Phoebe Philo has previewed its collection C on its webstore phoebephilo.com. The collection will be delivered from mid-year 2025 and will run through to November.
Phoebe Philo collection C
It will be available exclusively online at the label’s own webstore as well as via dedicated shop-in-shops at Galeries LafayetteHaussmann Paris, Dover Street Market London, and through select global wholesale partners.
Categories include ready-to-wear, leather goods, shoes and accessories.
Beyond that, there’s no information available, which is no surprise, the company having chosen a very pared-back approach to its launches since the label first appeared in 2023.
Phoebe Philo collection C
It has avoided the frenzy of catwalk shows as well as taking a very Philo-specific approach to the calendar with alphabetically-named collections and edits rather than straightforward seasons.
In fact, when the label first launched, the work arrived as a series of edits that were revealed and available simultaneously — together forming the first collection. Since October 2024, collections are now revealed in their entirety and in advance of availability, so that’s a small shift towards a more traditional strategy.
Phoebe Philo collection C
It’s a sign of the brand evolving as it has moved from its original online-only approach to adding in availability via very select luxury physical stores.
In November it opened its first shop-in-shop in London at the aforementioned Dover Street Market and only last month opened its first physical store in France, the 50 sq m space in Galeries Lafayette.
Elliott Hill has made his strategy for turning around Nike Inc. very clear in his first five months as chief executive officer: return the sneaker giant to focusing on sports, not fashion.
Nike
Hill has reshaped the company’s organizational chart, overhauled the sports marketing unit and tried to rekindle relationships with key retail customers and pro leagues, including the NFL.
“We lost our obsession with sport,” Hill, who returned to Nike after a long run as one of its top executives, told analysts in December. “Moving forward, we will lead with sport and put the athlete at the center of every decision.”
Investors will get an early read on Hill’s progress when Nike reports earnings on Thursday afternoon. Wall Street isn’t expecting much improvement yet. Analysts project quarterly sales sank 11%, which would be the biggest decline since the depths of Covid five years ago.
The company’s shares have fallen for three straight years. That’s the worst stretch in its history, which went public in 1980. The stock is down about 9% since Hill was announced as CEO in September, bigger than a decline of 1.7% for the S&P 500 Index.
Hill, who officially started in October, refocused Nike back on core sports such as running and basketball. The company had spent the past several years pumping investment into lifestyle products – those worn on the sidewalk, not on the court. That strategy initially boosted growth, but didn’t last, leading to a painful year of job cuts and a CEO change.
“Nike sells a lot of products that are more lifestyle than sport, but the brand’s identity is built off what these products can do for you,” said Simeon Siegel, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets. “That has to start and center around sport.”
Nike is also raising its presence in fitness and activewear through a partnership with Skims, the underwear label founded by celebrity Kim Kardashian. The collaboration, announced in February, is expected to release its first line next year.
Adding to Nike’s challenge is widespread uncertainty in the retail industry as brands contend with fallout from President Donald Trump’s escalating trade wars and softening consumer confidence. Several chains have forecast underwhelming outlooks for this year.
Hints about Nike’s sports renewal began to trickle in shortly after Hill was named its next CEO in September. Nike had become reliant on lifestyle franchises such as Air Force 1s, Dunks and Air Jordans. However, they were losing their allure and new product development at headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, had slowed.
The remaining problem, according to Poonam Goyal, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, is that management must still clear out a pile of unwanted inventory. That’s led to heavy discounts and will hurt in the coming months, she said. Analysts don’t expect the company to return to sales growth until 2026.
Executive Chairman Mark Parker, also a former Nike CEO, told employees in a memo announcing Hill’s appointment that the company needed to realign around product creation and helping athletes reach their full potential. Hill followed by telling staff to expect an “unrelenting focus on our athletes.”
Hill immediately began working to secure Nike’s long-term contract extension with the NFL, which had been considering other bidders for the license to make its on-field uniforms. Then senior management told employees that Nike had begun preparing a global push for its outdoor business, which includes hiking gear like trail shoes and fleece jackets.
Meanwhile, a sports reset took shape as Hill restructured his organizational chart. He segmented Nike’s corporate teams by sport across men’s, women’s and kid’s lines and named basketball, soccer and running as some of the most crucial categories.
Hill also shuffled sports marketing, naming Nike veteran Ann Miller executive vice president of the division. The move, he told employees in a memo, would “empower us to deliver more effectively on our commitment to serving athletes.”
In recent months, Nike has signed agreements with the NFL, NBA, WNBA, FC Barcelona and the Brazilian Football Confederation. It did, however, lose out to rival Puma SE as the soccer ball supplier for England’s Premier League, ending a 25-year partnership.
In December, Hill declared his intention to shift investment away from clicky ads that drive e-commerce traffic to its online shop. He told investors that Nike would “reinvest in our brands” and spend more marketing dollars on major sports moments.
That effort materialized in February, when Nike aired its first commercial at the NFL’s Super Bowl in nearly three decades. It starred many of the company’s top women endorsers: sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson, gymnast Jordan Chiles and basketball stars Caitlin Clark, Sabrina Ionescu and A’ja Wilson.
Hill made the rounds in person too. He flew to New Orleans to host a Super Bowl party. At the NBA All-Star weekend in San Francisco, he promoted a new shoe.
Then, shortly after superstar Luka Doncic, who’s sponsored by Nike’s Jordan brand, was traded by the Dallas Mavericks in a shock deal to the Los Angeles Lakers, the company had an ad for that, too. “Full tank. No Mercy,” it said.
In life, as in advertising, Falconeri has reconnected Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and Jason Statham in the brand’s latest campaign—the first time the real-life couple has jointly appeared in an ad.
Falconeri reconnects Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and Jason Statham in its latest campaign. – Falconi
Jason gets close with fiancée Rosie in Falconeri’s new spring-summer 2025 campaign, in images that capture the minimalist codes and timeless aesthetic of the Italian marque.
For the first time together in front of the ad camera, Huntington-Whiteley and Statham meet in Comporta, a peaceful oasis on the Portuguese coast known for its notable visitors, including Charlotte Casiraghi, and creators such as Sofia Coppola and Philippe Starck.
Photographed by Lachlan Bailey and styled by Geraldine Saglio, the campaign tells the story of a getaway for two and a reconnection with nature.
The artistic influences and architectural lines of the Melides Art Resort in Comporta provide the backdrop for Falconeri’s ultra-fine cashmere. Melides Art, set in a 270-hectare pine forest, is a 10-villa resort whose sand-colored structures have hosted Anselm Kiefer and Christian Louboutin.
Falconeri’s signature knitwear for men and women is shown in a range of different cuts: from a wrap-around turtleneck for women to a long-sleeved polo shirt for men, from a strapless dress with a plunging neckline to a cashmere shirt.
Supermodel Huntington-Whiteley and Fast & Furious star Statham first began dating in 2009 and got engaged in 2016. Now, amid the natural light of the Alentejo Coast and the delicate fibers of Falconeri, they are united in a campaign.
After launching the Entrepreneurship Award with the French Fashion Institute (IFM) to promote young fashion designers back in 2021, French luxury label Ami Paris is now also supporting emerging film directors. At the next edition of the Cannes Film Festival in May, the label by Alexandre Mattiussi will award the Grand Prix Ami Paris, recognising talented young directors.
Ami Paris has announced a new award in support of tomorrow’s film directors, the Grand Prix Ami Paris – Ami Paris
At the intersection of film and fashion: Mattiussi, founder and creative director of Ami Paris, is passionate about cinema, and he is collaborating for the first time with the Cannes festival. The Ami Paris label will be the main partner of this year’s Semaine de la Critique, a parallel section of the Cannes Film Festival created in 1962 to spotlight first and second films by emerging directors.
Promotional focus on young directors
In the last 60 years, the Semaine de la Critique has showcased the talent of names like Jacques Audiard, François Ozon, Justine Triet and Rebecca Zlotowski.
Ami Paris, founded in 2011, will award the Grand Prix Ami Paris for young filmmakers at the next edition of the Semaine de la Critique, scheduled on May 14-22 at the Espace Miramar in Cannes. An international jury will select one of the seven films competing in this section of the festival.
Alexandre Mattiussi, founder and creative director of Ami Paris, and Ava Cahen, CEO of the Semaine de la Critique – Denis Boulze
The award will be a way to zoom in on the work of talented, promising young directors, affording them visibility on the international cinema scene during the highly publicised Cannes Film Festival.