Homme Plissé Issey Miyake will be the star attraction and guest of honor at the upcoming June edition of Pitti, menswear’s most prestigious international salon.
The renowned Japanese label will stage an Italian-inspired runway show in Florence at Pitti from Tuesday, June 17, to Friday, June 20.
“The presence of Homme Plissé Issey Miyake at the upcoming Pitti Uomo in June fills us with pride and excitement,” said Raffaello Napoleone, CEO of Pitti Immagine.
“We are pleased to announce that Homme Plissé Issey Miyake is soon to embark on a new creative adventure. Marking the first occasion of this adventure is our participation in Pitti Immagine Uomo in June 2025,” the house said in a statement on Wednesday.
“We feel grateful for this opportunity to be featured at one of the most celebrated menswear events in the world. On this occasion, we will present our spring/summer 2026 collection to a local and international audience in Florence, created based on our research and field studies carried out during our travels across Italy,” the house added.
One of Japan’s greatest designers, Issey Miyake, founded his eponymous house in 1970. He built an iconic body of work defined by technologically driven fabrics, artistic silhouettes, unique collaborations, and a long-term fascination with pleated textiles—hence the collection’s name.
The Homme Plissé Issey Miyake show will take place on Wednesday, June 18, though the exact location has not been revealed. Guest designers generally select historic sites in and around Florence, the capital of the Renaissance, which offers no shortage of unique and striking venues. Jonathan Anderson staged his show in the lavish Villa La Pietra, the former home of writer and aesthete Harold Acton, while Hugo Boss once presented a collection in a Renaissance villa designed by Michelangelo.
“We have long hoped to associate the name of this great Japanese brand with our event, and today we can finally share a long-awaited announcement: Homme Plissé Issey Miyake will be the guest of honor at Pitti Uomo 108. This is our way of recognizing and celebrating the quality, creativity, and originality of the brand, its success on a global scale—and, at the same time, highlighting its current creative direction, which has successfully reinterpreted the quiet, elegant magic of its founder: one of the designers, one of the artists, who shaped the history of fashion in the twentieth century,” added Napoleone.
The house of Miyake further announced that its visit to Pitti would mark the beginning of a new era in which “the brand will travel around the world to present its clothing in places and at events where it has never been before, meeting local communities and connecting with a global creative scene.”
It did not disclose when or where these events—for men and women—would take place, noting that they may be staged outside of the traditional runway calendar.
However, the house emphasized that both its newly created IM Men collections will continue to be presented twice a year during the official menswear runway season in Paris in January and June.
Meanwhile, its signature Issey Miyake womenswear collection—now under Satoshi Kondo’s design direction—will continue to be shown during the Paris women’s ready-to-wear season in March and October.
Kondo’s latest collection in March was a visually striking display held at the Carrousel du Louvre. It opened with white cotton T-shirt dresses seemingly invaded by red ribbed knits or pleated cocktail dresses twisted into exotic swirls—suggesting they had lives of their own. Later, Kondo paired mannish blazers with dramatically inverted shirts, their sleeves cascading before the waist. The show received the largest applause of the season in Paris.
Along with these four signature shows in Paris, the brand also plans to “travel and acquire knowledge and experiences. We believe that our work will continue to evolve by establishing strong footholds that inspire our designs. By engaging in our craft in different cultural contexts, we aim to develop a wider range of clothing that is more diverse, yet still universal.”
The house concluded, “We also look forward to exploring new formats to communicate who we are as a brand. ”
Fasahion/lifestyle retail group Matalan has launched a 27-piece collection in collaboration with fashion brand Little Mistress and TV personality Vicky Pattison.
She’s only the latest in a series of reality TV show stars to link up with a retailer on a signature collection. She rose to prominence originally on the Geordie Shore show.
We’re told it’s a collection that brings together “the best of on-trend designs with Matalan’s signature commitment to great quality fashion at affordable prices”.
From dresses and tailored jumpsuits to casual blouses and statement skirts, the collection covers a variety of day-to-night styles, “reflecting Pattison’s personal style”. It comes in “bold hot pink, fiery red, and playful florals”.
With prices starting from just £18 and in sizes from 8-22 the collection is now available in-store and online.
Matalan’s buying director, Laura Wiard said: “The collection reflects the latest trends, while ensuring we stay true to Matalan’s mission of providing stylish fashion at accessible prices.”
Mark Ashton, founder and MD at Little Mistress, added: “We’ve worked hard to create a collection that’s not only fashionable and versatile but also accessible for everyone. It’s all about empowering women to feel their best, no matter the occasion. We’re confident that this collection will resonate with customers and help them express their own unique style.”
The June edition of London Fashion Week has long been less of a draw compared to the main seasonal events during the big international fashion months and the latest move from the British Fashion Council has underlined that — it’s been cancelled.
There’s been no official announcement so far, but a quick look at the LFW website shows no dates for June listed.
The BFC will reportedly instead focus on the London Show Rooms Paris event it runs for UK-based brands from 26 June to 1 July, and menswear will be the key category here.
Caroline Rush, the soon-to-be-ex-CEO of the fashion council told Vogue Business that the showroom event will “generate sales and develop [brands’] relationships with international media outside of a show environment, reinforcing our commitment to providing vital commercial opportunities for British designers”.
The Paris showroom event had itself been on hold since the middle of 2023 but was relaunched last September.
The June edition of LFW has long struggled to gain the traction that the main seasonal events enjoy as a matter of course. Originally launched 13 years ago as London Collections: Men before it rebranded as London Fashion Week Men’s, it rode the crest of the wave of interest in men’s-specific runway shows and attracted the big names of British fashion.
But while it became a co-ed event in 2020, the wider move towards co-ed shows meant labels often chose February or September (or even another city) to show their menswear. The pandemic had an impact too, although the June event remained strong up to and including the 2022 edition before declining in 2023.
The switch to a focus on London Show Rooms Paris means those brands seeking a menswear-friendly format at a time when other menswear labels are being shown internationally have a hopefully-welcoming home in the heart of fashion’s premier city.
Premium fashion retailer Jigsaw has received a £5 million funding injection from investor David Ross, who built his fortune as the co-founder of Carphone Warehouse. It means he’s become the majority shareholder of the business.
Jigsaw
That’s according to Sky News, which reported the deal saying that an investment vehicle controlled by him is committing the money to the chain seven years after he first invested in the firm.
Before the latest cash injection, Jigsaw founder John Robinson was the controlling shareholder.
The retailer is soon to be without a CEO after short-term CEO Hash Ladha (the former chief executive of Oasis and Warehouse) recently said that he’d be leaving in the summer. The report also said that a new boss is in the process of being recruited.
Jigsaw has been a long-standing name on UK high streets having been founded in 1970. But the company is currently loss-making and has struggled in recent periods, seeking rent reductions from its landlords and closing loss making stores during the pandemic.
Its last set of results were filed last autumn (covering the year to January 2024). They showed revenue up to £57.495 million from £56.779 million and gross profit edging up to £36.7 million from £36.3 million. But it made an operating loss of £934,000 compared to a profit of £1.9 million in the previous year. The pre-tax loss was £3.567 million compared to a profit of £816,000 a year earlier and the final loss for the period was similar at £3.566 million compared to £802,000 in profit last time.
Sky quoted a “source close to Jigsaw” saying the new funding would establish a more resilient long-term financial foundation for the company.
As well as reducing debt, part of the cash will be used to improve fulfilment capability and build a new online proposition for the brand.
The company hasn’t officially commented on the report.