For his latest Vuitton collection, Pharrell Williams tapped his best bud Nigo to be co-creative director. And Bernard Arnault made it back from the Trump inauguration to see it.
On Tuesday evening of Paris Fashion Week, the menswear set made the now-traditional pilgrimage from Auralee’s temple of elegance and grace to the Louis Vuitton Men’s show. The back-to-back is usually cause for whiplash.
The musician, producer, designer, and style icon just launched the third series of the Tiffany Titan collection.
Pharrell Williams kicks off Paris Fashion Week with Louis Vuitton streetwear show - The show established Louis Vuitton as the luxury leader in streetwear.
Louis Vuitton men's creative director, Pharrell Williams, drew his audience to a rear courtyard of the Louvre Museum after dark on Tuesday for a fall-winter catwalk show, kicking off Paris Fashion Week with a line-up of jazzed up streetwear.
The new men’s collection from LVMH’s crown jewel came with a heavy dose of nostalgia – plus hues of pink and dustings of glitter
The makeup maven collaborated with the founder of Humanrace Skincare to create a hyper-hydrated men's beauty moment.
Now sitting at the top of the luxury pyramid, the longtime acolytes employed rich textures and sophisticated details to dandify their signature silhouettes.
Inside, the drama continued with Hitchcockian flourishes, as an orchestra set the tone for Pharrell Williams’ latest menswear collection for LV, the crown jewel of conglomerate, LVMH.
Pharrell Williams commenced Men’s Paris Fashion Week with a streetwear-heavy show for Louis Vuitton. The brand’s creative director, 51, designed the collection with his old friend and artistic director of Kenzo, Nigo.
Pharrell Williams, Louis Vuitton's men's creative director, launched Paris Fashion Week with a vibrant streetwear collection at the Louvre, collaborating with Japanese designer Nigo. Despite a slowing global market,
This week Tiffany & Co debuted the new Titan Setting, which creates the illusion of a hovering diamond. The effect is possible thanks to the Floeting “platform”, a patented creation from a New Zealand jewellery company that includes a micro-engineered round brilliant diamond and its accompanying mounting, set without prongs or bezels.