Few designers have their cultural antenna more in sync with the zeitgeist than Stuart Vevers, whose latest collection for Coach cleverly captured the fashion youthquake taking place in New York.
His full-on silhouette of elephantine pants and the snuggest of jackets, waistcoats and jerkins completed by a sartorial twist amounted to a very cool take on today’s street fashion.
Business may be tricky for many brands, but kids in Lower Manhattan have never been more obsessed with looking and dressing with hip attitude. All one has to do is carouse the cafés in Dimes Square, or catch up with the gallants and groovers on Howard Street – a mini mecca of contemporary dandyism. A new generation whose style very deliberately challenges the status quo.
The key word here is ‘repurposed’, from elongated, patched up jeans; pants cut in mixed panels of faded denim or Coach monogram; or heavily eroded leather jackets.
It being Coach, pretty well every passage included a bag – from some great bucket-like totes with hefty straps, to moon shape clutches, to a series of credit card holders hanging from neck chains. The clothes looked lived – in but lovingly so. Plus, you could see that the models loved the picks and wanted to leave the venue in their looks.
The cast was perfect – courtesy of casting agent Ashley Brokaw – a marvellous array of youthful hope and pride. The very sort of cool insiders that every adolescent dreams they will turn into if they move to New York.
“The whole idea came from a New York morning. I find them very special – light, bright, fresh and full of the optimism of moving forward,” explained British-born Vevers, in the backstage on Monday, the penultimate day of the six-day New York Fashion Week.
“I wanted heritage and nostalgia, but not in a heavy way,” smiled Stuart, who also riffed on other parts of his adopted country he had visited.
Showing sheath dresses photoshopped with a print of Monument Valley, grunge black T-shirts reading Seattle and tops that featured Sante Fe fairground.
Staged in a giant warehouse on the East River, the set glorified New York. A series of massive sepia photos of classic doorways, neo-classical villas and cut stone buildings printed onto 40-foot-high canvas hangings.
Under Vevers, Coach has grown into a cult brand. So, even though the show took place in the most easterly point on the island of Manhattan and past a giant road building project hundreds of fans, a few PETA activists thronged around outside the show.
The color scheme was muted, faded and worn creams, browns, beiges and indigo blues. The music an emotional mix of Elton John’s “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” with lush orchestral strings.
In a busy moment for the brand, Coach announced this week that its chairman emeritus Lew Frankfort would be releasing his memoirs entitled, rather wickedly, “Bag Man”. Billed as “The Story Behind The Improbable Rise of Coach”, Frankfort will be happily signed copies on October 8 at a soirée in Hudson Yards. Another example of how Coach has seeped into the very history of New York, and America.
Vevers feted the collection and the latest issue of Perfect magazine with a party with the world’s coolest stylist Katie Grand. A packed party just off Union Square inside Café Zaffri, an uber happening Levantine restaurant with coffered ceilings and embroidered walls.
Not a bad place to celebrate his latest collection, quite possibly the best he has ever designed for Coach.
Frasers Group’s Gieves & Hawkes brand is continuing to expand at retail and has returned to the city of Bath with the opening of a store in the newly redeveloped Shire’s Yard.
Gieves & Hawkes, Bath
Bath is a key destination for both UK and and international tourists, as well as having an affluent local catchment, so it looks like a strong move for the heritage menswear brand.
The 2 Broad Street store is set across three floors in a prime location at the heart of the city with the company saying the opening is “a significant moment in the brand’s continued celebration of craftsmanship and heritage”.
The space covers 2,085 sq ft and showcases the full breadth of the Gieves & Hawkes offering, from ready-to-wear tailoring and “refined” casualwear to the made-to-measure service for which the label is known.
Managing director Jason Gerrard said of the opening: “Bath is a city where Gieves & Hawkes has enjoyed a longstanding presence and loyal following. The opening of our new store is within the exceptional Shire’s Yard development, and we are privileged to be part of its vibrant community. Our new store represents our long-term commitment to Bath and the Southwest.”
Gieves & Hawkes, Bath
The Bath return is part of an ongoing national expansion strategy. Earlier this year, in a 254-year retail first, the brand opened a store-in-store within Frasers Group’s Flannels flagship in Leeds.
At the time Frasers said the debut “marks a significant milestone in the brand’s history and is a precursor to a wider regional expansion strategy to tap into a desire for craftsmanship, integrity, and authenticity outside of the capital”.
German womenswear brand Marc Cain has named a new CEO and it’s clearly preparing well in advance as he’ll take the reins of the business as of June next year.
Dr. Patric Spethmann – MARC O’POLO
He’s Dr Patric Spethmann, who will be responsible for all areas of the business. Helmut Schlotterer, founder and owner of Marc Cain, will remain chairman of the board, “primarily to mentor Patric Spethmann and act as a coach and advisor”.
So what is it about Spethmann that made the company (whose products are available internationally include the US and UK) pick him? He joins from Marc O’Polo, where he most recently held the position of COO. There, his focus was on “optimising internal processes, increasing the efficiency of workflows and organising structures”.
“In Patric Spethmann, we have gained a leader who brings with him many years of experience in the industry. Together, we will set the course for maintaining our brand and values and strategically driving them forward. This puts us in an excellent position for the future and enables us to respond quickly and efficiently to the challenges of the new era,” Schlotterer said.
And Spethmann added: “I am very much looking forward to joining Marc Cain in June 2026. As a leading player in the field of premium women’s fashion, I am particularly impressed by the company’s extraordinary innovative strength and its clear focus on forward-looking technologies. This combination of creativity, quality and progressive thinking makes Marc Cain, in my opinion, a company that sets trends for the entire industry.”
South African fashion retailer Mr Price will acquire NKD Group, a German-based discount retailer for up to 487 million euros ($567.55 million), it said on Wednesday, marking its first entry to the European market. By 1030 GMT, Mr Price shares were down 13.35%.
A shopper pushes a trolley outside a branch of South African clothing and homeware retailer Mr Price, at the Trade Route Mall, in Lenasia outside Johannesburg, South Africa, February 8, 2023 – REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo
Mr Price said that NKD, an apparel and homeware retailer with 2,108 stores in seven Central and Eastern European countries, is a strategic fit. Market data indicates that the growth in the value retail market is outpacing that of the overall retail market. In Europe, value retailing accounts for about 22% of the market.
“After meeting the NKD team, it was evident that this was the right business to pursue,” said the group’s Chief Executive Officer Mark Blair. “Like us, they are value-retailers at heart and have a very clear understanding of who their customer is and how to best serve them,” he added.
The acquisition of NKD, which is from funds managed by TDR Capital LLP, includes the purchase of all NKD shares and income from shareholder loans. The deal will be settled using a mix of existing cash reserves and debt facilities, Mr Price said in a statement.
The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals, including clearance from the European Commission and the South African Reserve Bank. It is expected to close by the second quarter of 2026, Wednesday’s statement said.
Once completed, Mr Price’s annual revenue would increase to approximately 53 billion rand ($3.12 billion) from 40.9 billion rand, while the number of its stores would reach more than 5,000, up from around 3,100, and it would have more than 40,000 employees.