Design enthusiasts already know the name Ruohan Nie. The rapidly acclaimed, award-winning style of her feminine, sustainably made luxury pieces has propelled her into the select circle of designers on the official Paris Fashion Week calendar from 2023 onwards. The young designer has built her career along an atypical path, to say the least, in a creative industry that often enforces standardisation.
Portrait of Ruohan Nie – Ruohan
At the offices of Spread the Communication, the young woman and her brand’s CEO, Waël Benkerrour, are preparing for one of their first extended interviews. Asked about her childhood, Ruohan Nie opens up. She grew up near Beijing, in a quiet “little” city of ten million called Tianjin, whose colonial heritage and myriad multicultural influences sparked her interest in the wider world. The daughter of two English teachers, she was introduced to the piano with rigour at a very young age (she laughingly refers to it as the “Chinese way”), an instrument she played until she was eighteen, as well as the flute.
A beginning between passion and inexperience
Until then, a career in fashion wasn’t really on the cards. After finishing secondary school, Ruohan Nie applied to traditional universities to study mathematics or history. But, having fallen for fashion at seventeen, she decided to apply to internationally recognised fashion schools, including Central Saint Martins. After facing rejections, the young woman sent her end-of-term music video to Parsons School of Design in New York, which accepted her- a successful gamble.
Ruohan Nie now works across China, Japan, and Europe. – Ruohan
In her first year, she went to study in Paris as an exchange student. During her year in Paris, the future fashion designer undertook a refreshing and unexpected internship with her professor, Australian artist Mel O’Callaghan, who was then working on bird saliva, used in Chinese cosmetics. Back in New York, Ruohan Nie began exploring 3D fashion design. The young artist then undertook a number of internships in the industry, following the lead of her friends, who had long been attuned to the industry’s tastes.
Internships, a panorama of the industry
She worked for Jenny Yoo, The Row, La Garçonne, and Shaina Mote. For the latter label, she went to work in Los Angeles, where she collaborated with local artists. “It was my favourite internship,” she admits, seated on a designer sofa. Meeting organiser, purchasing assistant, content creator… Ruohan Nie has tried her hand at several roles in the industry. “I often stayed on the surface. If I had my time again, I’d go deeper to learn more,” she admits.
The designer joined Paris Fashion Week in 2023 – Ruohan
The adventure of her eponymous label began in 2020, when she founded her brand after winning the Chinese Institute of America’s fashion design competition. Less than a year after graduating, Ruohan Nie won the Lane Crawford x Labelhood Special Fund in 2021, a fund dedicated to promising young Chinese designers. The designer staged her first show in Shanghai in September of the same year.
While lockdown dragged on in China, she applied to Paris Fashion Week (PFW) in 2022. Pascal Morand, Executive President of the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode (FHCM), who had already spotted the label, then added it to the official calendar starting with the spring/summer 2023 season- a presence that continues to this day. Beyond the shows, the brand enjoyed a two-year presence at the Boon gallery in the Marais.
The brand goes international with high-end retailers – Ruohan
For Ruohan Nie and Waël Benkerrour, exposure can be achieved in ways other than Fashion Week. The brand recently staged pop-ups in Japan and Canada, and will arrive in Milan next January. With its presence in Japan, its second-largest market, the brand is learning to meet the demands of local customers in terms of composition and values, and is honing a compelling sales pitch.
Going beyond fashion alone
Ruohan Nie’s expertise lies in creation, in all its forms. And when you look at her canvases, it’s clear that she doesn’t limit herself to fashion alone. Her eclectic background has taught her well: all the arts are connected. Her photographs and paintings have even led to requests from several galleries.
Ruohan Nie is developing a discreet, enduring luxury womenswear wardrobe. – Ruohan
Although she turned down the offer for fear of spreading herself too thin, Ruohan Nie knows she is nonetheless being recognised as both designer and artist, and that this aligns with how her profession is evolving. “Designers are changing,” says the designer herself. “People expect something different from what was done in the 1990s. They want more than just fashion to call someone an artistic creator. They expect a clear proposition, beautiful shows, but also a role in art in general.”
Early, decisive recognition
Ruohan Nie’s fledgling career was quickly recognised through awards and selections. The young designer distinguished herself by winning the Yu Creative Impact Prize in 2022, by her presence at Paris Fashion Week as early as 2023, and at the 2024 edition of the ANDAM Prize, where she reached the final stage. A few months ago, she also won the Sustasia Fashion Prize, focused on sustainable practices and innovation, during Shanghai Fashion Week.
The Ruohan brand quickly won awards and grants – Ruohan
All these accolades have had a decisive impact on her current state of mind. “It’s all about momentum, which is why I set myself goals,” she explains. “These awards are a test: are you good enough to succeed in the industry?” These distinctions have propelled her into another dimension, and her aim is to maintain this momentum for as long as possible. But, “the end is part of the game,” she acknowledges, recalling the “depressing” documentaries on Martin Margiela and Alexander McQueen.
What does the future hold for her label?
“Recognition for artistic brands can help you work at a major house,” she adds, confidently. Confident because, with around 500 looks produced per year with her label and even more sketches, Ruohan Nie rarely runs out of ideas. For her, a major house means other resources, a new dimension.
Before creating her own brand, the designer had an atypical career. – Ruohan
As for her eponymous brand, she says she has two choices: to remain a niche brand, or to be acquired by a group in order to grow. And thus earn the respect of an industry that, from Paris to Shanghai to Milan, has difficulty trusting Asian designers if they haven’t had the opportunity to prove their talent with a European house.
“The next decade will be China’s decade”.
For the time being, the brand is determined to build a stable structure to enable Ruohan Nie to concentrate solely on creation, as Waël Benkerrour explains. Suitable profiles are in short supply, especially given the scale of the label. With a very busy schedule, the artist spends around thirty weeks a year in China, but often travels to Europe and elsewhere to follow the life of her collections.
Ruohan Nie believes fashion needs Asian art directors – Ruohan
For the designer, the added value of these trips outweighs the workload. “The previous generation in China didn’t speak English and didn’t travel abroad. But our generation is free to exchange ideas and mix influences,” she stresses. “In fashion, the next decade will be China’s,” she asserts.
The brand aims for a lasting presence in Paris
Ruohan is currently present in around 50 boutiques in China and 20 abroad. As part of its international expansion, the brand has recently partnered with Galeries Lafayette Paris, Barneys Japan, SSENSE, and Printemps Doha, joining its existing clientele, which includes Isetan, United Arrows, and Machine-A.
The brand now plans to establish a foothold in Paris – Ruohan
Already well established in China, the brand now aims to deepen its retail presence in the country. With national and international recognition in mind, Ruohan’s main objective is to establish a lasting presence in Paris. It plans to open offices there to manage its press relations and to have a pied-à-terre near Italy, where it carries out its textile research.
This internationalisation requires a command of English on the part of the team, most of whom are Chinese. In recruitment, this has become essential. Every year, two or three members of the team travel to Paris to attend Fashion Week and its preparations. The reverse trip is planned for future Paris-based employees, to reinforce the feeling of belonging to the same project, that of an ambitious Chinese fashion brand.
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Department store group Fenwick has expanded its association with Danish fashion brand Selected, launching a new nationwide collaboration that’s “rich [in] digital and social content”.
Fenwick’s Newcastle flagship – Fenwick/Selected
The omnichannel activation, which appears across all eight Fenwick stores, “marks a significant moment” between the two, “reinforcing Selected’s growing presence in the British market through the UK’s largest chain of family-owned departments stores, while connecting physical retail with digital storytelling and social engagement”.
Rooted in Scandi minimalism, the brand continues to create “versatile, elevated wardrobe essentials designed for everyday life” with key pieces across the collections include “refined tailoring, premium knitwear, elevated denim and modern outerwear, designed to move seamlessly between work, leisure and social moments”.
Selected
Launching alongside Selected’s ‘Wardrobe Reset’ campaign, the activation rolls out across the Fenwick locations, brought to life through window takeovers, refreshed shop fits, and a programme of in-store styling moments and customer events, they said.
The physical activations will be supported by Fenwick’s digital platforms and social channels, with curated content designed to highlight the collection’s, “styling approach and campaign storytelling”.
So the partnership will feature a customer event at Fenwick Newcastle on 11 February featuring an informal talk and styling moment centred on Selected’s new season, alongside an arrival drink, Nordic-inspired canapés, DJ and curated gift bags.
The styling event includes a panel with Søren Riisberg, head of the Northwest Sales Region at Selected, and Fenwick head of buying, Victoria Claridge.
Leo Fenwick, partnerships director at the family firm said: “Selected is a natural partner… sharing our commitment to quality, considered design and accessible modern style.
“The partnership reflects a sense of refresh and optimism at the start of the year, with [the brand’s] clean Scandinavian aesthetic bringing a fresh perspective to our fashion offer. Alignment between our brand values and partner environments is central to our long-term partner strategy.”
Riisberg also said: “Fenwick is a highly valued partner, the brand campaign and expanding our branded spaces together marks an important step in positioning Selected even stronger in the UK market.”
In the last four years, Italian luxury outerwear label Moorer has doubled its revenue by extending its product range and opening several monobrand stores. Its founder and CEO Moreno Faccincani took back full control of the company in October 2025. In fiscal 2025, Moorer recorded revenue of approximately €60 million, growing in single digits. The Verona-based company’s performance was driven by Italy, Germany, the USA and Japan.
Moorer, Fall/Winter 2026-27
Last May, Moorer moved from its previous Milanese showroom into new, 1,000 sq m+ premises elsewhere in the city, in viale Regina Giovanna. A strategic decision dictated by Moorer’s desire to showcase the full extent of its collections, which now also include womenswear and feature a total look approach covering all product categories. Besides outerwear, whose revenue share has fallen from 95% to 70% of the total in the last five years, Moorer also sells shoes, knitwear, trousers and perfumes, as well as a first skiwear capsule collection launched last year.
Moorer products are available at Milan’s Global Blue tax-free shopping lounge in via Sant’Andrea, where they are on display for two months ahead of the Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics, and are also available at Moorer’s monobrand store in Cortina d’Ampezzo.
Moorer has expanded its mountain resort range, introducing high-tech ski suits with linings decorated with prints of the Dolomites, enhanced by silk details and equipped with deep, comfortable pockets. The garments almost look like works of art. In the Fall/Winter 2026-27 collection, Moorer has extended its knitwear assortment, introducing new models and original prints, broadened its footwear’s colour palette, and premièred a socks range.
Moorer, Fall/Winter 2026-27
Retail-wise, Moorer currently operates monobrand stores in via Montenapoleone in Milan, at Ginza in Tokyo, and in Prague, Knokke (Flanders) and Cortina d’Ampezzo. Six months ago, the label opened a new store in via Borgognona in Rome. A 260 sq m store with 11 shop windows is scheduled to open in New York City, in the heart of the Meatpacking District, in March. It will be followed in September by a store in Miami, and by a second store in Japan.
Moorer’s growth is underpinned by a substantial investment plan. The company is now operating its e-shop in-house, and has hired new staff to reach a total of 200 employees.
It serves approximately 600 wholesale clients worldwide, and is boosting its direct presence within multibrand stores by means of pop-up projects, marketing activations involving shop windows, and by setting up more permanent shop-in-shops. The label’s wholesale channel growth is primarily driven by the DACH area. Moorer is currently the best-selling outerwear brand at Lodenfrey in Munich. The label will soon open a new corner at Harrods, while the space at Rinascente in Milan has been converted into a concession following its successful sell-out results.
A year and a half after his co-founder, Max Svärdh, stepped back, Albin Johansson is likewise taking a step back at Axel Arigato, the label they co-founded in 2014. In June 2024, the Swedish brand, renowned for its trainers and chic streetwear, appointed Jens Werner as creative director, a role previously held by Max Svärdh.
Axel Arigato boutique – Axel Arigato
At that time, Albin Johansson retained the role of chief executive of the brand, in which Eurazeo acquired a majority stake in 2020. However, at the start of 2026 the company- which reportedly surpassed SEK 1 billion in revenue in 2024 (over €90 million)- has handed this role to Frédéric Serrant. He brings more than 16 years’ experience in international leadership roles across Asia and Latin America, gained at the sports and lifestyle giant Adidas.
His expertise is expected to help Axel Arigato reach a new milestone after years of expansion. The brand operates more than 15 own-name stores in major Scandinavian cities, as well as in key locations such as London, Paris, New York, Dubai, and Berlin. It is also stocked in numerous department stores worldwide. That expansion, however, has posed challenges, eroding the company’s margins between 2023 and 2024. The company, which has yet to file its 2025 results in Sweden, has therefore had to refine its strategy to improve profitability.
‘I am genuinely impressed by the remarkable work done so far to make Axel Arigato such a strong, distinctive, and inspiring brand. It truly reflects the talent, passion and commitment of the teams, and I am convinced that the brand’s potential is enormous. I look forward to joining the team, learning alongside them and writing the next chapters of the Axel Arigato story together,’ said Frédéric Serrant in a message on LinkedIn.
Albin Johansson will remain chairman of the board of directors.
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