Laurent Milchior, president of the family-owned lingerie group Etam, has chosen to promote from within to lead the group’s flagship brand. The departure of Marie Schott, deputy managing director since her return to the French company in 2023, was announced in November and takes effect at the start of 2026. Marie Delahaie, current managing director of Undiz, a role she has held since mid-2024, will take the reins at Etam in May, the group told FashionNetwork.com.
“Marie Delahaie’s appointment as Etam’s managing director forms part of a growth trajectory and renewed ambition. Her ability to build and carry a brand vision, her exacting standards in execution and her management approach, grounded in cross-functional collaboration and the strength of the collective, have already proved their worth at Undiz,” says Laurent Milchior in a press release, while the group adds that he will serve as interim managing director of the brand and that Marie Delahaie will begin refining her vision for Etam from February, while retaining her current duties as managing director of Undiz.
As the group searches for a new leader to head Undiz, the group’s second-largest brand, which is said to account for almost a quarter of its sales, Marie Delahaie is expected to keep a close eye on its progress.
“I would like to thank Laurent Milchior for his confidence. I am delighted to be joining Etam from May. This transition begins immediately, with the aim of collectively building a clear vision, true to the brand’s DNA, while supporting its momentum. I will also remain fully committed alongside the Undiz teams to ensure robust continuity and to support the continuation of the work under way.”
According to management, she will “play a key role within the Etam Group’s lingerie governance, in order to guarantee the strategic coherence between Etam and Undiz and to preserve the complementary nature of their positioning.” The group reported revenue of €892 million with its Etam and Undiz brands, as well as Maison 1,2,3 and Ysé, and is a shareholder in the Livy brand.
“This change in governance will also strengthen the strategic complementarity between Etam and Undiz, with their differentiated and complementary positioning, in the service of coherent, high-performance development within the group,” adds Laurent Milchior.
There will be numerous challenges for Marie Delahaie, as Etam accounts for more than half of the French group’s activity and faces the rollout of its new store concept, the scaling up of its responsible offering, the integration of new tools to build its ranges, and the defence of its French home turf, where the lingerie market is in decline in 2025, as well as asserting its positions in its main export markets.
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One key part of London’s West End saw big uplift in visitors during December with new figures from the Heart of London Business Alliance (HOLBA) saying footfall was up 19% year on year last month.
Photo: Pexels/Public domain
The area HOLBA covers includes Piccadilly, Leicester Square and Haymarket, which don’t account for the main shopping district but are just a stone’s throw from Regent Street, Bond Street and Covent Garden.
HOLBA’s figures also show that dwell time increased by 42 minutes per day compared to a year ago.
Overall, footfall was 20% above the average seem from 2022-24, and between 15 and 29 December, visits were up 35%, all of which HOLBA said underlines the area’s recovery from the pandemic.
Deputy chief executive, Mark Williams, said the figures “show that London’s West End continues to outperform national trends, with visitor numbers on the rise. This underscores its appeal as a global destination and the power of the experience economy in attracting people to the area”.
The New West End Company (NWEC), which represents businesses across the wider West End, hasn’t yet released its own figures for December. But it had earlier said that the area bucked the national trend over the Black Friday period. West End footfall was up 9% in the previous week, up 4.1% in Black Friday week itself and 6.2% the week after.
That further underlines how well the West End has bounced back after several years in which its status as one of Europe’s top tourist shopping districts was at risk. From 2020 onwards, the large number of store closures, the proliferation of so-called American candy stores and the (still-ongoing) absence of tax-free shopping for tourists meant central London was slow to recover. ‘Rival’ shopping cities such as Paris and Milan meanwhile have taken less time to get back to pre-pandemic footfall levels and London Mayor Sadiq Khan this week revealed that he’s lobbied the government to get the decision on cancelling the tax-free shopping perk reversed.
Bikkembergs returns to Milan Fashion Week and, for the first time, opens the doors of its headquarters on Via Stendhal (Solari). “Pitti is a wonderful platform, but we made a strategic choice to be more consumer-driven,” Dario Predonzan, the brand’s CEO, tells FashionNetwork.com.
Dario Predonzan at the entrance to Bikkembergs’ HQ in Milan
The more than 500-square-metre space, which opened around 10 years ago, brings together the design studio, offices, and B2B sales across two floors, and was set up for the occasion with an oversized inflatable soccer ball positioned at the entrance, the result of a collaboration with a Turin-based creative.
The soccer sneaker is at the heart of the brand’s strategy. Founded by Dirk Bikkembergs, the label is now owned by China’s Modern Avenue. “It is our signature piece, the item consumers associate most strongly with the Bikkembergs name. It’s also on trend right now thanks to its low-profile aesthetic,” Predonzan notes.
Last June’s collaboration with Gosha Rubchinskiy marked a step-change in this direction. “We phased out all the old models across the various markets, a move similar to what Adidas did with the Stan Smith. We will put a strong focus on the brand’s heritage,” says the CEO.
The collaboration with the Russian designer was a limited edition of about 2,000 pairs. “We sold almost all of them. Spring-Summer ’26 was the first season of the sales campaign and we nearly doubled the footwear category’s figures,” Predonzan continues.
A total look from Bikkembergs’ FW26 collection.
The company closed 2025 with turnover of 30 million, in line with last year. “We are satisfied because, despite the difficulties, the company is on a solid financial footing. We have worked hard to streamline processes. It is crucial to be a healthy business in such an uncertain market phase,” the CEO adds.
Driving Bikkembergs’ sales are Germany and Northern Europe, which are once again important markets. The US and Russia account for much of the remainder. “The opening plan through 2027 is proceeding, with two new openings coming in Tbilisi, Georgia, between March 2026 and next autumn-winter. Today we have nine mono-brand stores, but we are always looking for partners for new openings,” says the manager.
In Milan next March, the brand will celebrate its founder with a special event, coinciding with the launch of the first exhibition at MoMu in Antwerp dedicated to the Antwerp Six (which includes designer Dirk Bikkembergs himself). “We want to tie in with this important event to pay homage to our origins,” Predonzan concludes.
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Milan Fashion Week’s menswear season kicked off Friday afternoon with a grand show and ground-breaking collection from a powerhouse brand- Zegna. Presented inside Palazzo del Ghiaccio, a giant, all-white ice-skating rink in east Milan, redesigned like a giant gentleman’s dressing room, where the cast walked out of huge closet doors.
Creative director Alessandro Sartori’s take on Zegna’s brand heritage – FashionNetwork.com
Creative director Alessandro Sartori played with the house’s codes of refined elegance, even as he subverted them- with tailoring innovations and novel materials. Like his brilliant new Horizontal Three jacket, a snug double-breasted blazer, with a hidden third button that can be used to expand the garment into a far looser silhouette.
In terms of fabrics, Alessandro dreamed up a new blend of cashmere and paper- seen in check cardigan jackets. Devoid of interior pockets and with an unexpected hand, they hung perfectly.
The show invitation was a playing card, revealing the collection’s title- Memorie. A riff on the deep history of the brand, which has just named brothers from its fourth generation– Edoardo and Angelo– as new co-CEOs, 115 years after the label was founded in Trivero, Italy. This also referenced Alessandro Sartori’s own memories of his father, who died when he was a young boy.
Monochrome layers at Zegna – FashionNetwork.com
“One of my strongest emotions was my dad putting on a suit or jacket. When I later found photos of him, I rediscovered my father through his clothes,” explained a wistful Sartori.
The show was also the latest example of smart storytelling by this designer, who presented an early 1930s suit made for founder Ermenegildo Zegna in an Australian wool fabric woven at his own mill. Encased in a museum glass box at the entrance to the show, with a sign that read: Abito 1– or ‘First Suit.’
Staged on a classically cloudy January in Lombardy when a chill humidity seeps down from the nearby Alps, the collection looked ideal for the conditions. Notably, a beautiful series of Donegal tweed style speckled beige and brown suits. Worn with fine wool shirts finished with leather buttons.
No other major Italian tailoring brand has been as courageous as Zegna in pivoting an historically business suits-driven business into the new era of casual luxury. A key reason it could do so is the talent of its creative director Alessandro Sartori.
Zegna’s latest suits – FashionNetwork.com
That said, he produced multiple modernist suits in wide yet subtle stripes, cut with large, notched lapels. And showed multiple great coats with forgivingly softer shoulders. Natty yet always noble and worn on a cast of multiple generations, parading around the carpeted floor.
Backed up by a soundtrack that blended Nick Cave’s Into My Arms with Max Richter’s In The Garden, this was as polished a fashion statement as one could imagine. As Sartori kept stretching the Zegna DNA without ever snapping it.
“I am the custodian of the Zegna family wardrobe,” smiled Alessandro post-show. Before- for his next trick- trying on a Horizontal Three to show how the technique worked to much applause.