Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams, the stars of Heated Rivalry, have seen their public profiles skyrocket from obscurity to global obsession in the scant two months since the show premiered.
Kase Wickman
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Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams, the stars of Heated Rivalry, have seen their public profiles skyrocket from obscurity to global obsession in the scant two months since the show premiered.
Kase Wickman
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Though Ralph himself did not make the trip from the states, opting instead to watch from a live stream in New York, there was no shortage of star power. Looking on from the front row were a who’s who in the world of new guard leading men: Henry Golding, Liam Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Colman Domingo, Morgan Spector, Benito Skinner, and Nick Jonas.
“I always think of my father when I’m here, because this is the place where he would show me just how men were dressing,” David recalled. “We would walk the streets and see how Polo or Purple Label had become part of the culture. He’d say, ‘If it works in Italy, it means you’re a global brand.’”
Following the show, as the models emerged from backstage to mingle with guests for canapés and cocktails, the scene became a veritable trunk show. “I think I need that Yankee bomber jacket,” Golding told VF. He was just one of many guests, celebrity and otherwise, who were already drafting their wish lists. For the TikTok set, it was a particular Western fringe jacket that caught their eye, and for the discerning group of department store buyers, a trio of military-inspired officer coats not seen in the brand’s design canon since the late-90s.
The only thing that could tempt some guests to exit was the promise of a meal at the nearby Ralph’s Bar, a smaller satellite version of New York’s The Polo Bar inside the Ralph Lauren Milan flagship store on Via della Spiga. Here, a more subdued atmosphere unfolded for a select few, with Hemsworth and fiancée Gabriella Brooks unwinding in the back loggia making plans for a return to the French Alps, and Domingo with husband Raúl in the wood-paneled bar enjoying Ridgway margaritas; a recipe perfected in the home bar at Lauren’s Double RL Ranch in Colorado. Cast in a warm glow and dotted with equestrian oil paintings and paraphernalia, it all felt a world away from the scrum of flashbulbs and screaming fans outside, and nothing short of glamorous.
Zachary Weiss
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Shane Hollander may have felt a little sheepish about hiring a stylist, but Heated Rivalry star Hudson Williams appears to be much more at ease in high-fashion circles: After accessorizing his silky Armani dinner jacket with roughly four acres of sternum and Bvlgari jewelry at the Golden Globes 2026 last weekend, Williams made his runway debut in Milan on Friday, the very first official day of Milan Fashion Week.
Williams, who hails from British Columbia, took to the catwalk on behalf of Dsquared2, a line helmed by Canadian-born identical twin brothers Dean and Dan Caten and based out of Milan. The house frequently features celebrities in its runway presentations: In 2025, for the brand’s 30th anniversary celebration, Doechii opened the show, and Christina Aguilera, Brittany Murphy, and Naomi Campbell have all walked for them in the past. The Catens even designed wardrobes for Beyoncé’s 2016 Super Bowl halftime show and the Formation Tour, as well as Britney Spears’ 2009 Circus Tour, among other major celebrity collaborations.
Fans of Heated Rivalry, the steamy show that has the world’s social media algorithms in a (consensual) chokehold, are already in a seemingly permanent state of tizzy, but when a glimpse of a board featuring the headshots of the show’s models, Williams included, appeared in the background of an Instagram reel posted by the brand, the frenzy only increased. The sweat, she dripped.
Hudson Williams walks the runway at the Dsquared2 fashion show on January 16, 2026 in Milan, Italy.Daniele Venturelli
Appropriately enough, the set design for the show was a hockey-themed winter wonderland, featuring frosty white steps for the models’ entrances, and snow-tipped firs, as well as boards on either side of the runway printed with the Canadian flag’s signature maple leaf and bold red and blue “D2” emblems. Williams not only walked in the show, but led the charge by being first on the runway in the opening look. He wore coated denim jeans, tall winter boots with a red maple leaf detail, and a mixed-material top that appeared to be, like, six jackets all bonded into one rat-king superjacket.
Kase Wickman
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“We would love for you to attend our fashion month show.”
Me: “Are you providing dressing options?”
“Nothing in your size, sadly, but we do have these really fun earrings!”
In 2019, this was a common conversation I had with many London Fashion Week shows. It became rather tedious and honestly quite offensive.
For many years, as a plus-size woman, I’d been made to feel grateful to even be invited to these fashion month shows because, quite frankly, I didn’t have the acceptable ‘fashion-worthy body’ that’s so prevalent in the fashion industry – even though I had nearly a decade’s worth of high-end fashion editorials, billboards, beauty campaigns and articles under my name. My size was definitely still an issue. Plus-size models were definitely still an issue.
So, for the last three years I have been recording how many curve or plus-size models walk down the runway across the four main fashion weeks, and looking into whether any social trends or headlines have been able to alter and manipulate the numbers across the board dramatically. Let’s look at this past fashion month’s credentials…
The rise of the Ozempic trend in the US is still hanging around, three years since its first popularity – and it was quite apparent that the impact of this trend alongside the return of archaic phrases such as ‘heroin chic’ and ‘skinny is back’ hugely altered the messaging at NYFW back in 2022. After a lot of backlash, they more than doubled their numbers for curve models to 70 models later in that year, but their numbers have been decreasing ever since – averaging at around 40 models each season in 2024. Last Feb we saw a 50% drop and now the later part of 2025 we are back to our low average.
Gone are the days when the US were leaders when it comes to size inclusivity on the runway, so it is a real shame to see the big apple plummet back the past few years. Again in 2025, there was also no male plus-size representation, which is highly disappointing from the city that used to be the forefront of inclusion.
With over 117 designers showing this season and an average of 40 looks per show, there were around 4680 looks on the runways.
46 of them were considered curve or plus.
The designer loyally flying the flag for representation season after season is Christian Siriano, who cast eight plus-size girls on his runway this season. Jade Ward had four curve models, Michael Kors, Kim Shui, Bach Mai, Christian Cowan all had three models each.
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Felicity Hayward
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It was a family affair at the Gucci spring 2025 show on September 20 in Milan—and no one epitomized that kind of atmosphere more than Kirsten Dunst. The actress attended the presentation, held at the Triennale di Milano, with her younger brother, Christian Dunst. “We both needed a brother-sister getaway,” the actress tells W of her decision to bring Christian to the show as opposed to her husband, actor Jesse Plemons. “Jesse stayed home with the kids. Someone had to.”
The siblings coordinated their looks for the show—Kirsten in a floral, ankle-length dress and Christian opting for the more casual black trousers and white t-shirt. The actress insists the two didn’t match on purpose. Their names are similar enough. “It’s so embarrassing,” Kirsten says of the likeness between Kirsten and Christian. “Especially when we do interviews and I have to be like, ‘Hi, I’m Kirsten. This is Christian.’ It’s the same name.” But Kirsten put up with any embarrassment for the day in order to spend some quality time with her brother, plus check out creative director Sabato de Sarno’s sophomore offering for Gucci. Below, Dunst talks her favorite pieces from the show, her teenage style, and the niche piece of Jackie O. memorabilia she keeps in her home.
Did you see anything on the Gucci runway you could imagine wearing to an upcoming event?
There was a really beautiful brown sheath dress that I loved, and also those jackets with the beaded fringe. They almost had a Texas feel, but it wasn’t the normal placement of fringe, which I liked. I liked those short, poofy skirts, too. There was definitely an ode to Jackie Kennedy in there, with the head wraps and sunglasses. I actually have one of Jackie’s doors in my house.
A door?
Yeah, a door from her old apartment in New York. I bought it at an auction, kept it in my New York apartment, and then brought it home to L.A. with me. Then I found out the woman who previously owned my house in L.A. went to boarding school with Jackie and they were friends! But that’s what I like to spend money on. I spend so much time at home. I don’t care as much about clothes or cars, but house stuff I love.
How did you choose the look you wore to the Gucci show?
I was looking at the [resort 2025] runway pictures and I saw this big, floral jacket covering a dress. I always look for what’s under the coats because those can be easy, great silhouettes to wear. Now, though, I’m back in jeans and a T-shirt. I was like, “Get me into flats.”
Dunst in Gucci at the 2024 Academy Awards
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic, Inc/Getty Images
Moving onto the Style Notes questions, do you remember your first Gucci purchase?
I think the first thing I bought myself from Gucci were those slides without the back. I think I was about 20.
What was your style like when you were younger?
Whatever was at Fred Segal or Dollhouse. I was also really into Katayone Adeli. There was a store called Mail, which was a chain mail store in Nolita, and that was a destination for me every time I went to New York. Now you can buy everything everywhere, but back then it was so special to go to certain stores when you were in different cities. Like when I worked in Paris on Marie Antoinette, nobody had heard of Isabel Marant or Vanessa Bruno or any of those cute French labels. So I would come home with all these cool clothes no one had yet.
Did the films you were working on ever affect your style at the time?
No. I mean, [Marie Antoinette] had incredible costumes, but I was a real vintage hunter. I still wear vintage clothes I got when I was living in Paris. Me and my friend Io [Bottoms], who was in the movie too, would go scavenge in vintage stores in the Marais.
You’ve been in the spotlight and on red carpets for so long. Do you ever look back on pictures and think, “God, why did I wear that?”
I think everybody does. When I was a teenager, I wore butterfly clips in my hair and jellies with tights or knee-high socks. But that’s what you’re supposed to do when you’re a kid. So yeah, no regrets.
Dunst at the 1995 MTV Movie Awards.
Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
What about past red carpet looks that you still love?
I was the first person to ever wear Rodarte, so that was cool. I wore a bunch of [Kate and Laura Mulleavy’s] first collection on the Spider-Man press tour. It always feels special when you discover someone new, and then they became dear friends of mine. It feels like we grew up together and that’s special.
My Academy Award dress this year from Gucci was also incredible. I had never tried on a dress that fit so perfectly to my body. Their tailoring is incredible.
Who are your style icons?
I was lucky enough to grow up with Sofia [Coppola]. She always just looks so chic. I think I’ve always looked to certain women in my life. My mom always had fun style. But I’m also influenced a lot by movies. When I first saw Paris, Texas, I wanted to dress like Nastassja Kinski. Or, when I discovered Blondie, I wanted to dress like her. Same with Charlotte Rampling. The ’70s is my favorite era in terms of fashion.
And finally, I have to ask—growing up, did your parents ever call you or your brother by each other’s names? I have to imagine that was a confusing household.
It’s their own fault.

Embarking on new season fashion trends might feel intimidating, but dipping a toe into the world of new shoe trends can often feel a whole lot more manageable. After all, not only do they take up a smaller percentage of your look than a head-to-toe outfit but they’re also much easier to switch out for an emergency spare pair should you regret your choice by lunch time.
But what are the shoe trends this festive season?
Whether you’re a heel wearer or into comfier kicks, you’re looking for something that’ll make a statement or you’re in the market for a timeless new pair that’ll see you through several seasons to come, autumn/winter 2023 has got it all.
Here are the 7 key shoe trends that you’re about to start noticing everywhere…
1. SHARP POINTS
After years of the square-toe reigning supreme, it’s time for a new silhouette to take centre stage. While the rounded-toe might be popular in the world of ballet flats right now, thankfully it’s not the shape we’re seeing across the rest of the industry. Instead, it’s all about the point. And not just any point… The sharper, more aggressive the point on your shoe, the more on-trend it is. Whether you’re shopping for boots or courts, stilettos or flats, if your shoe looks like it could potentially puncture a football you’re on the right track. Unless, of course, you’re a footballer.
2. SILVER METALLICS
Nothing says party season like a little metallic action. But while we have a few more months to wait until those Christmas events kick off, some of our favourite fashion houses have decided to bring the party forward ever so slightly, with some pretty major silver footwear options for winter. The perfect way to zhush up a full-length knit, to offset an angelic white tight moment or bring a high fashion edge to your date night look, we’d be lying if we said we weren’t sold the minute we spotted the first pair hit the runway.
Charlie Teather
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The colder months have officially arrived meaning it’s time to discover this year’s key winter fashion trends. Sure all we’ve needed over recent weeks has been an umbrella and wellies, but there are some much more fun AW23 trends to know about – and while the sun may still occasionally be shining it’s never too early to get clued-up. Particularly, let’s be honest, when it’ll take many of us a moment to get our heads around some of the slightly more left-field looks.
Meteorological chaos aside, all this new season fashion fun is actually one of the most exciting things about the arrival of winter. And for fellow lovers of layers, just the *thought* of a good coat atop some super chic knitwear sees us – dare we say it – wishing for those lower temperatures.
If you’re eager to see what your wardrobe might look like this winter keep reading, because thanks to the world’s four fashion capitals – that’s New York, London, Milan and Paris – who are always ahead of the curve, autumn/winter 2023’s fashion trends were forecasted way back in February.
These are the key sartorial takeaways to prep yourself for the new season…
One of the simplest ways to elevate a look, pleating is back in a big way this winter. Whether you opt for a soft, draped pleat à la Loewe or a more intricate, dense pleat like Paco Rabanne and Rokh, it’s a great way to add a sense of texture without overcomplicating a look through various different fabrics or layers. Keep the rest of your outfit relatively monochrome in order to let the pleating do the talking.
Spotted at: (L-R) Paco Rabanne, Loewe & Rokh – as well as Coperni, Atlein, Tove, Givenchy, Ferragamo, Altuzarra, Balmain & Mugler
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Charlie Teather
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Spotted at Duran Lantink, Chanel, Bottega Veneta, Fendi, Mugler, Miu Miu, Alexander McQueen
Bold brows with a lot of arch were spotted at runway shows in pretty much every city. Most prominently, many shows in Paris, including Chanel, Alexander McQueen, and Miu Miu, highlighted a strong brow.
Shawna Hudson
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Happy fashion month! I hope you’ve been enjoying our coverage as much as I have. So far, my colleagues have dissected the only Milan runway trends you need to know, the elite street style outfits from London, the top-tier runway looks from NYC, and much more. As for me, I decided to do a little compare-and-contrast exercise with the newest street style photos from Milan and Paris.
So how is the fashion set dressing differently in each city this season? For starters, Milan showgoers heavily favored baggy pants and jeans, while Paris attendees largely went with straighter-leg and more tailored styles. Scroll down to see examples of how the two cities differ right now.
Erin Fitzpatrick
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Now that the style set has packed up its things and headed to Paris to close out fashion month, let’s sit down and discuss everything we just saw at Milan Fashion Week for the spring/summer 2024 season. Buckle up—the Italian houses gave us so much to talk about. This is a fashion week that’s historically much more predictable than its counterparts in NYC and Paris, but with a new class of creative directors at the helm of many established houses and an influx of new labels on the scene, Milan is proving to have a strong It factor up its sleeve.
This season introduced us to the new era of Gucci with the debut collection from Creative Director Sabato De Sarno, and while the opinions are split on old versus new Gucci, it marks a refreshing new chapter in Milanese fashion along with the exciting rebrands that Maximilian Davis and Matthieu Blazy are doing at Ferragamo and Bottega Veneta respectively. The first looks at 2024 are already exciting us, and below, you’ll find the eight most important trends to know about now.
Anna LaPlaca
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Fashion’s first supermodels aren’t going anywhere. For a few years now, brands have enlisted the original ’90s supermodels — from the smiley Christy Turlington to the perpetually chic Kate Moss — in their runway shows. This past fall 2023 season, however, was especially focused on bringing back the industry’s most famous faces, honoring their careers and contributions to fashion as a whole. The recognition is well-deserved, of course, but what makes this the right time for such a resurgence?
The obvious answer is the new Apple TV+ docuseries “The Super Models” — a shiny exploration into the illustrious careers of Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista, and Turlington. With recent fashion seasons criticized for leaving behind its mainstays for industry outsiders and influencers, nostalgia is somehow a timely solution. This resurgence has also perhaps been brewing since Versace brought together five ’90s icons for the grand finale of its spring runway show in 2018.
This year’s shows also lifted up their legends: Campbell graced several runways, even debuting her own 70-piece collection with PrettyLittleThing. That’s not to mention her happy front-row reunion with Moss at the Fendi show during Milan Fashion Week. Claudia Schiffer, meanwhile, closed the Versace show in an homage to the late Gianni Versace, as she was one of his original muses.
Edward Enninful, British Vogue editor in chief, also recently brought the supers together for his very last September issue. “What better way to celebrate than with four women who have, over the course of more than three decades, come to define the very idea of fashion itself: the original supermodels,” he wrote. The cover story went on to point out these women’s “rock star moves,” with Campbell speaking out about racial discrimination, Evangelista breaking records with Steven Meisel, and Crawford seamlessly navigating the tumultuous road from modeling to television. Without social media, they accrued supermodel status simply by acting like superstars.
Advances in social media prompted major — and debatably unwelcome — shifts in the cultural zeitgeist. Now, with fashion influencers facilitating major sales, the front row might look a little different than it used to. “Why spend money promoting on a billboard when you don’t know who’s driving past that billboard?” fashion content creator Ellie Zeiler prompted HuffPost in 2022. “You can just hire a fashion influencer and know that people are specifically going to that page for fashion content.”
Still, it’s a tough sell. If everyone has a platform, everyone has the chance to make it into Fashion Week, undermining the industry’s historic exclusivity. Think pieces debating whether or not influencers are ruining fashion for good only reemphasize this point. While publicists might be dealing with an increasingly flooded inbox, the fashion world was long overdue for a change.
Despite it all, the supermodel title transcends. Bringing the legends of the early aughts back to the runway signals a longing for the glamour of pre-social-media runway culture. In combination with the increased inclusivity made possible by the influencers of today, fashion might be on to something really super.
Chandler Plante
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Natalia Bryant might’ve just had her runway debut, but she was always destined for fashion. “My mom says, ‘Walk like Naomi but remember to be yourself,’” the oldest daughter of Kobe and Vanessa Bryant told Vogue prior to her first show. “‘Put your own style to your walk and always with your head held high.’” In fact, it’s partially thanks to her mom that Bryant decided to pursue modeling in the first place, signing with IMG Models in 2021 and joining a crew of talent like Ashley Graham and Gigi Hadid at the agency. Fast-forward to this year’s Milan Fashion Week, and she’s already walking alongside celebrities and industry icons like Kendall Jenner and Claudia Schiffer for Versace’s spring show.
Leading up to her first catwalk, Bryant introduced herself to the fashion world with a series of heavy-hitting projects, earning her stripes before ever stepping foot on a runway. In early September, she appeared in UGG’s new autumn campaign, joining model Aweng Chuol and rapper A$AP Nast. In 2021, she took time out of her freshman year at USC to grace the September cover of Teen Vogue, later attending the Met Gala in a sequin Connor Ives dress. She flexed more of her personal style at Vanity Fair’s 2023 Oscars afterparty, wearing a black velvet Monsoori gown with floor-length sleeves, and showing more love to Versace with a zebra-print midi dress in March.
“Versace does such a great job at making women feel empowered and strong. At the show, there was this electric energy and everyone was so sweet and inspirational,” she told The Zoe Report in March, seemingly unaware that she’d be walking for Versace herself in just a few short months.
In anticipation of her runway debut, Bryant asked a few of her fellow models if they had any helpful advice, sharing the answers on Vogue’s Instagram. “Just try to take in the moment and let yourself remember it,” Hadid responded before embracing Bryant backstage and expressing her pride.
Bryant’s mom — the woman who started it all — also shared her excitement following her daughter’s first runway. “I’m so proud of you! You did it mama,” she wrote on Instagram. And if the past two years serve as any indication, she’s only just getting started.
Chandler Plante
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Last week, Prada’s SS24 Ready-to-Wear show in Milan caused a major stir in the fashion world. From Prada slime to a star-studded front row to a standing ovation for the line itself, the show is basically all anyone in fashion can talk about.
In the beauty realm, Prada also didn’t disappoint. Though the beauty look was understated, it was uniquely suited to each model’s complexion. Not only that, but every beauty look was created using Prada’s new beauty line. Prada Beauty Global Creative Makeup Artist Lynsey Alexander went for matte skin and lips, and wanted to focus on the eyes. We’ve been saying matte lips are about to make a huge comeback, and Prada just helped us prove it.
Keep reading for every Prada makeup product used on the Milan runway. Though Prada Beauty has technically yet to launch in the United States, but many of the products are already available on the website—and trust us when we say, they are worth the splurge.
Katie Berohn
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Some things never change. On Sept. 22, supermodel Claudia Schiffer returned to the runway as a tribute to the late Gianni Versace. The ’90s icon closed the Versace show at Milan Fashion Week for the first time since joining Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell, and Helena Christensen for an homage back in 2018. She graced the catwalk in a shimmering green-and-silver-checkered gown, joining models like Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid. “It’s basically molded onto my body. It fits me like a glove,” she told Vogue of her dress. Schiffer’s presence at the show was the ultimate full-circle moment, serving as a powerful reference to Gianni Versace’s 1995 spring show, which she also closed.
Schiffer shone on the runway, but her rare appearance was the finale to what ended up being an entire collection inspired by Gianni’s original show. The concept — brought to life by the legendary Donatella Versace — paid homage to her brother’s original mod looks with carefully tailored silhouettes, colorful free-flowing silks, and checkerboard patterns. Of course, that didn’t stop her from adding her own creative touches, including the sparkly embellishments on Jenner’s collar and the delicate beaded detailing across Schiffer’s reimagined gown. Schiffer has long been touted as one of Gianni’s original muses. Donatella herself even commented that Schiffer will “always be an inspiration” in February 2022 after the model praised the Hadid sisters’ re-creation of her 1995 Versace ad with Sylvester Stallone. “Donatella is just a wonderful, warm-hearted, gentle, genuine, nice person who really does care,” Schiffer told Vogue. “It’s just more than just a fashion show and ad campaign. It’s much more than that.” Read on to see how one of the most memorable models in Versace history returned to the runway after all these years.
Chandler Plante
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With autumn‘s official arrival this weekend, no doubt you’ve started thinking about your new season wardrobe. From shoes to bags, coats to colours, it can be hard to know what is the easiest way to inject a fresh new feeling into your looks without having to overhaul the entire thing.
And while there are endless autumn fashion trends we’re all falling for already, if you want to treat yourself to just one cult new item (okay, technically two…) this season you’d be wise to consider Alaïa’s Strass Ballet Flats.
Spotted everywhere we looked down the front rows at London Fashion Week, there are very few of the street style set who don’t seem to own a pair.
Jeremy Moeller
Jeremy Moeller
While being spotted wearing the same thing as a friend or neighbour was once considered a serious faux pas, the fashion world has moved on and decided that imitation really is the highest form of flattery. Besides, these shoes so immediately became ubiquitous that it’s impossible to know who wore them first or ‘started the trend’.
Yep, when it comes to Alaïa’s studded pumps we’re all just as easily-influenced as each other.
Jeremy Moeller
Jeremy Moeller
Of course, with ballet flats having returned to the fashion forefront over recent seasons thanks primarily to the likes of Miu Miu, The Row and Simone Rocha leading the ‘balletcore’ charge, it was inevitable that a tougher, edgier take on the simple – often saccharine – trend would emerge.
And for those who find Maison Margiela’s Tabi flats (you know, the ones loved by Dua Lipa and Zendaya with the separated toes) a little too out there, Alaïa’s embellished shoes have found that perfect middle ground.
While the black pair are undoubtedly the most popular right now, throughout the season’s fashion weeks so far we’ve seen a handful of white iterations dart in and out of show venues; distracting the swarms of street style photographers that congregate outside.
Of course, as we move into autumn, black would be the more obvious choice. But who likes being obvious…?
Jeremy Moeller
Raimonda Kulikauskiene
Of course, at £830 a pair, this trend will feel out of reach for many of us. Luckily there are a number of studded ballet flats at various different price points, making the look attainable regardless of your budget.
But if you do treat yourself to a pair of the Alaïas, can we please be the first to borrow them?
SHOP SIMILAR STYLES:
For more from Glamour UK’s Fashion Editor Charlie Teather, follow her on Instagram @charlieteather.
Charlie Teather
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September may mean it’s back to school, but it’s also the month we preview everything SS24 has in store for us. Sure, we may have barely dipped our toe into autumn, but as per tradition, designers from across the four fashion cities – New York, London, Milan and Paris – are using the new-season feeling to showcase the looks they have coming for spring and summer. But along with some beautifully breezy garments, we also want in on all the beauty intel.
Now that New York and London have wrapped and Milan is stepping up, we’ve had a chance to get a vibe for Spring 2024. Coquettecore seems to be going strong with silky pink ribbons woven or corseted through hair at Christian Siriano. Meanwhile, PatBo made the case for pastels with pretty pink eyeshadow swept across their models’ lids. Or, for an alternative shade, Tiffany Brown Designs went big on baby blue, with a whole show dedicated to the colour which was washed across the models’ eyes.
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Vintage romance is an emerging mood among London design houses Richard Quinn, Erdem and Annie’s Ibiza. Hair stylist Sam McKnight swept hair into regency-style chignons at Richard Quinn, while Terry Barber for MAC took care of portrait-worthy skin with delicately blushed lips and earthy-toned lids. Annie’s Ibiza saw ’20s-style finger waves created by Sam and high shine red lips created by the pros at Charlotte Tilbury. And romantic matte red lips created by Bobbi Brown pros at Erdem created a pretty statement.
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Elle Turner
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Though the shows have already come and gone in cities such as Copenhagen, Oslo, and Tokyo, officially speaking, fashion month won’t begin until the festivities kick off in New York City later this week. But just because the start date is in the future doesn’t mean that planning hasn’t been going on for weeks—months—in preparation for the biannual event. Part of that pre-show prep is the curation of wardrobe items and outfits, all of which will be debuted on the streets of NYC, London, Milan, and Paris in the coming weeks.
To get a sneak peek at the garments, accessories, and shoes that’ll be showing face throughout the month, I called on a few of the coolest dressers in the business, from content creators to editors, and asked them to share a bit about the pieces they’re planning on wearing. Scroll down to find out what fashion’s best dressed crowd has lined up for the next four weeks before anyone else.
Eliza Huber
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If you ask anyone who was in attendance, they’ll tell you that the spring/summer 2023 fashion tour felt different from any held in recent years. After smaller shows, laid-back schedules, and virtual presentations spurred by the pandemic, the fashion community finally returned in full swing this September and October, bringing with it a bevy of standout trends that will play a major role in our wardrobes this spring.
In a democratic turn, many of the trends showcased this season were a continuation of those displayed on the fall runways, ensuring that nothing we just recently splurged on will go to waste. The pretty-things trend we’ve harped about for months continued to reign supreme, as evidenced by the abundance of 3D florets at Loewe and Prada and dainty bows at Chanel. Also carried over from fall were hyper-elevated basics, but this time, designers such as Miuccia Prada and Tory Burch offered up new, reimagined ways to style and layer them.
Of course, no fashion season would be complete without a few curveball trends being thrown into the mix. At Prada, co-creative directors Raf Simons and Ms. Prada took everyone by surprise when they brought skinny pants back from fashion purgatory just one year after TikTok officially axed the style. Similarly puzzling is the pants-less trend that Bottega Veneta Creative Director Matthieu Blazy and Victoria Beckham made a convincing case for.
Clearly, creativity is at an all-time high in and around the fashion world right now. Experience the 11 spring/summer 2023 trends it spurred below.
Kristen Nichols
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Idris Elba isn’t just one of the most handsome men in Hollywood (and winner of People‘s 2018 “Sexiest Man Alive“), he’s also one of the most stylish.
The latest example? The powder blue Gucci suit he wore while attending the house’s Fall 2023 menswear show at Pitti Uomo in Milan on Friday. The look, which he accented with a skinny (possibly leather?) tie, loafers and a bright gold watch, was kissed by signature motifs of the Italian brand: androgyny, a rockstar flair, fashioning the unfashionable and extravagance. While the jacket is perfectly tailored, the pants are a bit more voluminous, with a slight bell bottom effect.
“Idris is 6-foot-2 and he loves sharp clothing,” longtime stylist Cheryl Konteh previously told Fashionista. “We both love color and we love prints.”
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Idris Elba in Gucci at the Fall 2023 menswear show.
Photo: Pietro S. D’Aprano/Getty Images for Gucci
A scroll through the actor’s Instagram or archive of red carpet looks is evidence that he likes to play with color and print while keeping silhouettes classic. The suit, which verges on Tiffany Blue, is a bold statement that we hope continues for men on the carpet.
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Andrea Bossi
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In fashion, the top headlines of 2022 were brimming with excitement and chaos.
Scandals swept Balenciaga and any brand associated with the artist formerly known as Kanye West. Legislation offered a new pathway for sustainability in fashion. A new guard of creatives took the helm at some of the world’s most stories houses, while a recession loomed over the whole industry.
Ever since the pandemic struck in 2020, the years have felt as though they’ve all bled together. That’s certainly true for fashion news — so, we’re recapping the biggest headlines in the industry from 2022, from the biggest controversies to the most notable moments of progress.
In a major escalation of a longstanding conflict, Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, kicking off an intensified war that hasn’t stopped. The fashion industry responded with letters, donations and posts on social media. Vogue Ukraine called designers to action, while Granary — the fashion education platform founded by Ukrainian Central Saint Martins graduate Olya Kuryshchuk — shared an open letter urging the community to condemn Russia.
Groups like LVMH and Kering donated to aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), while some brands suspended business in Russia altogether. Meanwhile, designers like Demna took to the runway for messaging against the war (before the brand was embroiled in scandal).
Kanye’s outbursts hit new heights of offensive this year, from sending a “Wh*te Lives Matter” shirt down the runway at his Paris Fashion Week show, to violently coming after a beloved Vogue editor, to making various antisemitic statements to continuing to align himself with white nationalists and former President Donald Trump.
The artist has long faced mental health issues, including being diagnosed with bipolar disorder after a psychiatric emergency in 2016, but his actions in 2022 went too far to be explained by mental illness, many argue. They led to him losing billion-dollar brand deals with Adidas, Balenciaga and Gap, and being removed from the Forbes Billionaire list.
Balenciaga ended the year not with a celebration, but with a series of apologetic statements.
The Kering-owned luxury brand released its Balenciaga Gift Shop campaign on Nov. 16, showing a range of new giftable items from the brand, “staged around children dressed in the Balenciaga Kids line” — however, it soon started trending, with many criticizing the photos showing children next to wine glasses, holding teddy bears in BDSM-reminiscent harnesses.
#BalenciagaGate only got more heat when people turned attention to its Spring 2023 campaign, released just a few days after on Nov. 21. The Joshua Bright-photographed imagery was set in an office, and among a variety of props strewn across a desk, there was a printed copy of the 2008 United States v. Williams decision on child pornography laws. More controversy ensued.
Celebrities distanced themselves from the brand. Customers started destroying their products and calling for a boycott. Lawsuits were filed and pulled. Many apologies were issued. Read our breakdown for more.
Every era in fashion has had its big names. Now, the industry is moving forward with a new guard of creatives taking seats at the helms of the world’s biggest, most influential houses.
Matthieu Blazy became creative director of Bottega Veneta in 2021, and debuted his first collection for the brand for Fall 2022. Maximilian Davis, a LVMH Prize semifinalist and graduate of the London College of Fashion, joined Ferragamo. Harris Reed arrived at Nina Ricci (and though we haven’t gotten a full collection yet, he has dressed Adele.) Ludovic de Saint Sernin is headed to Ann Demeulemeester.
Meanwhile, we’re seeing some of the most powerful names in fashion step back. Riccardo Tisci showed his final Burberry collection in September, and has been replaced by Daniel Lee. Alessandro Michele, who ushered in a new era of extravagance at Gucci, stepped down in November, after seven years at the helm and two decades at the brand. That month, Raf Simons also announced the closure of his eponymous label after 27 years in business.
André Leon Talley passed away in January 2022 at the age of 73, leaving behind a grand legacy in fashion.
Known for his encyclopedic knowledge of the industry and larger-than-life presence, Talley was creative director and then editor-at-large at Vogue, responsible for some must-read columns that inspired the next generation and becoming one of the first Black editors to reach the top of the masthead.
Raised in the Jim Crow South, Talley detailed his ascension in fashion and the racism he had to work against in his memoir, “The Chiffon Trenches.” He peeled back the curtain with language as entertaining as it is profound, welcoming wonder in a world often guarded by walls. He ushered in a new guard of dreamers, building his audience and developing close ties with educational institutions like SCAD.
Viral fashion moments abounded this year, especially during the Spring 2023 runways. IRL shows returned with a vengeance, but it was the internet that made them live on — and truly take off. There’s no better example than Bella Hadid closing Coperni that season in Paris with a spray-on dress. A close second is Gucci’s “Twinsburg” debut in Milan, featuring 68 pairs of twins walking down the runway in mirrored looks.
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As Fashionista reported, size diversity on the runway regressed in 2022, with the number of New York Fashion Week shows featuring non-sample-sized models dwindling from past seasons, after this issue had become such a talking point pre-pandemic. With runways often being in the market of what’s in and what’s cool, the exclusion of different bodies served as a disappointment.
The fashion industry is notoriously under-regulated, but a new chapter is on the horizon in the U.S., with legislation presenting a path forward for the conversation around sustainability.
In January, led by Sen. Alessandra Biaggi and Assembly Member Dr. Anna Kelles, a New York coalition announced the Fashion Sustainability and Social Accountability Act (frequently dubbed the Fashion Act), which seeks to hold the state’s biggest fashion businesses accountable for environmental and social matters. A few months later, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand introduced the Fashioning Accountability and Building Real Institutional Change (FABRIC) Act, the first federal fashion bill that would address labor concerns and workers’ rights in the U.S. garment industry. (Read the full text of the bill on Sen. Gillibrand’s website.)
Kim Kardashian is responsible for one of the most discourse-fueling looks of 2022: She re-wore the dress Marilyn Monroe donned to sing JFK happy birthday in 1962 — owned by Ripley’s Believe It or Not — to the 2022 Met Gala. People discussed her extreme diet, the ethics of wearing (and thus unavoidably damaging) a historical garment, the fact that she walked the carpet with then-boyfriend Pete Davidson… The list goes on.
… All the while, Kardashian was laughing her way to the bank, by way of Skims, which reached a $3.2 billion valuation in 2022, thanks to new funding and ever-loving fans.
“This latest round will allow us to focus on bringing more innovations and solutions to our customers and become even more of a trusted resource for them,” Kardashian told Fortune.
Since launching in 2019, Skims has found rapid success in shapewear and loungewear, with the pandemic catapulting its cozier categories. This year, the brand also took home the inaugural CFDA Innovation Award presented by Amazon at the trade organization’s annual ceremony.
Tom Ford made big moves in 2022: He sold his namesake brand to Estée Lauder for $2.8 billion. It became the cosmetics company’s largest acquisition to date and the first fashion brand in its portfolio. Ford will stay on through the end of 2023, as will longtime business consultant Domenico De Sole. Ford also stepped down as president of the CFDA (and was succeeded by Thom Browne).
Patagonia literally gave itself away as a company in the name of environmental preservation and sustainability: This year, American rock climber-turned-businessman Yvon Chouinard transferred ownership of the brand he founded to a trust and nonprofit. The company said it was “going purpose” instead of “going public,” making Earth its main shareholder — a first-of-its-kind move.
For the (somehow) uninitiated, “nepo babies” are relatives of successful, famous or otherwise well-connected people who then end up successful, famous or otherwise well-connected. In 2022, they got called out on online and on the front pages of magazines, with the connections that may have helped them reach their heights of career success being called into question.
Of course, fashion has always loved nepo babies, from Hadids to Jenners to Gerbers. And every year, there’s a new class to look out for in campaigns or sitting in the front row at a Miu Miu show.
Rihanna has changed any and every new space she’s entered, so it’s no surprise she had the same effect on maternity style as she flaunted her pregnancy in the first half of 2022.
Rather than opting for clothes that covered up her growing bump, the Fenty founder refused to tone down sexiness or her own style. That meant: beaded halter tops, vintage Chanel, diamond belly chains and more. She even got “maternity crop tops” to trend.
In early 2022, Julia Fox solidified her place in fashion with a trip to Haute Couture Fashion Week with her then-boyfriend. While there, she debuted a makeup look that would rank among the most influential of the year: her intense Black Swan-like cat eye.
Even after their split, Fox continued serving looks, becoming a TikTok star and highlighting emerging designers. She opened LaQuan Smith’s Fall 2022 show and was crowned one of Fashionista’s best dressed celebrities in 2022. She took the cake in ambitious dressing, daring any fan to take it up a notch and dream bigger through their clothes.
Talks of a recession relentlessly haunted headlines throughout 2022, as the Fed raised rates to curb spending. Economists fretted the future, as did the fashion industry. (You can read “The State of Fashion 2023” report by the Business of Fashion and McKinsey & Co. for a careful run-down.) Experts cautioned of a “polycrisis” between the economy and fallout from Russia’s war in Ukraine, with fashion executives bracing for a slowdown through 2023.
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Andrea Bossi
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