wool & Cashmere-Blend Three-Quarter-Sleeve V-Neck Sweater

Vince

Wool & Cashmere-Blend Three-Quarter-Sleeve V-Neck Sweater

Open Edit, Satin Midi Skirt

Open Edit

Satin Midi Skirt

Nour Hammour Jacket

Beck Suede Bomber Jacket

Nour Hammour

Beck Suede Bomber Jacket

This is one of those investment jackets I keep coming back to when doing market research for my various stories. It just exudes coolness with the modern and relevant shape. A dream piece for sure.

Styling Pieces

Reformation, Greer Straight Leg Jeans

Reformation

Greer Straight Leg Jeans

Marlo 12 Bag in Leather

The Row

Marlo 12 Bag in Leather

Nevada 85 Leather Ankle Boots

Khaite

Nevada 85 Leather Ankle Boots

Guest In Residence Sweater

Argyle Wool-Blend Sweater

GUEST IN RESIDENCE

Argyle Wool-Blend Sweater

I’m so vibing with argyle this fall, and this polo from Gigi Hadid’s label, Guest in Residence, is a wow piece. I’d style it with corduroy pants and flats for an elevated yet easy look.

Styling Pieces

Corduroy Straight-Leg Pants

COS

Corduroy Straight-Leg Pants

Small Miller Watch in Blue, Size Os

Small Miller Watch in Blue, Size Os

MW, The April Ballet Flat

Madewell

The April Ballet Flats

Levi’s Jeans

Levi's, 501 Jeans

Why hello there, fantastic jeans. Levi’s is synonymous with A+ denim cuts, and this pair of 501s in the darker wash is a favorite among my co-editors. Yes, it’s one of those no-fail purchases.

Styling Pieces

COACH, Swing Zip Bag

Selection Stand Collar Wool Blend Coat

MANGO

Selection Stand Collar Wool Blend Coat

Nordstrom, Benson Loafers

Aritzia Shirt

TNA, Radcliff Shirt

A plaid shirt is another must-have for fall 2025. While you could certainly wear the shirt as is with your favorite trousers or jeans, tying it around the waist as a layering piece is also worth considering.

Styling Pieces

Nappa Leather Jacket With Grainy Finish

Massimo Dutti

Nappa Leather Jacket With Grainy Finish

Wool Skirt Pants

Alex Mill X Margaux: the Clara - Espresso Suede

Alex Mill X Margaux:

The Clara

Toteme Bag

Toteme, Leather Bag

I’m a sucker for a gorgeous Toteme bag. This bucket bag with that beautiful finish is a compliment magnet. That’s all.

Styling Pieces

Jacket With Collar

Taney Pencil Skirt

The Frankie Shop

Taney Pencil Skirt

Tony Bianco, Charlie Slingback Pointed Toe Kitten Heel Pumps

Tony Bianco

Charlie Slingback Pointed Toe Kitten Heel Pumps