Roberto Cavalli has announced the opening of a new boutique at Via Santo Spirito 24 in Milan, in the heart of the Quadrilatero della Moda. The location also becomes the hub of the Roberto Cavalli Atelier, the Maison’s “temple of haute couture,” where the house’s creations have always come to life. Covering 160 square metres, the new store opens onto the street with a glass-fronted entrance and two flanking display windows; the interior design blends historic elements of Milanese architecture- as the original marble terrazzo flooring with decorations typical of early 20th-century Milan- with a contemporary language aligned with the Maison’s aesthetic.
The new Roberto Cavalli store on Via Santo Spirito in Milan
The interiors are characterised by a neutral, luminous palette, with warm white walls paired with Roberto Cavalli Home beige fabric-effect wallpaper while furnishings and garment rails in polished champagne gold create a sophisticated atmosphere. The focal point of the space is a semi-circular wall clad in Roberto Cavalli Home wallcovering, embellished with the maison’s logo in polished gold, which shapes the layout and introduces the various retail areas; accessory tables in champagne gold and glass, perimeter rails, and integrated changing rooms guide customers through the shopping experience. A second level, dedicated to accessories and footwear, is arranged around a central relaxation area and is complemented by display systems for eyewear and belts.
Louis Vuitton has announced the opening of a pop-up store in New York, open until April and devoted entirely to its monogram, to celebrate the 130th anniversary of the French maison’s iconic motif. Located in SoHo and hotel-inspired, the pop-up offers a series of immersive spaces dedicated to the maison’s most celebrated designs: Speedy, Keepall, Noé, Alma, and Neverfull, as well as exclusive new editions of the monogram.
Louis Vuitton’s pop-up in New York
Visitors can explore the Keepall Lobby and the Noé Champagne Bar before heading to the Alma Terrace, while a dedicated service area showcases Louis Vuitton’s savoir-faire and allows customers to bring their bags in for repair. Visitors can also take advantage of personalisation services, including hot stamping and distinctive patches, offered exclusively at the pop-up.
Spanish label Loewe is continuing the global expansion of its Casa Loewe concept by opening a new boutique in Tokyo’s Ginza district, strengthening its presence in Asia with a space that is the brand’s second-largest store worldwide.
Loewe arrives in Ginza, Tokyo
The new boutique reinterprets the brand’s Spanish heritage through the lens of Japanese design, with a palette of greens, earthy materials, and a façade clad in handmade ceramic tiles. Defined by a warm, luminous aesthetic, the Casa Loewe concept was first unveiled in 2016 at the brand’s flagship in Madrid; since then, it has gradually expanded to several major cities internationally, with notable openings in Seoul, Chicago and, most recently, Shanghai.
Polène, a French leather goods brand founded in 2016, has chosen Milan to inaugurate its first Italian boutique, at 37 Via Alessandro Manzoni, adding to the stores already present in Paris (two standalones and a corner inside the Le Bon Marché department store), New York, Tokyo, Seoul, London, Hamburg, Copenhagen, and Beijing (the last two both opened last November).
Polène’s first Italian boutique is on Via Manzoni in Milan
Conceived by Norm Architects, the project draws on Milanese architectural codes: understated, discreet façades and bright, detail-rich interiors. The 343-square-metre boutique is entered via a stone-dominated entrance inspired by Milanese flooring, followed by a space dedicated to textiles that leads into the world of leather; finally, the last area is clad in ceramics. The Craft at Work immersive experience extends the exploration with the Leather Orchestra: in a small dedicated space, visitors become conductors of an ensemble of leather panels, where material and sound meet in a unique performance.
The German chain dm will open its second store in Ravenna on January 15, a 550-square-metre space inside the Teodora Shopping Centre, reaching 96 stores in Italy and 11 in Emilia-Romagna.
dm opens second store in Ravenna
“Every new opening is, first and foremost, an opportunity for us to build relationships and create value locally,” said Benjamin Schneider, CEO of dm Italia. “Being present in Ravenna with a second store… represents a concrete investment at the local level: nine employees will work there, within an environment that is consistently attentive to continuous training and service quality, hallmark elements of the dm approach, and its corporate culture.”
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The house of Dior has named UK actor Josh O’Connor to be its latest brand ambassador, joining soccer legend Kylian Mbappé in the brand’s style diplomatic corps.
Josh O’Connor for Dior – George Eyres
“Dior is delighted to welcome Josh O’Connor as the new ambassador for Jonathan Anderson’s collections,” the Paris-based house said in a release.
The actor had previously been a presence at several runway shows of J.W. Anderson, who was appointed overall creative director of Dior in June 2025.
O’Connor first grabbed attention and international fame with his performance as Prince Charles in hit series The Crown- for which he won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor .
Subsequently, he has garnered critical acclaim in a variety of films, including Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers, in which he wore clothes designed by Anderson in this studied melodrama about competing players and emotions in tennis.
O’Connor has also worked with Guadagnino in an ad campaign for Aston Martin, shooting an elegiac road movie short in sun-dried Sicily.
“Josh O’Connor embodies a singular, sensitive, and undeniably modern expression of masculine elegance, perfectly in sync with the contemporary Dior style,” added Dior about the Cheltenham, England-raised thespian.
The Very Group has published its results for Q1 of FY26 (the 13 weeks to late September 2025) and they show the e-tail giant still loss-making but seeing “further improvements in profitability and a return to top-line growth compared to the same period in the prior year”.
The launch of The Very Collection in September 2025 was a key development for Very UK
It comes after what it described as “robust” results for FY25, even though they included a major pre-tax loss linked to a writedown of an inter-company loan made to the then-controlling Barclay family’s holding company as lenders prepared to take over the business.
Now owned by major lender Carlyle and reportedly up for sale, the company said that the market remains challenging but the group saw revenue growth of 2.4% to £460.8 million in Q1. At the star Very UK operation, revenue (which accounts for the bulk of the firm’s total retail sales) rose 3.7% to £406.7 million.
Growth was achieved in both Retail revenue with group sales of goods up 0.9% to £341.3 million and in Finance revenue, which jumped 5.8% to £112.9 million.
The company added that the Very UK operation saw strong results within its higher-margin Home category that rose 10.9% year on year, while its Sports offering increased 12.3% following the introduction of a number of key new brands in the second half of the previous year.
Meanwhile the Toys and Beauty category continue to perform well with 6.4% growth, of which Beauty alone saw 4.1% growth.
That said, Fashion and Sports combined declined 1% in a tough market but, as mentioned, Sports was strong. Parts of the Fashion market were buoyant as well with a 30.1% increase in casual womenswear sales, in part supported by the launch of its new own-brand offering The Very Collection in September 2025. Given that Q1 only ran until the end of that month, it looks likely that the collection will be able to contribute even more in the future.
This all led to gross profit rising to £173.4 million from £163.3 million, or a statutory gross margin rate of 37.6% up 1.3%pts.
It also said that its continued focus on cost controls contributed to a 16.3% increased in pre-exceptional EBITDA to £63.4 million.
That said, it still made a total pre-tax loss of £24.9 million, wider than the £23.1 million loss in the previous year. Similarly, the net loss of £31.4 million was larger than a loss of £23.1 million of the year before, although the company is clearly moving in the right direction on an underlying basis.
UK property giant British Land is looking for a new CEO. Simon Carter’s five-year tenure at the top oversaw the firm’s successful pivot to a retail park focus. He’s departing after an 18-year total association to head European logistics properties firm P3 Logistics Parks.
British Land’s Nugent Shopping Park, south London
His departure comes with a 12-month notice period so there’ll be no immediate hurry to sign a replacement.
Carter first joined British Land in 2004, working in several roles across Strategy, Corporate Finance and Treasury before leaving in 2015 to become CFO at Quintain Estates & Development and then Logicor. He returned to British Land as CFO in 2018 and was appointed CEO in 2020.
William Rucker, chairman, said: “I want to thank Simon for his significant contribution to British Land. During his 18 years here across two stints he has achieved a huge amount, and as CEO has positioned the business for future success with a very strong management team and an exceptional London office campus and retail park platform.”
Carter added: “British Land has been a huge part of my professional life, and it has been a privilege to work for such a fantastic business.
“The contrarian calls we made post-pandemic have positioned British Land for long-term success. There is never a perfect time to move on, but I will be leaving the business with market-leading positions in London campuses and retail parks – both of which are benefitting from strong rental growth in supply-constrained markets.”