Dolce & Gabbana has opened “a first-of-its-kind” combined beauty and accessories store in London’s Covent Garden, underscoring the shopping area’s appeal to high-end beauty operators and also its wider status as a key London shopping district.
The store is in landlord Shaftesbury Capital’s estate, specifically in the historic Market Building, and marks the brand’s return to Covent Garden following the success of its Christmas pop-up on the Piazza in 2022.
It features an exclusive selection of cosmetics plus signature fragrance collections, as well as a make-up consultation area.
And it’s interesting that the label has chosen to offer accessories there too for the first time globally. Adding accessories has been a key trend of recent mass, premium and high-end beauty openings — Harrods’ H Beauty for instance also sells sunglasses and that category is a key feature of beauty specialists such as Superdrug and Boots. In the case of Dolce & Gabbana, sunglasses are also a prominent feature in the store.
As for the store itself, it’s fitted out with gold panelling and monochrome tiles, with the décor aiming to blend “the heritage charm of the Market Building with trademark Italian glamour”.
As mentioned, Covent Garden is a popular destination for beauty retailers (and their customers) and it also has stores offering the category from Chanel, Diptyque, Guerlain, Miller Harris, Penhalgon’s, Tom Ford, and Charlotte Tilbury.
In fact, Tilbury only opened its significantly upsized boutique there that includes its world-first Skin Spa, in a prominent anchor unit at the beginning of the year.
William Oliver, Retail Leasing Director at Shaftesbury Capital, said: “Dolce & Gabbana’s commitment to blending tradition with innovation is what makes Covent Garden the perfect location to debut a world-first concept. Building on the noteworthy success of its pop-up in 2022, the brand has reinvested in the destination, showcasing Covent Garden’s appeal for internationally renowned fashion houses to put down permanent roots.”
Heritage menswear label John Smedley has launched its first diffusion line, dubbed JS by John Smedley, for SS25. It brings its 240-year history in British manufacturing and its contemporary take on versatile knitwear to a wider audience and will be exclusively stocked at John Lewis.
Made in England from fully-traceable, high-quality New Zealand Extra Fine Merino Wool, the capsule “has a vibrant and youthful aesthetic, retaining the values of colour and high quality craftsmanship that are hallmarks of the brand”, it said.
While it’s a diffusion line of menswear silhouettes, there’s a unisex edge to the collection of 13 styles featuring shades of blue, pink and green, colour blocked or in bold, statement stripes.
The line features John Smedley’s “most popular pieces reimagined through a contemporary lens”. They’re designed “with a relaxed, boxier fit and colour blocking throughout the collection, as well as unique design details of visible branding knitted into each garment”.
Jess McGuire Dudley, deputy managing director of John Smedley, said: “As a brand we are continually looking to adapt to our customer and the evolving demands of the market. Through the diffusion line we can offer high-quality, fashion-forward styles with sustainable credentials, all designed and made in the UK at mindful price points.”
Stella McCartney has unveiled its summer 2025 campaign starring Myha’la, Alex Consani, Eva Mendes and Raye.
Stella McCartney
And as expected with the eco-friendly label, there are other stars aside from the human celebs. Those famous faces are juxtaposed with doves and “fantastical avians created with AI, inspiring others to see from different perspectives; a bird’s eye view”.
The company said that “with nearly 50% of avian species in decline and 3.4 billion birds harmed or killed for feather down annually, it is a reminder that there could someday be a world where these creatures live only in fantasy if we do not save what we love”.
As that last statement suggests, the campaign is an evolution of the ‘Save What You Love’ manifesto that opened the designer’s summer 25 runway show, a celebration of and call-to-action for birds inspired by author and birdwatcher Jonathan Franzen’s book The End of the End of the Earth.
The campaign also promotes what’s the label’s “most sustainable edit to date”, made with “96% conscious materials”.
So what about the human stars of the campaign, all of whom were shot by Ethan James Green in New York? Myha’la is an actor and advocate for representation in media as well as ending racism and homelessness.
Named Model of the Year at the Fashion Awards 2024, Alex Consani walked the runway show and featured in the Stella McCartney x Adidas Rasant trainer campaign. She’s a voice for inclusivity in fashion and support for trans children.
Actor, model and author Eva Mendes, who was also in the winter campaign, is an advocate for women and children and “uses her entrepreneurial initiatives for good, including a zero-plastic solution to consumer water”.
Award-winning Raye meanwhile “raises her voice for the injustices of the music industry, feminism and the environmental crisis, particularly its outsized impact on women of colour”.
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. posted its fastest pace of revenue growth in more than a year, as the Chinese internet pioneer co-founded by Jack Ma takes another step toward a recovery after years of turbulence.
The Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. headquarters in Hangzhou – Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg – Reuters
The company reported better-than-anticipated revenue gains in its two most important divisions: e-commerce and cloud services, which houses its AI endeavors. That hints at a bounce-back in Chinese consumption from post-Covid troughs, and initial success at beating back rivals from ByteDance Ltd. to PDD Holdings Inc. that in recent years eroded its market share. The company’s stock rose as much as 11% after markets opened in New York on Thursday.
Investors may have also been bullish because of Alibaba’s growing determination to compete in artificial intelligence. Chief Executive Officer Eddie Wu said Alibaba will spend more on AI infrastructure over the next three years as it did in the past decade. He went as far as to say that Artificial General Intelligence, or AGI, is the company’s “primary objective.”
“This is the kind of opportunity for industry transformation that really only comes about once every several decades,” he told analysts on a conference call. “So when it comes to Alibaba’s AI strategy, our first and foremost goal is to pursue AGI.”
The financial results show Alibaba is already righting a business knocked off-kilter by a government clampdown that began in 2020. It regained its footing after Beijing signaled a pullback in scrutiny in 2023. Joe Tsai and Wu — two of co-founder Jack Ma’s most trusted lieutenants — took the helm that year and refocused investment on AI and e-commerce. On Thursday, Alibaba reported a faster-than-projected 8% rise in sales to 280.2 billion yuan ($38.6 billion) in the December quarter, after cloud services revenue expanded its most on a quarterly basis in about two years.
That division, which houses the company’s AI-related projects and hosts computing power for external clients, grew revenue 13% to $4.3 billion. International commerce sales — driven by overseas marketplaces such as AliExpress and Trendyol — surged 32%.
Alibaba has gained some $100 billion of market value in 2025, though it’s still far from its pre-crackdown peak. Ma himself joined a select group of the biggest names in Chinese technology and business at a televised summit convened this week by Xi Jinping — signifying Alibaba’s return to favor after years in the cold. The gathering featured entrepreneurs across a broad swath of industry, notably from the sphere of artificial intelligence.
“Now that Alibaba has defended its main e-commerce business, and its side AI business is also booming, we could see Alibaba’s results flourish in upcoming quarters,” said Li Chengdong, head of Beijing-based Internet think-tank Haitun. “Their government relationship wasn’t in a good shape in the past few years and that must have led to a huge loss of clients. Now the AI business is finally reviving the group.”
Ma was the highest-profile casualty of Xi’s crackdown on the internet and private sector in 2020, when authorities scuttled the blockbuster initial public offering of Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group Co.
That episode kicked off a yearslong campaign to tighten state control over the economy, rein in the nation’s billionaire class and shift resources toward Xi’s priorities including national security and technological self-sufficiency. Once one of China’s most outspoken entrepreneurs, Ma largely disappeared from public view.
But authorities have taken a less combative approach as China’s economy slowed and companies aligned themselves with Xi’s push for leadership in areas like AI. Alibaba, which operates one of the world’s biggest cloud services platforms, wowed investors this year by making major headway in that arena during the post-ChatGPT era.
“The results show very good progress — a very clear ‘back to basics’ strategy is paying off,” said Jeffrey Towson, partner at TechMoat Consulting.
Since the advent of OpenAI’s chatbot, Alibaba has invested in a clutch of China’s most promising startups, including Moonshot and Zhipu. It prioritized the expansion of the cloud business that underpins AI development, slashing prices to win back the customers that fled during the turbulent years.
It also decided to spend big on AI, joining a race led by Baidu Inc. at the time. DeepSeek’s sudden rise to global prominence last month – a shock to both Silicon Valley and Wall Street — boosted Chinese tech stocks including Alibaba in recent weeks. Since then, Alibaba has unveiled a Qwen model that performed well in official benchmark tests and signaled the company’s growing relevance in the field. Apple Inc. is incorporating Alibaba’s AI technology into Chinese iPhones, a vote of confidence in its prowess.
On Thursday, Wu talked up Alibaba’s aspirations to ride the AI wave and develop AGI — the industry holy grail touted by prominent advocates from OpenAI’s Sam Altman to Masayoshi Son.
But like many of his peers, the Alibaba CEO stopped short of outlining a profitable use case for AI. It should however enhance services throughout the business, while Alibaba itself as an infrastructure provider should benefit, he said.
“We’re still in very early days when we’re talking about the advancement of artificial intelligence technology,” Wu said. “The future business business models and the future ways in which these models will be monetized are not necessarily clear to anybody today.”