Pitti Uomo has announced Soshi Otsuki as guest designer for its upcoming winter edition (January 13 to 16, 2025). The Japanese designer, winner of the LVMH Prize for Young Fashion Designers in 2025, will take centre stage in Florence with a special catwalk show dedicated to his eponymous brand, written ‘Soshiotsuki’.
Soshi Otsuki
“Meeting Soshi Otsuki in Tokyo and stepping into his world, we felt an immediate affinity and did not hesitate: we promptly offered him a premiere at the January edition of Pitti Uomo,” said Francesca Tacconi, special events coordinator at Pitti Immagine.
“It has been fifteen years since I tried- on four occasions- to enter a fashion competition in Italy, which I ultimately never won. At the time, I thought Japan’s sombre atmospheres were ill-suited to a sky as bright as Italy’s, and I set the idea aside. Now, more than a decade later, it is a great honour for me to be able to show in Florence. I am intrigued and excited to see, today, the effect of Soshiotsuki’s clothes under the Italian sky,” said the designer.
Born in 1990, Soshi Otsuki launched his eponymous menswear label in 2015. His second collection was shortlisted for the 2016 LVMH Prize, while in 2019 he received the Tokyo New Designer Award.
Otsuki, who graduated in menswear from Bunka Fashion College, draws on Japan’s classical performing arts in his creative process, translating them into fashion through tailoring and craftsmanship executed with meticulous attention to detail.
“An ideal of ambitious clarity emerges from Soshi’s work, grounded in a constant dialogue with a millennia-old tradition, yet imbued with modern sartorial awareness,” said Francesca Tacconi. “It is Made in Japan filtered through the lens of Made in Italy: the reference is to the years of the ‘baburu keiki’ [the Japanese economic bubble in the mid-1980s], when men in Tokyo wore Armani- wore Italian. The language, however, is contemporary and decidedly anti-nostalgic, recoded according to the desires of the present, with a subtle yet effective commercial bent.”
Soshiotsuki also created the outfit for the new campaign tied to the theme of the upcoming edition of Pitti Uomo.
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Lenzing AG will have to move forward without Rohit Aggarwal, who only assumed the role of CEO in summer 2024 following Suzano’s entry as a shareholder at the Austrian fibre producer. Aggarwal has informed the Supervisory Board that he is stepping down from his position for personal reasons with effect from January 31. However, to ensure a seamless transition, he intends to support Lenzing as an adviser until the end of September 2026.
Rohit Aggarwal will step down as CEO at the end of January. – Lenzing
Following Aggarwal’s departure, Lenzing AG will initially be led by a three-member Management Board. As part of the company’s ongoing organisational development and to underpin its recently sharpened premiumisation strategy, Lenzing AG is establishing a new six-member Executive Committee.
The Executive Committee will comprise the three-member Lenzing AG Management Board and will be complemented by the company’s senior commercial managers Patricia Sargeant (Nonwovens), Yann Lepage (Textile Fibres), and Anton Putz (Pulp).
By introducing the new Executive Committee, Lenzing AG aims to strengthen its strategic focus on business opportunities in the premium fibre segment. The goal is to expand its position as a leading integrated premium provider of regenerated cellulose fibres.
The Supervisory Board has already initiated the process to appoint a successor to the CEO and will announce a new appointment in due course.
“Increasing structural profitability remains a key objective. The Management Board will continue to focus resolutely on strengthening the company’s competitive position, financial performance and sustainable value creation – with the aim of further consolidating Lenzing’s position as the global market leader in sustainable cellulose fibres,” said Supervisory Board chairman Patrick Lackenbucher.
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Delsey turns its focus to international markets. The luggage brand has just announced the appointment of its new global managing director, Gilles Bariguian. He will lead the group into a new phase of accelerated international expansion, a move upmarket, and towards profitable growth as the brand approaches its 80th anniversary in 2026.
Gilles Bariguian brings extensive experience in luxury and international markets – Delsey
“I am delighted and honoured to be working with the teams to elevate the brand and open a new chapter of global development in a rapidly changing mobility market. Delsey is no longer just a travel brand; it now caters to every moment of mobility, a market that has evolved significantly since the Covid-19 period,” said Gilles Bariguian.
Diversifying its international presence
With 20 years’ experience at Procter & Gamble across four continents, and roles at Guess EMEA, Etoile Group (specialising in luxury in the Middle East), and Cenomi (a department-store chain in Saudi Arabia), Delsey’s new global managing director will be tasked with steering the Parisian brand’s international expansion. At the same time, he will continue his consulting work with the Saudi Fashion Commission and its 100 Brands programme.
With its strongest presence in the US (2,561 points of sale) and Europe (1,688), the brand counts just over 300 points of sale in Asia and 111 across the Arabian Peninsula.
Beyond international expansion, the objectives of the new global managing director are to accelerate digital transformation, broaden the product portfolio, and build sustainable, profitable growth for Delsey, a company founded in 1946.
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Amazon has agreed with Italy’s tax collection agency to pay 510 million euros ($582 million) to settle a tax dispute in the country, two sources close to the matter said on Wednesday.
Amazon logo is seen in this illustration created on February 11, 2025 – REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
However, in an unusual development, Milan’s prosecutors are in disagreement with the accord between the revenue agency and the U.S. tech company and plan to continue their investigation, two other sources said.
The prosecutors, who suspect evasion amounting to some 1.2 billion euros related to 2019-2021, expect to wrap up their probe early next year, according to the second two sources familiar with the investigation.
The prosecutors are also conducting two other investigations into the company – one involving alleged tax evasion relating to 2021-2024, and another involving alleged customs and tax fraud involving Chinese imports.