It’s technically not February NYFW if a bit of snow doesn’t fall. As shows wound down on Saturday night, NYC was greeted by a fast-moving snowfall that promised to fall into Sunday, making for an enjoyable show commute. It may also be an ideal time to jump on one trend already emerging from the week: fur (though it tends to be faux or by-product pelts.) Prabal Gurung was one designer who led this style—he, along with Ashlyn and Michael de Paulo, was among those who showed up on the weekend.
Faux fur and sleek designs set the tone for Prabal Gurung’s winter-inspired styles. – Courtesy of Ashlyn
Last September, Prabal Gurung showed his collection underneath a grand archway outside City Hall in an effort driven by hope for a female President and skewing on the designers’ Eastern tendencies. (Prabal Gurung was born in Singapore to Nepalese parents, raised by a single mother in Kathmandu, and was schooled in New Delhi.)
A lot has changed since that show, including the designer’s seasonal aesthetic, which felt heavier on traditional Western sportswear for the day (while his evening styles explored embellishment and fantasy of perhaps leaning towards his Eastern side).
Held at the Surrogate Court building at 31 Chambers Street, the landmarked Beaux-Arts building is still active as a probate and estate proceedings facility, adding to Gurung’s opulent vision.
Backstage, the designer spoke to FashionNetwork.com about his impetus for the collection. “This particular moment of looking at what is familiar to me started with my upcoming memoir that comes out in May,” he said, adding, “In this crazy chaotic time, what we are looking for is intimacy and comfort either through a friend or a one-night fancy.”
To that end, the designer offered cashmere as a comfort, with knits being a strong message. A chunky cable knit sweater extended as a scarf and was draped across the back of louche cargo-pocket trousers and a shirt or became a plaid turtleneck paired with polka dot style tied around the waist. Fine-gauge cashmere was paired with leather and worn under shearling coats or tightly layered over pleated silk with a gold metallic polka dot dress reminiscent of traditional Indian styles. Embellished polo neck sweaters also stood out.
Textured outerwear and layering in Gurung’s FW25 collection. – Courtesy of Ashlyn
The designer expresses faux fur as an oversized ‘fox’ or in a mint green above-knee Mongolian fur coat. Gurung’s perspective of NYC comes from the 5 a.m. vantage point where he sees the office professional and party girl collide. This season, his frocks featured sheer panels to reveal a midsection, cutouts to create exposed hips, and many exotic feather details.
Well before the final walk, an interesting catwalk choreography took over, whether intentional or not, that resulted in models repeating their turn down the runway. There were also a lot of different ideas and one-off looks in the collection. Thus, the flow and message of the show were complex to take in at times, as it was a bit disorienting. That Gurung, who has always been outspoken politically speaking, chose to mimic what many Americans have been experiencing intensely for the last three weeks on the runway also displayed the depth the designer explores in his collections.
For designer Ashlynn Park, the shape is everything for her sculptural and esoteric designs. For her Fall/Winter 2025 Ashlyn collection, Park looked to the exotic persimmon fruit and its luscious curves. According to show notes, the designer’s transformation from flower to fruit over cold winters is an analogy for reality in Park’s view that “hard-fought beauty holds the deepest meaning.”
Persimmon-inspired overcoat from Ashlynn Park’s FW25 collection – Courtesy of Ashlyn
She also drew upon her Korean culture to infuse her collection with elements of Bojagi, a symbolic cloth wrapping discipline that helped Park devise a ‘puzzle’ textile technique. It involves a square that is cut and reassembled in three-dimensional forms, which, according to Park, recontextualises familiar elements in something new. If it sounds a bit cerebral, you are on the mark. Practically speaking, the result wasn’t that tough to grasp.
A central shape was a peplum ‘blouse’ primarily made of Merino wool to make it appear more jacket-like with rounded sleeves. The peplum was central throughout, whether on fitted waist styles or looser silhouettes. Pants and skirts recalled the orange fruit in their fitted waists, bulging hips and legs, then restrained by tapered hemlines. The shape was especially intriguing, as was the reimagined trench coat, halter-style cable knit sweater tops, and bright Persimmon-coloured overcoat with a simple leather cord belt.
Park launched in the pandemic—aided by a managing partner whose CV includes Comme des Garçons and Prada—with an installation at the Cristina Grajales gallery and used the gallerist’s new Tribeca space, adorned with home fine art pieces curated by the designer to add to the art connoisseur aesthetic.
Elegant wool coat from Ashlynn Park’s FW25 line – Courtesy of Ashlyn
Eveningwear designer Michael DePaulo launched his collection in 2012 but has enjoyed running his business dressing ladies either for a fundraising ball or the red carpet in California for the past few years. He returned to NYFW with his “Mystical Garden” collection for a presentation in one of the Rockefeller Center event spaces, a newly popularized destination for the famous New York City commercial, retail, and entertainment plaza.
DePaulo told FashionNetwork.com that he envisioned a woman at a gala who would wander into the dark night to explore the garden and grounds. Shimmering crystals on a blue tulle A-line recalled the night sky while decorative yellow flowers on a black short playsuit style recalled the garden.
The mysterious and mystical came into play with black fabrics and floral motifs that were intriguing in a black lace catsuit, a strapless taffeta dress with a gathered and rounded tier hemline, and a sheer floral black dress over a nude-toned classic Fifties-style silhouette each proved enticing.
Adidas Originals has launched a new, premium label that celebrates its heritage with the debut of A-Type. The collection reimagines its famous designs in much finer materials with a higher level of craftsmanship.
Adidas Originals A-Type
And it’s not meant to be just an homage to its archive or a slightly elevated offer. The high-end materials and artisanal manufacturing really do elevate it from mere sports or every day pieces into true luxury.
Adidas is talking about an “artisanal” offer put together in “outstanding ateliers” with pricing of around $1,500 for a leather track jacket.
Not that pricing is hugely relevant at present because for now, it’s something not on general release and only ‘friends and family’ can get their hands on the products. But A-Type will likely be available more widely with future releases.
It’s as if the German sports giant has decided that, after years of high-end designer collabs, it can do true luxury on its own based purely on its proprietary design codes. Its designer link-ups will continue, however.
A-Type’s first offer focuses on a monochrome palette for the Superstar sneaker (no surprise there given its icon status), as well as the Firebird tracksuit and Airliner bag.
The A-Type Superstar is handmade in Italy using premium leather, and comes complete with cashmere shoelaces with silver-plated lace tips. The shoes also come in a moulded box with wooden shoe trees and white gloves — yes, Adidas really is taking this project to high-end extremes.
The Firebird (including top, pants and shorts) harks back to the style of the product’s 1980s launch but also features premium leather materials and handcrafted details and there are cashmere-blended T-shirts to add an extra luxe edge.
Adidas Originals A-Type
The bag, meanwhile, looks back to the 1970s original and reinvents it in supple leather with premium hardware for both large and small sizes.
To underscore the luxury element of all this, Adidas has also included sterling silver Trefoil jewellery in the mix with pendants, rings, and earrings.
It’s all supported by a campaign featuring Pusha T, Tyshawn Jones, Selena Forrest, Fiffany Luu, Paloma Elsesser, and DJ Hank Korsa.
It’s significant that the line was launched during such a high-profile event as New York Fashion Week but that, of course, attracted the ire of campaign group PETA. As well as targeting Coach during NYFW, the group protested about Adidas using “tormented ostriches and other animals”. Its president Ingrid Newkirk said: “PETA is calling on Adidas to step away from leather and stick to the wonderful cruelty-free vegan materials it already offers.”
Snow and sludge were not enough to stop the fashion from steaming ahead on Sunday as shows continued on day four. While most eyes eagerly awaited Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans, the garment trade (and those who latch on to it) were preparing their own seasonal victories. Two designers, Jonathan Cohen and Sally LaPointe, referenced sports, while Ulla Johnson entered her golden era.
Ulla Johnson
Ulla Johnson has mastered the impressive runway set. For her Fall/Winter 2025 show, she laid the floor with gold-plated brass tiles on the 14th floor of 555 Greenwich Street, overlooking the Hudson River. She marked the runway with a singular flower-shimmering metal statue, “Le Géant,” by French artist Julie Hamisky, who also designed the jewelry. It made for a dramatic yet poignant moment, perhaps as a solemn tribute to the designer’s mother, who passed away recently.
Show notes referenced a bygone Byzantine era: glistening silken threads, gold leaf, hand painting, hand-felted, and hand embroidery—elements of craft Johnson’s creations are known for—all made modern for today’s wardrobe. The theme suggested evolution, and the collection followed suit.
Most remarkably, it restrained the Bohemian Bourgeoisie, aka Bo-Bo aesthetic; yes, it was still there, but with curtailed pattern use, fewer hippie tropes, and the addition of more tailored styles, the collection read more cerebral than in the past. The music was “Paint It Black” by the Rolling Stones, but covered in Italian, as was for “Knights in White Satin.” The songs were familiar yet different, much like the collection.
All-gold brocade fabrics, woven metallic tweeds, and an embroidery gold-on-black-chiffon look opened the show, marking the shift. Pantsuits in neutral black or tan with a chromatic topper signaled a need from the collection that the Ulla Johnson woman might desire.
Ulla Johnson’s golden elegance on the Fall/Winter 2025 runway – Courtesy of Ulla Johnson
Standouts included great statement outerwear, whether marled felted coat, faux fur, an emerging trend, ombre toppers in yellow, brown, and red car coats or purple, black, and green, and a tan leather trench that topped a brown sequin sweater and olive leather pant.
Capelets adorning denim and twill jacket styles were a distinct take as well. Leather options read sensual more than tough as a short brown miniskirt with a tucked-in thick cable knit sweater (another emerging trend that may be hard to pull off for many) and a black leather A-line skirt paired with a turtleneck worn with a crystal jewelry bra worn over it under brown overcoat. Chunky, crystal-fringed embellishments added a frivolity and insouciance to several styles while the main patterns, shown as intarsia knits, echoed the Baroque reference.
Just before the show started, a production team mopped the shiny flooring—a futile effort with varying degrees of shine; it was impossible to keep them all glistening. It seems like a good analogy for fashion, but keeping things fresh isn’t always easy. In this show, Johnson succeeded.
Jonathan Cohen
Fun fact: in June 1963, when Muhammad Ali, then known as Cassius Clay, was knocked down by his opponent Henry Cooper at Wembley Stadium, the GOAT boxer said it was because he was distracted by Elizabeth Taylor sitting ringside.
This rare boxing moment was met with defeat and glamour and was the starting point for Jonathan Cohen’s Fall Winter 2025 collection. The designer combined the sport’s motifs with Taylor’s early 60s glamour into a cheeky and sophisticated result that leaned more into an era than earlier efforts.
Speaking to FashionNetwork.com, Cohen explained how the two worlds came together. “The idea of that event was incredible, Liz Taylor in a stunning dress and the expressions on her face. The thoughts were amazing and not always PG,” Cohen explained.
The concept of Taylor’s lavender eyes fixated on the designer to the point he created a jacquard and embroidery print featuring her eyes abstracted that hit on a ‘proper fall coat’ and a column gown with an Empire waist marked by a yellow bow reminiscent of the Camelot era. “I was very invested in this collection; I always am. But once I am done, I move on, and with this collection, I am still living in this world.” (Who isn’t yearning for the Kennedy era right about now?)
Cohen leaned into jackets more than ever, showing snatched-waist peplums and cropped styles often mixed and matched with the other key pattern—an embroidered white-and-yellow floral motif on navy satin. Sheer black skirts with paillette-embroidered flowers were hard to resist.
Jonathan Cohen’s Fall/Winter 2025 collection plays with bold florals and structured tailoring – Courtesy of Jonathan Cohen
The ‘push and pull’ of boxing and fashion was most evidenced in a charming boxer short and cropped work shirt look, jacquard pants with two grosgrain stripes running down the side, and the boxing shoe/boots collaboration with Marina Larroudé of Larroudé for a playful modern touch to the collection. A serendipitous meeting with eyewear legend Selima Salaun of Selima Optique has yielded Cohen’s first eyewear style, the Siouxsie, after the legendary 80s singer.
Cohen encapsulated the collection with a display campaign featuring key New York (mainly) women instrumental in the brand’s success. Cohen clinched the deal regarding a proposition for something not yet in one’s closet this fall.
Sally LaPointe
Sports were also a theme for designer Sally LaPointe, who chose the NBPA headquarters and training facility to showcase her own feat: 15 years as an independently owned and female-founded fashion brand. LaPointe used the regulation-size court as her runway, oddly enough smack dab in the middle of a midtown 6th Ave office building. By default, it became a metaphor for her career journey.
Entitling the collection “Endurance,” a note on the seats defined it as ‘the power to withstand pain or hardships, the ability or strength to continue despite the adverse conditions.’ Whatever the trials the designer went through to get to this point, the collection demonstrated her conviction to execute her vision, making it powerful and seemingly effortless.
LaPointe loves to celebrate musical and dance troupes; this time, her show was opened with a choreographed dance (think drill team on an executive level) by @supa-blackgirl led by Traci Young-Byron. The models were dressed in hot pink boy shorts and hoodies, with the tops flounced with the brand’s signature feather motif.
The models had the fortitude to follow the outstanding performance in their fierce outfits. Out came a slick patent leather jacket, a snakeskin trench, leopard prints as a long coat and brief paired with sheer pieces, and billowing chiffon cape styles topped with fur or marabou. A yellow charmeuse asymmetrical style paired with a black sequin legging only visible on one leg looked like a slam dunk at retail. Making her debut on the Lapointe runway was WNBA Chicago Sky player Kyrse Gondrezick, who possesses the ‘unapologetic confidence’ for the LaPointe look.
Sally LaPointe’s bold leopard print statement for FW25 – Photo credit: Jonas Gustavsson
A big message was that chaps in various fabrications—black leather, leopard fur, and pink feathers—leaned into the Western trend but made it audaciously sexy. The designers also chose some old fur styles in conjunction with Saga Furs. Lapointe showed plenty of shimmery orange looks in a nod to the game ball and an Instagram and sports-fan-worthy crystal minaudières, perfect for those high-profile wives, basketball and otherwise.
Amazon is facing its second workers’ union vote in as many months as laborers at a warehouse in suburban Raleigh, North Carolina, decide this week whether they wish to collectively bargain with the retail giant.
Reuters
Workers at the five-year-old warehouse in the city of Garner will vote through Friday to join or reject the upstart Carolina Amazonians United for Solidarity and Empowerment, or CAUSE, which seeks to push Amazon for higher wages, longer breaks and more scheduling flexibility, among other things. They will need a simple majority among voters to join the union.
In January, workers at a Whole Foods store in Philadelphia voted to unionize, the first successful organizing effort at the national grocery chain that Amazon acquired in 2017 for nearly $14 billion.
A successful union vote could open the door to further organizing at one of Amazon’s roughly 1,000 warehouses scattered across the U.S., potentially increasing its labor and logistics costs. A failed vote, on the other hand, could put a chill on organizers’ efforts.
Italo Medelius-Marsano, secretary for CAUSE, said the group is hoping to negotiate for wages of as much as $30 per hour and breaks of an hour, double what he said was the current time allowed for lunch, as well as better job protections. “We deserve better for the work we do day in and day out,” said Medelius-Marsano, 28, who staffs the warehouse’s shipping dock. “Amazon can afford to pay its workers better than they do.”
Amazon has vigorously rejected prior union actions, arguing that workers are better served by seeking changes directly with the company. Despite a successful 2022 union drive at a warehouse in Staten Island, Amazon is yet to recognize the group or negotiate with workers; and it is battling allegations of misconduct during two union votes at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama, for which the National Labor Relations Board has ruled a third election should be held.
Earlier this month, Whole Foods asked the NLRB to dismiss the results of the local election after the Trump administration fired two members of the agency, leaving it with only two board members, which it said is too few to certify the election results. Whole Foods also alleged the union coerced and intimidated workers in an effort to win the election.
Retaliation alleged
Meanwhile, Amazon has challenged the constitutionality of the NLRB itself in a September federal lawsuit.
An Amazon spokesperson, Eileen Hards, said the company opposed the formation of the union in North Carolina. “We’ve always said that we want our employees to have their voices heard, and we hope and expect this process allows for that,” said Hards in a statement, referring to the union vote. “We believe our employees favor opportunities to have their unique voice heard by working directly with our team.”
She said pay starts at $18.50 at the warehouse, more than double the state’s minimum wage.
Workers at several Amazon warehouses, from California to New York, walked off their jobs in December during the peak holiday shopping season. The strikes were organized by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.
Medelius-Marsano said Amazon had already begun work to oppose the vote among the roughly 4,700 workers at the Garner facility, including playing anti-union messages on a loop in breakrooms and encouraging employees to attend voluntary meetings where officials push a “no” vote. Hards said Amazon has acted within its rights as an employer.
Several workers at the facility filed complaints with the NLRB last week alleging Amazon had retaliated against them for their union activity, including firing them or withholding benefits. Hards said Amazon “does not retaliate against employees for exercising their rights.”