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Growing number of emerging designer competitions staged by fashion labels to foster creativity

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Nicola Mira

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June 12, 2025

Alongside the main emerging designer competitions, like the Andam Prize, the LVMH Prize and the Hyères Festival, countless initiatives are flourishing as the fashion industry searches for hidden gems. A growing number of labels, often in association with fashion academies, have launched their own emerging designer competition, looking for young stylists or talented artisans that could potentially join their creative teams. A way to deal with the dearth of apprentices in the manual craftsmanship trades, and to inject fresh creative energy into a label.

​Chinese designer Kexin Zhang will join Louis Vuitton’s leather goods department – Louis Vuitton

Among the most recent initiatives, French luxury group Kering has selected the winners of its new competition for sustainable jewellery design, the ‘Kering Generation Award X Jewellery’, staged in partnership with CIBJO (the international association for the fine and costume jewellery, goldsmithing and precious gems trades) and the Poli.Design department of Milan’s Politecnico University. Kering invited 22 start-ups and students to create a piece of jewellery from scraps. The competition’s first edition, whose theme was ‘second chance, first choice’, was held on June 7 in Las Vegas, during the JCK World Jewellery Show.

The winner in the ‘student’ category was Korean designer Lee Min Seo from Seoul’s Hongik University, who makes jewellery using leather offcuts from the manufacture of janggu, a traditional Korean percussion instrument. Her reward will be an internship at one of Kering’s jewellery brands, Boucheron, Pomellato, Dodo, or Qeelin. The winner among the start-ups was Chinese brand Ianyan, whose jewellery creations are made from imperfect and/or cracked stones. The two winners will also be mentored by experts from Politecnico’s faculty in Milan.

At the end of 2023, Louis Vuitton launched, in partnership with 30 schools around the world, the ‘Accessories Design Graduates Initiative’, a competition recognising innovation and creativity in leather goods and accessories design. Chinese designer Kexin Zhang, trained at the Academy of Fine Arts in Tianjin (TAFA) and the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp, where she specialised in jewellery design, has recently won the competition’s second edition, thanks to “her sense of detail and exceptional expertise.”

Zhang will join Louis Vuitton’s leather goods and accessories design departments to create new products, said Louis Vuitton. Working alongside the luxury label’s staff, she will design leather goods, accessories and jewellery items, taking part in a comprehensive introduction programme, and she will undoubtedly meet Johnny Coca, head of women’s leather goods at LVMH’s flagship label.

In March, Parisian label Ami presented the fourth AMI x IFM Entrepreneurship Award to Matho, a brand specialising in knitwear designed as an extension of the body, founded by Léa Mathonière Fallot. Matho won €20,000 in prize money and a mentorship. The jury also awarded the Coup de cœur prize to Telmet, an experiential brand led by Léo Ciavarella and César Noyer which combines fashion design and audiovisual creations. Telmet received a €10,000 cash prize. For Ami Paris, the award is a way to give concrete support to emerging designers.

Other labels are hiring emerging designers for special projects, for example one-off collaborations. They see in this approach the opportunity to refresh their offering without losing their brand identity, while creating commercial buzz. In return, they offer visibility to young talents who are often unknown to the public, giving them the chance to design ad hoc capsule collections. This was the case with AZ Factory, for example, as it sought to give continuity to the Alber Elbaz brand after the eponymous designer’s death.

A look created by Anglo-Indian designer Supriya Lele for Mango as part of the Spanish label’s young designers programme
A look created by Anglo-Indian designer Supriya Lele for Mango as part of the Spanish label’s young designers programme – Mango

Spanish fast-fashion label Mango has recently launched the ‘Mango Collective’ project, “to celebrate the creativity and innovation of emerging brands.” As its first guest stylist, Mango has chosen Anglo-Indian designer Supriya Lele, a finalist at the 2020 LVMH Prize, who has already made a name for herself in London, where she set up her label in 2017. “The goal is to launch one collaboration a year, featuring a collection jointly created with a guest brand or designer, with the idea of building a creative community,” said Mango.

Focus on artisanal and manual craftsmanship

Artisanal skills and handcrafting talent are also very much in demand, as shown by the plethora of initiatives being organised in this field. Loewe, LVMH’s Spanish leather goods label, was one of the first houses to create a craftsmanship award, in 2016, under the aegis of its then creative director Jonathan Anderson. At the end of May, Japanese sculptor Kunimasa Aoki was crowned as the winner of the 2025 Loewe Foundation Craft Prize.

In 2017, French footwear brand J.M. Weston established, through its corporate foundation, the ‘J.M. Weston Foundation Awards’, aimed at promoting an international exchange between young French and Japanese artisans. “The objective is to allow young shoemakers to work  for a period of four weeks at the best workshops in both countries,” said J.M. Weston, adding that the winners must complete during this time  “an exceptional project working with the support of local master craftsmen who will be training them in their methods.”

Each year, J.M. Weston awards four scholarships through this programme, two for French apprentices and two for Japanese ones. The selection of this year’s two Japanese winners is under way, and they will visit the J.M. Weston factory in Limoges, France, in September. The two French winners have already been picked, and are expected to travel to Japan in October, where they will be working at the Scotch Grain factory in Tokyo. The closing ceremony, with the presentation of the completed projects and the awards, will take place in Japan on October 31.

In 2023, Marseilles-based label Sessun launched an international competition for designers under 35 years of age operating in the field of interior design. For the competition’s third edition, Sessun awarded first prize to Sarah El Yousefy and Nina Ouchinsky. Their project will be realised and presented at Galeries Lafayette Haussmann in Paris in September. Second prize went to Gala Vernhes-Chazeau, and third prize to Constant Clesse and Clément Pasquier. Setting up designer competitions allows labels to boost their brand image while supporting the creative generations of tomorrow.

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Footasylum announces ‘landmark’ Trinity Leeds store, Europe and Middle East also on expansion radar

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January 19, 2026

Footasylum‘s busy store-opening strategy of 2025 has continued into the new year with the footwear/sportswear business now planing to open a “landmark” new store in the Trinity Leeds shopping centre in April.

Footaylum

The 12,000 sq ft store “builds on Footasylum’s long-standing presence in Leeds”, and follows the “strong performance” of its former store at The Core shopping centre and last year’s “successful” pop-up at Trinity Leeds, it said.

The new store will be located on the centre’s lower ground floor in the unit previously occupied by Superdry.

To celebrate the spring opening, Footasylum said will be “bringing its social media strategy from the screens to the streets” with a series of events in-store.

It  will also be partnering with local businesses “to celebrate the incredible talent within the city and connect with consumers at a local level”, it added.

On the latest opening, Shannon Osman, head of Retail at Footasylum, added: “Leeds has always been a strong market for [us]. The response to our pop-up in the Trinity shopping centre last year and our previous store at The Core demonstrated clear demand for a bigger, permanent Footasylum presence in the city.

“This store represents an important step as we continue our rollout across the UK and beyond under Aurelius’ ownership. Investing in high-quality retail spaces remains central to our multi-brand, multi-channel strategy, and we look forward to further openings in the year ahead.”

Footasylum added that the Trinity Leeds opening forms part of its ongoing UK store rollout and follows a number of recent openings including Cornmill Centre, Darlington, Croft Retail and Leisure Park, Bromborough and Forster Square shopping centre, Bradford.

Separately, the company also noted that it continues to progress its international expansion programme having signed a distribution agreement with MAD agency across the DACH region of Germany, Austria and Switzerland in November.

In addition, a new strategic partnership with Apparel Group was signed in December, “setting in motion plans to open Footasylum stores across the Gulf Cooperation Council region”, including the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman.

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Beauty and fashion demand helps Landsec’s Golden Quarter performance to sparkle

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January 19, 2026

Landsec’s prime shopping destinations had a shining Golden Quarter in terms of both sales and footfall with health & beauty (+13%) and clothing (+5%) sales becoming “the strongest-performing categories” across its major retail destinations.

Bluewater

The key quarter, which includes Christmas trading, “maintained healthy consumer demand, exceeding last year’s impressive figures and pulling further ahead of market averages”, the commercial property giant said in a trading statement Monday (19 January).

With Liverpool One and Bluewater in Kent among its portfolio of key shopping/entertainment destinations, total Golden Quarter sales rose 4.9% year-on-year, “significantly outperforming the national retail benchmark”, which it notes fell by 0.2%. And during the three peak Christmas shopping weeks, sales were up 6.5% year-on-year, it added.

Footfall across Landsec’s major shopping centres and outlets also rose by 0.7% over the quarter, compared with the national benchmark of -0.3% across the wider market, “supported by strong seasonal momentum”.

Since FY22, its retail destinations have also seen cumulative sales growth of 20%, outperforming the UK national average by 17ppt, it also noted.

Performance-wise, health & beauty’s particularly strong showing was helped by four out of the six new Sephora stores opened in the UK over the past 12 months having been at Landsec destinations, it added.

And let’s not forget the rising importance of leisure and hospitality, with both also playing key roles in consumer engagement, seeing a 6.2% growth in sales.

“This category also played a key role in increasing dwell times across Landsec’s centres, reinforcing the importance of [our] experience-led strategy in supporting retail spend and repeat visits”, it noted.

Bruce Findlay, managing director of Retail at Landsec, added: “Consumers continue to seek out destinations which combine a wide selection of the best brands with best in class experiences. This was certainly true during the Golden Quarter with sales and footfall for prime retail once again ahead of the wider market.

“With a reach of one in four UK consumers, we offer brands more footfall than any other retail platform. By combining this reach with the powerful data insights available to us, we’re creating a self-reinforcing growth engine that delivers higher sales and attracts the world’s best brands.”

He added: “Alongside a strong leisure and hospitality offer, we provide compelling, experience-led retail environments, positioning us well for continued success as we look ahead to 2026.”

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Frasers Group integrates Sports Direct membership into Frasers Plus

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January 19, 2026

UK retail giant Frasers Group has announced the integration of  Sports Direct Membership into its ‘Frasers Plus’ loyalty scheme “to create one unified, rewards platform” from February.

Frasers Group

Aiming to widen its customer loyalty offer, Frasers Plus is the group’s credit payment account “that rewards customers every time they shop across the Frasers Group portfolio and partner retailers”. 

With this integration, users “will gain access to even greater rewards with more exclusive benefits and personalised offers” the group said.

Frasers said the move marks a new chapter in its digital elevation as it unifies Sports Direct Membership’s loyalty and rewards offerings under Frasers Plus.

The integration “simplifies the customer shopping experience” across the group’s portfolio (Sports Direct, Flannels, and Frasers) and 16 partner retailers (including LookFantastic, Myprotein, Marks Electrical), “providing a single destination for rewards, personalised offers, and flexible payment options” in the Frasers Plus app.

David Twigg, MD of Frasers Group Financial Services, said: “This is an exciting step forward for Frasers Plus. By integrating Frasers Group’s existing loyalty offerings under Frasers Plus, we’re building on important learnings from the past year about how our customers like to shop and streamlining the customer experience to deliver a more powerful, personalised, and cohesive rewards proposition across the full Frasers Group portfolio and partner retailers.”

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