Jack & Jones will soon be carving its first turns on the ski slopes. The budget retailer owned by Danish group Bestseller has entered the market for mountain sports performance apparel, presenting to buyers its first Fall/Winter 2025-26 skiwear collection. An initiative that has been driven by Jack & Jones’s French subsidiary.
“For the last five years, we have been collaborating in France with the high-altitude restaurants of the La Folie Douce chain, creating an apparel range for their employees. They asked us to design a ski suit for them, and we also offered it to Jack & Jones retailers in several countries, where it has worked very well. This led me to urge our parent company to develop a real skiwear line,” said Jara, head of sales on the French market for Jack & Jones. Jara was involved in defining the style codes with the group’s design office in Denmark, as well as testing the products on the slopes.
The Jack & Jones Ski line is extensive, and consists of some 50 items, including the various colourways. It features five pairs of trousers, six jackets, performance underwear, sweatshirts, fleeces and t-shirts, as well as accessories like hats, gloves, skiing goggles etc. “We’ve positioned the line at entry level, with aggressive prices (from €89 for jackets and €59 for trousers), and a medium performance level (a 10,000 index for waterproofing, and 5,000 for breathability),” said Jara.
“The idea isn’t to compete with the private label brands by the likes of Decathlon or Intersport, which are well-established and more classic in design. We’re going for more directional, eye-catching looks and motifs,” he added. For example, orange and black high-altitude prints, marbled effects, bright colours like yellow and sage green.
The line has a 2.8 margin coefficient and is intended for Jack & Jones’s traditional retail network, especially major chains like Intersport or Sport 2000, but also for independent retailers in cities and resorts. The collection is being presented to retailers throughout February for delivery in October 2025, and was recently showcased at the Sport Achat trade show in Grenoble, in the French Alps. “It was the first time we attended [the show], and we made good contacts. Many were amazed at the prices we quoted. We’re targeting occasional consumers, for whom going skiing is already quite a spend (transport, accommodation, etc.) and who therefore don’t want to go bust buying their outfits,” said Jara.
Bestseller is commercialising this France-driven skiwear collection in 15 markets, including Italy, Spain and Greece. Next winter, it will also be available at Jack & Jones monobrand stores. In France, the brand is distributed via 1,200 independent retailers and some 50 monobrand stores. The latter’s number is growing, and the plan is to have 80 addresses in France by the end of 2025.
Like Kate Moss and Alexa Chung, Chloë Sevigny is one of those enduring style icons who don’t seem to change but always stay in style and remain in high demand for ad campaigns.
Just a day after it was revealed that Moss is fronting Isabel Marant’s latest campaign, Sevigny has been unveiled as the SS25 face of Jimmy Choo, fronting the marketing for its shoes, bags and eyewear this season.
The campaign features the brand’s new collection, Hyper Glamour.
Conceived by Paris-based Ezra Petronio and Lana Petrusevych, of Petronio Associates, it “evokes the energy, polish and playful attitude of the early 2000s; as embodied by Chloë Sevigny — an icon and arbiter of taste, then and now”.
It comprises a series of visuals and films with minimal sets, that play with colour themes in the collection, “ensuring an acute focus on Chloë” and hero shoe, bag and eyewear styles.
The Oscar-nominated actor is known for her roles in films such as Kids and Boys Don’t Cry, as well as her TV performances in Big Love and Monsters.
We’re told thatSevigny “brings her unique charisma and creative energy to the campaign. Her confident presence and nonchalant attitude draw the viewer into her world mirroring her effortless and innate style. The campaign’s clean aesthetic and cropped focus frames Chloë as she questions traditional notions of glamour and ultimately redefines them according to her own rules”.
The brand’s creative director Sandra Choi said that Sevigny “embodies the spirit of the Jimmy Choo woman – confident, effortless and good fun – she’s alluringly comfortable in her skin possessing a strong sense of self, it’s an energy that draws you in”.
Fast-fashion e-tail giant Shein’s planned £50 billion float on the London Stock Exchange has another obstacle to overcome, this time in the shape Donald Trump and European regulators. The US President wants to close a tax loophole central to the fashion giant’s business model.
Trump has promised to scrap the ‘de minimis’ exemption for small packages worth less than $800 (£645) that are shipped from China, Canada and Mexico to the US. The rules mean small packages mailed directly to US home addresses currently avoid import taxes.
The loophole has allowed retailers including Shein to avoid paying customs duties by shipping small orders directly to customers. Estimates compiled by the US select committee on the Chinese Communist Party last year suggested that Shein and fellow Chinese online store Temu were responsible for almost 600,000 packages shipped to the US every day that were under the $800 threshold.
It raises the prospect of much higher duty costs for Shein, given the vast majority of its US sales are shipped in small packages. So the impending tax changes cast doubt over whether the Chinese company can push ahead with its London IPO.
Clive Black, of Shore Capital, told Sky News: “Depending on where they are in the process, it could be distinctly unhelpful … I would think that every Chinese company trading with America at the moment is thinking that they need to understand the lay of the land here.”
Shein made $8.5 billion in revenues from the US in 2023, according to GlobalData, equal to around 28% of its global revenues. GlobalData spokesman Neil Saunders said the removal of the de minimis benefit was “potentially very disruptive”, adding that it had “the potential to dampen investor sentiment”.
Although the full scope of the changes is yet to be made clear and Shein has been diversifying where it ships from, the fashion giant could be facing hundreds of millions of dollars in additional import duties. H&M, for example, paid $205 million in import fees in 2022, government figures showed.
Wayne Brown, of Panmure Liberum, told Sky the US clampdown suggested similar moves could be coming in other markets. He said: “It raises the prospect that the EU will do the same and that the UK and other countries may follow.” There has been heavy criticism of the tax loophole from local European and UK businesses.
Shein’s planned listing in London would mark one of the biggest deals this year and is thought to be supported by the government. However, doubts have already been mounting about the listing as the company faces scrutiny over alleged abuses in its supply chain.
Earlier this week, campaigners at Stop Uyghur Genocide launched a judicial review process to block the Chinese fast fashion empire’s planned float. The group has pointed to alleged evidence to indicate that Shein has benefitted from forced labour. The claims have been denied by the Chinese company, which has said it “strictly prohibits forced labour in its supply chain globally”.
U.S. skincare giant Neutrogena has announced the appointment of Tate McRae as its newest brand face, with the Kenvue-owned beauty brand unveiling a new campaign featuring the Canadian pop-star.
As a Neutrogena global ambassador, McRae will be featured in the skincare brand’s marketing initiatives across multiple platforms, including TV, social, digital, point of sale, “and will also integrate the brand into her own future projects,” according to a press release.
Kicking off her ambassadorship, the starlet features in Neutrogena’s new ‘Beauty to a Science’ campaign, which spotlights products from its recognised Hydro Boost range, including the Water Gel.
“I’m thrilled to partner with Neutrogena – a brand I’ve trusted since I was young. What I love about this campaign is how real it feels. We’ve all been there—those moments where your brain just won’t stop spiraling, and the last thing you need is the overthinking messing up your skin,” said McRae.
“That’s why I’m obsessed with Hydro Boost. It keeps my skin hydrated and is the perfect reminder that skincare doesn’t have to be complicated to work.”
Born in Calgary, Alberta, McRae, 21, has shot to fame in recent years as a chart-topping artist and dancer for her hits including ‘Greedy’ and ‘You Broke Me First,” among other tracks. In February, the singer will release her third album, “So Close to What”,before hitting the road for a world tour.
“By featuring Tate and her infectious energy, alongside Dr. Shah, whose expertise helped to make him the most followed dermatologist on social media, we’re bridging the gap between beauty and science, creating a powerful message for the next generation,” said Andrew Stanleick, Kenvue president of skin health and beauty in North America, Europe, Middle East, and Africa.
“With Neutrogena Hydro Boost, we’re redefining hydration and showing how skincare can empower you to feel your best every day.”
In its most recent trading update in November, parent firm Kenvue Inc. announced third quarter net sales decreased 0.4% to $3.89 billion, on the back of falling skin health and beauty segment sales.