\ RUNWAY MAGAZINE ®

November 16, 2025

Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci at Dolce&Gabbana show

Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci at Dolce&Gabbana show “When Fiction Becomes Fashion”. Story by Eleonora de Gray, Editor-in-Chief of RUNWAY MAGAZINE. Photo Courtesy: GettyImages / @iude @_artaurus_.

We have always known that fashion is theater—an illusion, a performance, a staged verdict. But seldom has the stage itself stepped into the spotlight. On September 27, 2025, at Dolce & Gabbana’s Milan theater, the real and the fictional coalesced: Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci, inhabiting once again the legendary characters of Miranda Priestly and Nigel, sat front row, their gaze mastering the silhouettes that passed. And suddenly, our stories were not just told—they were lived.

A Runway Within the Runway

The Dolce & Gabbana Spring Summer 2026 collection was already a play of paradoxes—lingerie as outerwear, pajama silks reimagined for the boulevard, intimacy displayed as grandeur. Into this mise-en-scène entered Priestly, inscrutable behind her sunglasses, Nigel at her side.

This was not acting. It was embodiment. The presence of Priestly in a real-world show blurred every boundary: fiction became documentary, performance became history. The audience did not simply see characters; they experienced the cultural mythology of The Devil Wears Prada grafted onto a live fashion event.

The Seal of Authority

Why did this moment reverberate beyond mere promotion for a sequel? Because it reminded the world of what fashion is at its core: judgment, authority, and narrative power.

Miranda Priestly may have been written as fiction, but her influence became real. Her aura crystallized an archetype: the editor not merely as observer, but as institution. Runway Magazine—the name chosen in the film as the fictional counterpart to our own—was not parody but prophecy. What began as cinematic shorthand has since merged with reality, with Runway Magazine standing as both symbol and institution: the place where fashion’s authority is recorded, debated, and canonized.

The presence of Priestly and Nigel at Dolce & Gabbana therefore did not borrow from reality. It returned to it.

Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly Runway Magazine


Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly Runway Magazine


Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly Runway Magazine

Fashion as Cultural Manuscript

Supported by Stefano Gabbana and Domenico Dolce, who invited this crossing of worlds into their theater, the act became more than marketing. It became a cultural manuscript. The runway here was no longer fabric and silhouette alone—it became text, layered with references, judgments, histories, and mythologies.

Runway as Institution, Not Illusion

This is why the moment belongs not only to cinema or promotion, but to fashion history. Because Runway is not an invention. It is not a script. It is not a role. Runway is the record, the stage, the institution that has shaped fashion’s narrative for three decades.

When Streep adjusted her glasses as Priestly, it was more than method acting. It was a tacit acknowledgment of Runway Magazine’s permanence—a cultural mirror too sharp to be dismissed as fiction.

Toward the Sequel, Toward the Future

The aftershow cocktail, where Streep and Tucci mingled with Stefano and Domenico, was not simply a celebration of cinema’s return. It was a ceremony of acknowledgment: that fashion houses and Hollywood alike recognize the power of this narrative to endure.

The upcoming Devil Wears Prada sequel is inevitable in its cultural weight, because it builds on what was always more than entertainment. It builds on the very institution of fashion authority. And Runway Magazine stands at the center of this axis—between film and fashion, history and future, perception and reality.

Closing Line

On that September night in Milan, fiction bowed to reality. Priestly was never just a role. Nigel was never just comic relief. They were, and remain, reflections of the living institution of fashion—Runway Magazine, where the line between storytelling and authority vanishes, and where every season is already history.

Runway Magazine cover 2025


Runway Magazine cover 2025


Runway Magazine cover 2025


Runway Magazine cover 2025


Runway Magazine cover 2025


Runway Magazine cover 2025


Runway Magazine cover 2025



October 22, 2025

L’Oreal x Kering Deal

L’Oreal x Kering Deal “KERING SELLS THE SCENT OF SURVIVAL”. Story by Eleonora de Gray, Editor-in-Chief of RUNWAY MAGAZINE. Photo Courtesy: Kering.

There’s a golden rule in luxury business management, neatly outlined in nearly every CEO’s manual on corporate damage control:
When cash bleeds and your legacy is wheezing, sell the perfume.
Preferably to L’Oréal.

And Kering just did exactly that.

On October 19, 2025, Kering announced with near-theatrical grandeur a “strategic partnership” with L’Oréal, sealing off its beauty division in exchange for a €4 billion consolation prize. The sale includes The House of Creed — its only true niche perfume gem — and 50-year licenses (yes, fifty, not fifteen) to develop and distribute fragrances for Gucci, Bottega Veneta, and Balenciaga. That’s not a handshake — that’s a surrender with royalties.

Let’s decode this:
Creed? Gone.
Future Gucci perfumes? Made by L’Oréal.
Balenciaga’s eau de scandal? L’Oréal.
The next Bottega Veneta scent? Still L’Oréal.

Kering, in effect, is stepping out of the vanity room and hoping no one notices the scent of desperation trailing behind.

The Real Story Behind the Glossy Release

Luca de Meo, freshly instated as Kering’s new CEO (a man with actual automotive and tech strategy credentials, not just a legacy name), described the deal as “a decisive step.” And he’s right — decisively late. The house of Pinault has been limping ever since François-Henri Pinault doubled down on a series of self-inflicted wounds:

  • Balenciaga’s PR implosion (no introduction needed),
  • Gucci’s identity crisis (Alessandro Michele and Sabato De Sarno are out, Demna Gvasalia is in, and the brand still has no idea who it’s dressing),
  • A general aesthetic freefall that’s driven high-value customers — and investors — to the competition.
And now, the final bell: monetizing the only consistently profitable arm left — fragrance and cosmetics. Because when couture starts burning, you bottle up what still sells and hand it to someone who knows how to distribute mass luxury.

L'Oreal x Kering - Nicolas Hieronimus and Luca de Meo
L'Oreal x Kering - Nicolas Hieronimus and Luca de Meo

L'Oreal x Kering - Nicolas Hieronimus and Luca de Meo
L'Oreal x Kering - Nicolas Hieronimus and Luca de Meo

This Isn’t Innovation. It’s Liquidation.

L’Oréal, ever the savvy predator in the beauty jungle, wasted no time. Let’s not forget:

  • It devoured YSL Beauté in 2008 (after Gucci Group originally owned it).
  • Snatched Mugler fragrances and Azzaro from Clarins in 2019.
  • Bought Aēsop from Natura in 2023 for $2.5 billion.
And now Creed — the one house with enough gravitas to sit alongside L’Oréal Luxe’s other prize possessions like Lancôme, Armani Beauty, and Valentino.

In other words: when L’Oréal sees a sinking ship, it doesn’t offer a lifeboat — it buys the cargo and sails off.

Damage Control Masquerading as a Partnership

The press release tries to perfume over the rot with fluffy language: “exploring wellness,” “unlocking long-term potential,” “combining innovation capabilities.”

Translation?
L’Oréal will make money.
Kering will make excuses.

The pitch about a “joint venture” in longevity and wellness is a polite afterthought — a fancy way of saying, “We’re trying to stay relevant, please give us five more years.”

And those 50-year licenses? That’s practically forever in luxury terms. No brand bets that far ahead unless they’re exiting the category altogether.

When Heritage Becomes Overhead

This isn’t the first time a luxury group folded its cards:

  • Stella McCartney’s beauty license bounced between LVMH and independent hands.
  • Prada once let Puig handle all fragrance development before trying (and failing) to bring it in-house.
  • Burberry, in a moment of rare clarity, pulled its perfume business back from Interparfums in 2017 — and its profits soared.
Kering did the opposite. It exited the only division that made sense... and sell.

Because this isn’t about innovation.
It’s about hemorrhaging less.
And hoping no one notices the blood under the eau de toilette.


L’Oreal x Kering Deal


Final Notes (Base, not Top)

When the family scion steps down and the automotive fix-it guy steps in, the boardroom doesn’t smell like creativity — it smells like risk mitigation.

LVMH isn’t exactly quaking in its Berluti loafers due to being totally isolated from public. Kering is playing catch-up while selling off its best catch.

If this is the future of luxury, someone hand us a sample vial of the past. We’ll take the full bottle, vintage sealed, from a time when luxury meant art, craftsmanship, and leadership… not liquidation.


July 16, 2024

Re-Inventing the Runway

RUNWAYWeb3: Re-Inventing the Runway is a new chapter in a series of revolutionary immersive experiences exploring the fashion runway show, the most spectacular looks of the great fashion designers and fashion houses. It is not a documentary from the past shown in the big screens, it is the real-live experience allowing us to embrace the imagination and see the present and the future of fashion.

These unforgettable experiences created by RUNWAY magazine brings together the industry's leading voices from the present, uniting them and leading them to the future. With a rich mixture of media and technology, Re-Inventing the Runway immersive experience reveals how new technology can bring so intimately the ultimate statement of a designer's vision to us, transforming the way we interact with the iconic styles of Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Fendi, Dolce & Gabbana, Valentino, Moncler, Jean Paul Gaultier, Prada, and Versace.

This immersive experience is an exploration of fashion, is a visionary approach to blending this vision with interactive, digital experiences. It is a celebration of the imagination and passion that has revolutionized how we experience fashion at first hand. 

Re-Inventing the Runway is both visceral and insightful, with 3D designed environment, 3D looks, graphics and sound design, all of which will evoke our world of imagination where iconic runways shift the cultural landscape, and where we are creators of it.

Within this immersive experience we can emerge with the imagination of a designer, experiencing the forms as if they were physically present. This feature not only brings the runway to us but also empowers us, as we are no longer passive observers, we are active figures. Re-Inventing the Runway is our environment to explore, dream, and discover, guided by the seamless interface of a truly revolutionary 3D fashion experience.


Re-Inventing the Runway
Screenshot featuring Moncler look created by Pierpaolo Piccioli in 2019

Re-Inventing the Runway
Screenshot featuring Valentino look created by Pierpaolo Piccioli in 2023 “PP Pink” collection

Re-Inventing the Runway
Screenshot featuring Jean Paul Gaultier look 2023-2024 “Haute Jeanerie – Fashion Fiction”

Gamifying Journalism

This innovative Web3 experience gamifies traditional media’s expert journalistic review. It transforms opinion, analyses, observations, photos and texts into a new form of media expression. This is a unique and interactive way to express opinions. Through this experience, Runway Magazine pioneers new storytelling methods.

Incorporating elements of gamificationRe-Inventing the Runway experience educates us about the nuances of fashion design and trends through interactive participation. It’s a bold redefinition of the media's role in the fashion industry, turning passive observation into an engaging journey. This approach allows RUNWAY Magazine to creatively present and transform visuals into an informative and expressive new format.

Re-Inventing the Runway is more than just a digital experience, it is the harbinger of the future of fashion media. By merging editorial content with virtual interaction, RUNWAY continues to lead the way in innovative, immersive journalism.

As we chart new courses in the vast seas of imagination and technology, this experience stands as a testament to the endless possibilities at the intersection of fashion, art, and digital landscapes. This revolutionary approach not only respects but revitalizes the traditional media format, inviting users worldwide to step into the future of fashion and beyond.

Re-Inventing the Runway new chapter in a series of revolutionary immersive experiences by RUNWAY magazine will be released in September 2024. It'll be available on RUNWAY magazine digital at RUNWAYMAGAZINES.com and RUNWAYUNIVERSE.com - dedicated hosting for all Web3 experiences developed by RUNWAY magazine.

RUNWAY Web3 experiences are accessible on all computers, they are also adapted for slow internet connection. All connections to the Web3 environments are private. These experiences are also adapted for mobile devices, installation of an app is required.


Re-Inventing the Runway
Screenshot featuring Valentino look created by Pierpaolo Piccioli in 2023 “PP Pink” collection

Re-Inventing the Runway
Screenshot featuring Jean Paul Gaultier look 2023-2024 “Haute Jeanerie – Fashion Fiction”

Inventing the Runway
Screenshot featuring Jean Paul Gaultier look 2023-2024 “Haute Jeanerie – Fashion Fiction”


September 15, 2022

Michael Kors Spring 2023 New York Runway

Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway. Anne Hathaway attended the show as Andy from Devil Wears Prada. Story by RUNWAY MAGAZINE. Photo Courtesy: Michael Kors / GettyImages.

Michael Kors presented Spring Summer 2023, or perhaps resort summer collection today dedicated as always to New York. He defined this collection as a tribute to polish and sleek elegance of big city.

Urban Resort – that is how Michael Kors defined his new collection. With a runway that juxtaposed the sleekness of the city with greenery inspired by a resort getaway, the show celebrated the fusion of urbanity and nature. Big city polish juxtaposed with relaxed resort glamour, which premiered live this morning on a palm-lined on New York Runway.

Anne Hathaway attended the show, and probably without a special impression she took look of Andy from Devil Wears Prada. Massive comments about this comic appearance blow all social media networks. And yes, she stole the show.

Anne Hathaway as Andy from Devil Wears Prada, Anna Wintour at Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway
Anne Hathaway as Andy from Devil Wears Prada, Anna Wintour at Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway

The Starbucks coffee mug is noted under the seat of Anna Wintour… Did Andy bring it to her?

Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway Magazine
Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway Magazine

Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway Magazine
Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway Magazine


Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway Magazine
Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway Magazine

Read MORE and see ALL LOOKS Michael Kors Spring Summer 2023 New York Runway HERE

September 10, 2022

25th Anniversary Fendi Baguette New York show

25th Anniversary Fendi Baguette New York show. Fendi Resort 2023. Story by Eleonora de Gray, Editor-in-Chief of RUNWAY MAGAZINE.

To celebrate 25 years Fendi Baguette Silvia Venturini Fendi decided to bring fabulous Fendi Spring 2023 show in New York City. The show took place at historic Hammerstein Ballroom, at Manhattan Center. Her show was not part of New York Fashion Week, even though it was a first day of the fashion week Spring Summer 2023 season. 

The house unveiled a special fashion show spotlighting iterations of the Iconic style designed by Silvia Venturini Fendi and Kim Jones in collaboration with Marc Jacobs, Tiffany and Co, Porter Yoshida and Sarah Jessica Parker.

“It was a special day when I designed this bag; the stars aligned. The horoscope said it was a Fendi day,” – said Silvia Venturini Fendi

“I didn’t want to do a traditional ‘collection’ for the anniversary. Rather it’s a celebration of a time, of the moment the Baguette became famous. I relate that time to a sense of freedom in excess and fun – both qualities the Baguette possesses,” – said Kim Jones, Artistic Director of Womenswear, Fendi.

“I’ve got one word: Fendiroma. And it is one word! It is another land, this Fendiroma… And I’ve got two words: The Baguette. It’s a bag – and I am never one to shy away from an iconic bag,” – said Marc Jacobs, Creative Director and Founder, Marc Jacobs.

At once interpretations and celebrations of the Baguette in this 25th Anniversary year, the collections of Kim Jones and Silvia Venturini Fendi at Fendi, Marc Jacobs, Tiffany & Co, Sarah Jessica Parker and Porter pay tribute to the bag and the city in which its place in pop culture history was sealed – New York.



Moved Sarah Jessica Parker said that “I finally left the house and landed in Fendi wonderland. Our top secret collaboration on the iconic Fendi baguette was revealed on the runway tonight, and four colorways are due to arrive sparkly and ready just in time for the holidays. This eve I got to Carrie/carry the lavender delight. The whole show was a feast.”

Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Kardashian at 25 years Fendi Baguette Runway Magazine
Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Kardashian at 25 years Fendi Baguette Runway Magazine

Linda Evangelista at 25 years Fendi Baguette Runway Magazine
Linda Evangelista at 25 years Fendi Baguette Runway Magazine

Taking inspiration from the object itself, a moment in time, as well as the spirit and geography of place, the Baguette is realised in a multiplicity of ways, both in terms of clothing and accessories, reflecting the maker as much as the iconic item, while never neglecting the enjoyment and sense of celebration for the wearer.

In this rough-cut romance between uptown and downtown, luxury and utility, excess and reality, the Baguette and the clothing and accessories it inspires are at once defined as a moment in history and part of a continuum with today.

For Fendi, the essential utility of the bag becomes a multi-pocketed motif, migrating throughout the collection. The unmistakable Baguette dimensions made mini and micro pockets, appearing on parkas to gaiters, roving all over the body, covering gloves, hats, skirts, sweaters and, of course, the bag itself in one of its new iterations. In contrast and cohesion, a sense of hyper-luxe and glossy glamour pervades the collection – the Baguette is not entirely utilitarian after all. Those gaiters are made from silk satin, that parka shaved mink or glossy leather; a stratification of sequins and biased cut silks are often layered beneath, adding a shimmer of art deco allure.

For Marc Jacobs, grand dimensions from another time are contrasted with the humble origins of today and in so doing banish notions of costume in his collection. A reflection of the glittering and gritty New York cityscape the casual is made formal in parachute train skirts, balloon-backed broken denim jackets, rustling cellophane opera capes and fluro recycled fur stoles and hats. The glitter of rhinestones, silver, and fluro yellow pervades, becoming an almost literal example of ‘local colour’; inspired by the glass frontages and workman’s safety vests to be found on the city’s streets.

Exaggerated, platformed and oversized, the take on the Baguette itself also shares something of these silhouettes’ grand gestures – elongated and gleaming, replete with multiple mini versions of itself attached. ‘Fendi at Tiffany’s’ might be the name for the meeting of these two grand edifices. Here, the storied New York institution takes on the Baguette and reimagines it in its most precious of forms, through its use of sterling silver, enamel, croco, white gold and diamonds.

The T and the F complement each other in logo white gold fastenings, encrusted in diamonds while shining crocodile takes on the hue of Tiffany Blue – a colour which also irresistibly permeates the Fendi clothing palette. Perhaps most startling of all is an unprecedented Baguette made entirely of stippled sterling silver. Crafted by hand over a period of four months by the Tiffany artisans, the bag is engraved with lilies and roses – the national flower of Italy and New York State, respectively. It is also the first of Fendi’s ‘Hand in Hand’ partnerships to come from outside Italy and is a measure of Tiffany & Co’s superlative
craftsmanship.

“It’s not a bag, it’s a Baguette,” declared Sarah Jessica Parker in Sex and the City and the pop apotheosis of the Baguette was complete. It is a statement that is also inscribed inside each of SJP’s capsule bags, or rather Baguettes. Designed alongside SVF (that’s Silvia Venturini Fendi), embroidered in degradé sequins with a palette of purple, wasabi, baby pink or soft blue, the bags feature four interchangeable buckles to suit the wearer’s mood.

In contrast, the supreme utility of the Japanese luggage brand Porter, gives the Baguette a decidedly masculine bent. Known for their hard-wearing bonded nylon – that nevertheless exudes beauty and luxury – together with precision Japanese craftsmanship, here lightness and functionality are key. The Porter collection is also a proponent of one of the Baguette’s latest incarnations: the Bum Baguette.

25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine
25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine


25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine
25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine


25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine
25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine


25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine
25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine


25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine
25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine


25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine
25 years Fendi Baguette New York Show - Fendi Resort 2023 Runway Magazine

Photo Courtesy: Fendi / GettyImages

September 9, 2022

New York Fashion Week 2022 Opening Night

New York Fashion Week 2022 Opening Night. New York Fashion Week 2022 is a swag – New York Mayor Eric Adams. Story by Eleonora de Gray, Editor-in-Chief of RUNWAY MAGAZINE.

Yep, it’s official. New York Fashion Week is a swag, according to nightlife New York Mayor Eric Adams. And yes, he opened New York Fashion Week last night, the night when the whole world mourn Queen Elizabeth II.

“New York is as cool as can be right now,” Eric Adams said in his opening speech, “in Gracie Mansion with this room full of folks with swag.”

Swag – Swagger meaning: walk or behave in a very arrogant or aggressive way.

Swag is a slang which came from 1960s. Back there it meant “loot”, and it came from a term thieves used to describe stolen goods. And it is how, according to Merriam-Webster, swag became a new world for “freebies”, promotional free given goods. Where New York Mayor Eric Adams got this slang from, you might ask? Check out his biography. Former policemen, who straighten up his life after looting. Does he really?

New York Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Steven Kolb, CFDA CEO - NYFW 2022
New York Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Steven Kolb, CFDA CEO - NYFW 2022

New York Mayor Eric Adams was co-hosting the opening party with Steven Kolb, CEO of the Council of the Fashion Designers of America (CFDA), and Anna Wintour. This is the second fashion week since Adams took office. During his first, in February, he was seen sitting in the front row at Michael Kors’s runway show, beside Wintour. He also attended the Met Gala, and Balenciaga show.

New York Times published a very sarcastic article “Mr. Mayor, Who Are You Wearing?” about this opening New York Fashion Week night and Eric Adams.

Vanity Fair went even further: “The New York Times recently published a front-page story that focused on the mechanics and finances of Adams’s regular evenings at the restaurant Osteria La Baia, which is run by two friends, the brothers Robert and Zhan Petrosyants, who pleaded guilty to felony charges in 2014 after federal prosecutors accused them of money laundering.” And this is just top of the hill.

That night went “swaggingly” well.

New York Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Steven Kolb, CFDA CEO - NYFW 2022
New York Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Steven Kolb, CFDA CEO - NYFW 2022

Eric Adams published on his instagram several photos about this event with the description: “There’s a reason New York City is home to Fashion Week, just look around our city and check out all the incredible style! It was an honor to join CFDA and Vogue Magazine last night to help kick off New York Fashion Week 2022. Let’s head to the runway!”

He received massive wave of the comments like this one: “Are you going to get the drug addicts, criminals. and homeless off the street or just continue to prance around like a socialite???”

To add here New York officials recently declared a disaster due to polio outbreak In New York which have infected THOUSANDS in the state. It comes after officials announced the detection of the virus in wastewater in April 2022. But how this problem can be compared to fashion, and “business” dinners at Osteria La Baia, owned by felons-friends?

But let’s face it, the best way according to the Mayor Adams is to battle criminals with fashion. In the article on CFDA website, describing this evening and speech of Eric Adams, he was expressing his admiration to fashion and his personal fashion sense, “When I want to place emphasis on ending gun violence, a designer comes to me to design my tuxedo with “End Gun Violence” on the back of it drawn over the entire subway system to show we must be safe in our city.”

That’s one way to do it…. But not the way a mayor should. Even Mayor in “Jews” didn’t go that far!

New York Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Steven Kolb, Michael Kors, Thom Browne - NYFW 2022
New York Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Steven Kolb, Michael Kors, Thom Browne - NYFW 2022

Eric Adams also expressed his admiration to Anna Wintour: “No person personifies the spirit and energy more than Anna, the Angel that Wears Prada. Her love for this city is remarkable. Her dedication, commitment, and how she talks about what this city will become.” Another personal friend, I presume.

Mayor Adams is also announced that “This week, we will move about and know you are a 600-million-dollar juggernaut just in this week alone. That is twice the amount we make than if we had the Superbowl here. You bring the economy to the city with 100,000 employees, 100 million dollars’ tax revenue; you bring the character, the posture, and the stance of this city; you are the exclamation point of New York. New York is back! We are live; we will bring the artistic energy and the diversity we are known for. We will make this a signature event every year that I am Mayor.”

Who gave him these numbers? These numbers were valid when designers like Ralph Lauren participated in New York Fashion Week. But I guess these numbers were not calculated by the participants at the New York Fashion Week. These are just global numbers of fashion business in USA. Who he wants to fool? This New York Fashion Week, like any other previous fashion week is a week presenting mainly emerging designers who don’t have this kind of money to invest in one show, and hire so many people. Get real!

Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Tommy Hilfiger at Gracie Mansion - NYFW 2022 opening
Mayor Eric Adams, Anna Wintour, Tommy Hilfiger at Gracie Mansion - NYFW 2022 opening

Steven Kolb, CFDA CEO, was also quite pleased with the new New York administration and the way Mayor is handling the fashion industry. “I love that he opened Gracie Mansion. Mayor Di Blasio did this 8 years ago, but this is different. He supported manufacturing initiatives and economic development; he saw it and elevated and collaborated on it. Mayor Adams sees that too, but he also sees the creativity. He understands the seriousness of fashion but also the magic of it,” he said.

This evening attended “swaggers”: Tommy Hilfiger, Michael Kors, Thom Browne, Tory Burch, Vera Wang, Stan Herman, Andrew Bolton, Victor Glemaud, Karlie Kloss, Aurora James, Emily Ratajkowski, Cynthia Rowley, Rebecca Minkoff, Stacy Bendet, Lauren Santo Domingo, Derek Blasberg, Willy Chavarria, Dee Ocleppo, Bach Mai and Carly Cushnie among others.

Swag it all off, guys! Perhaps this is a time for a new clean start for these emerging designers who are so eager to show what they are capable of. After all New York is always rich on talents.

Photo Courtesy: Mayor Eric Adams / BFA

July 25, 2022

Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Best of

Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Best of.
Dior Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 folklore and tradition “From Ukraine with love”.

The tree of life is at the heart of Ukrainian artist Olesia Trofymenko’s work, and the starting point for the Dior fall winter 2022-2023 Haute Couture collection designed by Maria Grazia Chiuri. Painting and embroidery give an emotional charge to this image that is a symbol for different far-flung cultures and mythologies.

Dior Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Dior Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 Runway Magazine


Virginie Viard, artistic director of Chanel invited artist Xavier Veilhan to collaborate for this collection. He made a film with blurred dog, car and the shark, featuring himself alongside Chanel ambassador Charlotte Casiraghi, musician Sebastien Tellier and model Vivienne Rohner. Virginie Viard adored this fantasy universe, populated by animals and playfully shaped objects.

Chanel Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Chanel Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine

Giorgio Armani Privé Fall Winter 2022-2023 explores realism, a distinctive trait within Giorgio Armani’s style, always filtered through his personal vision and interpreted through refined art, is a constant presence in a collection that arises from the need to give new space to sparkle and frivolity, offering an escape into dreams and creativity.

Giorgio Armani Prive Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Giorgio Armani Prive Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine

Balenciaga Couture Fall 2022-2023 “Latex on, latex off and Daft Punk forever”. 

Black, faceless, masked, and latexed Balenciaga couture collection 51 presented today by Demna Gvasalia / Demna of Destruction. This show was some sort of kaleidoscope of disorder, peasant jean looks as a reminded of Levi’s prisoner uniform from the beginning of XX century in California, known today as model 501, Daft Punk helmets, fabulous pieces from the archives by Cristóbal Balenciaga, founder of the house. Today it is all Couture according to Demna. But where’s Couture, where’s Balenciaga? And let’s hope he credited Tony Gardner, the original creator of this fabulous glossy helmets / headpieces.

On the runway we saw Kim Kardashian, Nicole Kidman, Bella Hadid, Dua Lipa and Naomi Campbell. Latex on, latex off approach and Daft Punk forever!

Balenciaga Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Balenciaga Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine

Elie Saab Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 “The Beginning of Twilight” . 

Another collection of Elie Saab with voluminous shiluettes and beads…. lots and lots of beads. Read carpet dresses more and more becoming “Stay Home” dress-robes. It is another collection of Elie Saab we all know. You’ve seen one, you’ve seen them all. Elie Saab enveloped the mystery, and we wrapped it up.

Elie Saab Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Elie Saab Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 Runway Magazine

Zuhair Murad Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 “Hamsa, ever watching eye”.

This is one of the most beautiful stories told at this Haute Couture fashion week in Paris. Zuhair Murad in every creation told a magic story about hamsa, tarot, horoscope, mystery of birth. Each and every pieces was embroidered or painted with one story.

Inspired by the ethereal art of Daria Hlazatova, Zuhair Murad engenders a collection in which cryptic and complex symbols prevail. Here immeasurable stars abound; elsewhere, myriad eyes, windows to the soul, draw benevolence and purity. A prominent place is reserved for the eye in a part of the collection, whether allowing moonlight to filter through silver embroidery, or centered on the fabrics, gathering its folds with absolute tenderness.


Zuhair Murad Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Zuhair Murad Haute Couture Fall 2022-2023 Runway Magazine


What exactly Olivier Rousteing did with archives of Jean Paul Gaultier? Or even better, what exactly he created out of iconic pieces of Jean Paul Gaultier? Well, nothing. Absolutely nothing! He simply recreated them – he is so good at recreation… although it was NOT an idea…

Master of copy, Olivier Rousteing was invited officially to see the archives and re-fresh the looks of Jean Paul Gaultier. He is a master of reproducing. “Jean Paul such big inspiration,” – said Olivier Rousteing, and getting into his archives such great possibilities for copy, I might add. We only can imagine how he feels, like a little boy in a candy factory. Rather than visiting libraries, taking pictures of the famous looks from old magazines, as he did for years, and reproducing them, Olivier Rousteing got the access to the archives.

Jean Paul Gaultier by Olivier Rousteing - Couture Fall 2022 Runway Magazine
Jean Paul Gaultier by Olivier Rousteing - Couture Fall 2022 Runway Magazine


“This season, I wanted to step away from Rome, or at least I wanted to place Rome in a global context,” says Kim Jones, Artistic Director of Couture and Womenswear. “In this collection, we are looking at fragments of different cities, namely Kyoto, Paris and Rome. The fragmentary nature of things is echoed throughout the collection, like snatches of memory or the impression of things past, present and future.”

This season Jones and the craftspeople of the Fendi ateliers approach the couture collection as a palimpsest, where iterations, transparencies and fragments of the past go to make up the present and move subtly into the future.

Fendi Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine
Fendi Haute Couture Fall Winter 2022-2023 Runway Magazine


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