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Tom Ford Resort 2026 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Tom Ford Resort 2026 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

“As I delve further into the Tom Ford ambiance, my dance continues,” said Haider Ackermann. This pleasant metaphor for fashion creative direction was delivered pre-recorded, in a note that accompanied these recently-readied photos of a resort menswear collection glimpsed in the company’s Milan showroom way back in June. So far, Ackermann has been dedicating his Big Designer Energy to the runway shimmying of his mainline shows in Paris.

Yet even without any live movement, interaction, or context to frame it, this resort package generated some tempo. Its most urgent element was the insistent percussion of commercial imperative; this collection and its womenswear partner have been timed to go on sale very shortly after this review drops. Around this beat were framed some choral highlights articulated through color; a red suede shirt worn over a lilac sweater, a blue suede blouson over a yellow silk shirt, some dashing pink sweater and sock interplay, and a gorgeous dark electric blue raincoat were all emblematic of Ackermann’s virtuoso palette playing.

“I aim at depicting a mosaic of masculine selves,” wrote the designer, adding that his menswear is driven by “noble spirits that inhabit and bring to life my vision.” These spirit-summoned selves broke down into three broad categories. There were the formal selves in tautly cut but decadently fabricated tailoring that seemed a little skinnier than Ford’s OG Zegna-cut block, the house archetype semi-formal country club rich kid in lushly appointed preppy staples, and the aspiring roué-flaneur in robes or happily crumpled same-color separates. Writing in his collection note Ackermann pointed to “ease, nonchalance, and studied carelessness,” as the three closely-related attributes he was working to distill within this appealing resort offer.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Hermès Appoints Grace Wales Bonner as Its New Menswear Creative Director
Fashion

ICYMI: Hermès Names Grace Wales Bonner as Its Menswear Creative Director, Michelle Rhee on 3.1 Phillip Lim's Future & How Beauty Holiday Repurposes Industry Surplus

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84


In case you missed them, we’ve rounded up our most popular stories of the week to help you stay in the loop. No need to thank us — just toast a apple crisp macchiato in our honor when you’re discussing who did what over your ham and cheese croissant. Homepage photo: Launchmetrics Spotlight …

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October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Rag & Bone Pre-Fall 2026 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Rag & Bone Pre-Fall 2026 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

For pre-fall 2026, the Rag & Bone team had prep on the brain. Kyle Sweeney, the Senior VP of Menswear, explained that they were focused on the “evolution of traditional American Ivy wear.” He continued, “we looked at the idea of this urban prep, but in a very sophisticated lens through the eyes of New York City. We focused on the idea of this modern uniform and the fact that every great uniform starts with a great shirt.”

Shirting this season included new details—oxford button-downs came with stamped graphics on the front placket for an edgier and youthful touch while also featuring more relaxed silhouettes. They were paired with boxy shorts with distressed hemlines that could be dressed up or down. This season denim is also more relaxed; the hero fit is the carpenter jean, which comes in ’90s-inspired vintage washes. The monochromatic styling delivered a punch, with lots of double collared looks throughout the collection.

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Hermès Appoints Grace Wales Bonner as Its New Menswear Creative Director
Fashion

Hermès Appoints Grace Wales Bonner as Its New Menswear Creative Director

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84


As interesting as it’s been watching fashion’s game of creative director musical chairs over these past few months, it’s been tiresome witnessing white man after white man getting appointed at these top fashion houses. Some women have broken through the noise, such as Bottega Veneta’s Louise …

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October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Thinness is back on catwalks -- and the data proves it
Lifestyle

Hermes taps British designer to lead its menswear line

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

French luxury company Hermes on Tuesday announced that a British designer, Grace Wales Bonner, is taking over its men’s pret-a-porter collection from a predecessor who held the position for nearly four decades.

Hermes taps British designer to lead its menswear line

Wales Bonner, aged in her mid-30s and a graduate of London’s prestigious Central Saint Martins art school, said in a Hermes statement she was overjoyed to be joining “such a magical house”, and called it “a dream”.

Her first collection is due to hit the catwalk in January 2027.

Wales Bonner takes over from French designer Veronique Nichanian, 71, who led the label’s menswear line for the past 37 years.

Hermes on Friday announced Nichanian’s departure, after she presents her last men’s collection in January, for the 2026-2027 Autumn-Winter shows in Paris.

The new blood at Hermes is just the latest in a series of artistic changes at the big fashion houses, notably at Chanel, Dior, Balenciaga, Loewe and Jean Paul Gaultier.

The luxury sector is currently going through a challenging period for sales globally that is impacting many companies, but Hermes has been well-protected from the buffeting.

Its sales have continued to increase, and its turnover grew more than seven percent in the first half of this year, to eight billion euros .

Wales Bonner, the daughter of an English mother and a Jamaican father, has picked up a string of awards for her innovative approach to menswear blending European tailoring and African influences.

In the past, and under her own label, she has explored themes of identity and post-colonial heritage.

In a 2019 interview with The Guardian, Wales Bonner said “I wasn’t sure if I wanted to be a historian or an artist”.

Hermes’s artistic director Pierre-Alexis Dumas welcomed her, saying “her contemporary view of the world, of crafting and of culture, will continue to guide the men’s pret-a-porter collection”.

mdv-jri/jmo/rmb/phz

Hermès International

Christian Dior

Balenciaga

LOEWE

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Phipps Fall 2025 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Phipps Fall 2025 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Given the current state of the political climate, one could say it’s a strange time to be leaning into the red, white, and blue right now. But American heritage and craft is what designer Spencer Phipps has built his brand on since its inception in 2018. He is constantly looking for new ways to reinvent American staples, like jeans and workwear jackets. This season, Phipps wanted to continue telling that story—and in a way that doesn’t ignore the complexities of dressing for life in America at the moment. “As I was putting the looks together, I realized there was a narrative,” said Phipps. “We started with a very joyful, nostalgic, and childish way of dressing—and then got into something more dark, weird, and maybe even slightly criminal.”

His vision of the modern American man—because character dressing is what Phipps does best—made for a wardrobe that was full of tensions and parallels. There were clear attempts at subverting classic American wardrobe pieces, almost as a way to challenge the definition of what being American is today. (The opening look, for one, featured Phipps draped in an American flag from 1859; it had 33 stars on it, versus the standard 50.) “American identity is under such scrutiny right now,” said Phipps, who wanted to embed his new clothes with a sense of optimism. “The American dream is about the human desire of chasing a better life—and living your own personal freedoms and truth.”

The result made for on-the-nose Americana, but with twists. His cozy flannel shirts had off-kilter details like upcycled yokes and studded piping, He also created western-style chaps, but covered them in dramatic Mongolian yak fur. The looks were hyper-masculine, but the finer details were less so. The more wearable items will surely be the best-sellers: Phipps crafted cotton rugby shirts with stars and stripes, and workwear pants with big cargo pockets. His cowboy-cut jeans and “chap jeans” were cool, subtle nods to western style. As always, he had some vintage tees in the mix too, including one style that read “Something Special from Wisconsin!” It reflected his obsession with thrifting. ”I’ve been buying vintage since I had money to buy clothes,” he said.

Outerwear was particularly strong. There were cool suede and knit zip-ups, and a vintage red knit sweater shaped into a hunting jacket silhouette. He even branded a vintage mustard shearling jacket with his logo. The most intriguing development: a venture into tailoring, with a small assortment of suit blazers. A charcoal blazer with a vintage blanket yoke had a real 1970s feel. “It’s a new direction for us,” said Phipps. “Pre-Covid, we used to make really nice suits in Italy. Now, I like suits with a story—there’s a little bit of a clunky dad spirit to ours.” It looked like the kind of prized find you would stumble upon in a dusty secondhand shop in L.A. or Santa Fe, and that was precisely the point.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Balmain Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Balmain Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

“Newness is not what you see, it is how you are.” Olivier Rousteing delivered this observation during a preview for his spring 2026 womenswear collection in Paris earlier this month. This collection was its close menswear companion, and similarly signified a new expansion of the designer’s Balmain practice.

Rousteing said that when he began to manifest it, “I was in my free place. Where I do my meditation every day on the beach. It might be in Italy, the south of France, the Middle East… somewhere where I can see the landscape, see the sky. This collection is an exercise in self-reflection, challenging myself, and even after 15 years at Balmain continuing to be a force for newness and disruption.”

Here that translated into a masculine counterpoint to the sumptuously boho version of Balmain we saw at the Hotel Intercontinental, shot show-style without an audience. Many of the pieces were shared freely between the two; there were the same gorgeous action-pocketed weathered-leather blousons, the same papery wide-mesh knit in terracotta, an adapted version of the terry-towel skirt into a robe with matching pants, and the same endless summer, Bali surf-pro chest-piece made of wooden beads and shells.

Other points of connection were the bags garnished with shells, the fluid wraps of silk in conch pink and other paradise tones, and the occasional harem pant, albeit not quite as drop-crotched as the women’s. For more formal moments during this barefoot Balmain reverie, there were many great beaded sandals.

Deconstructed combat pants, strong shouldered field jackets, and loose rib knits added up to a mellow military perspective. There was a strong dose of wide-lapeled tailoring, often styled with tucked in jackets. Both tailoring and militaria were sometimes embellished with more organic craft; shells, beads, and stones—very chilled, softened, and relaxed descendants of the hyper-tight, hyper-luxe Faberge-fabulous collections of Rousteing’s earliest seasons at this house. “To me, real luxury today is freedom and enjoyment,” said Rousteing of a collection whose texture, tactility, and looseness exemplified the designer’s enlightenment.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Duckie Brown Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Duckie Brown Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

For their spring collection, Duckie Brown’s Steven Cox and Daniel Silver offered a melange of vintage Duckie pieces mixed with brand new ones. It’s the kind of thing that happens when you are packing and come across your old things and decide it’s time to give them a new spin. As it happens, the Duckies are indeed packing up their West Village studio up in a crate and sending it to Greece, where they’re currently in the midst of constructing their house. “Duckie Brown is definitely happening over there, and now we’ve gone from this apartment that we used to live in that Daniel bought in the ’80s and we made Duckie Brown in it, into a kind of slaughter—well that’s a harsh word—but there’s something about taking this desk, pushing everything off it, and start again,” said Cox with characteristic elan. And thus an oversized yellow suit (2016) worn with a pink blouse (new); a jacket adorned with trompe l’oeil beaded medals (2006) worn with their classic big shirt in red silk jacquard (new) and plaid trousers (2012); a gorgeous green cashmere coat (2007) worn over a paisley silk jacquard robe (new), and pink wide leg trousers (new). A red and blue patterned jacquard coat from 2014 looked just as amazing now as it did over a decade ago. All are for sale.

“The new pieces are all Duckie Brown favorites: the silk trousers, the tuxedo short, long skirt or dress, all done in crepe de chine and silk—we can’t do wool in Greece,” added Cox. They were primarily inspired by two things; the bathrobes worn by Josh O’Connor in The Durrells of Corfu; and the test swatches they painted on their studio walls in Brooklyn while trying to figure out the colors of the house in Greece. The pinks and greens from their kitchen and living room transposed into the clothes. (Frank, one of their best customers, has already taken home the kitchen-pink shirt). A terrific skirt made from a white fabric with the word SAMPLE printed on it came from their summer visit to SCAD, where they visited to advise the senior class and met a student by the name of Kaj Nielsen. “We really admired the fabric when we first met him and the next day he brought it to us, wrapped in a little bow,” Cox explained. They say home is where the heart is, but when the heart is built in to the clothes, then home can really be anywhere you want. We look forward to the next era of Duckie Brown.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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The Fall 2025 Menswear Trends That Matter, According to Mytheresa
Fashion

The Fall 2025 Menswear Trends That Matter, According to Mytheresa

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Summer may be over (sad), but with fall’s arrival, it’s time to start thinking about cool-weather outfits. Yay! To help us make sense of the season ahead, we tapped the supremely stylish Sophie Jordan, the menswear buying director of Mytheresa. Here, she tells us which fall trends to consider, how she would style them, what you should buy to shake up your wardrobe for the months ahead, which classic pieces are worth investing in, and so much more.

Hi, Sophie! What are some of the big trends and ideas you saw in the fall collections that you’re picking up for the Mytheresa man?

Tailoring was for us. It’s a key story we see every season, but for fall 2025, it’s evolved with a more fashion-forward point of view. There were a lot of pinstripes for a strong sartorial take—a real 1980s, “Patrick Bateman in American Psycho” vibe. The Tom Ford runway is a key reference here and also Brioni tailoring, which they styled with striped shirts with contrast white collars and a pattered tie. It made for a really polished look.

We interpreted this as a “smartening up” or “making an effort” look. We also really considered the male customer who’s buying into this category for the first time. Maybe he’s buying into Auralee suiting, which was also styled with a shirt, tie, or even a knit. The result is super elegant but still cool.

What’s a new brand that the Mytheresa customer should have on their radar this season?

A.Presse is a new brand from Japan that we introduced for fall, and it’s already getting a fantastic reaction. The sweatshirts and jackets are already selling well. The fabrications are incredibly special ([everyone] mentions how lovely they are when you touch them), and the attention to detail and authenticity in their vision for the brand is very unusual to see. We’re so happy to be partnering with them.

Saman Amel is a personal favorite but also a brand that continues to grow for us season after season. Their modern approach to tailoring and wardrobing is really exciting. Their silk shirts and pants are best sellers alongside the linen they introduced for high summer. The trajectory of this brand—and how much more room they have to develop their vision—is truly exciting.