The Spanish fashion and beauty group is honouring its roots with a new launch. Puig has unveiled Colonias Absolutas, a collection of fragrances that pays tribute to its founder, Antonio Puig, and the group’s family heritage. Inspired by Mediterranean olfactory culture, the collection reinterprets the essence of eaux de cologne through a contemporary lens.
The fragrances are now available on the company’s online platform. – Puig
“We thought it was honest and right to stay true to our origins and honour what we have inherited,” said Manuel Puig, vice-chairman and a third-generation family member.
The concept is based on the premise of a return to essentials. “The idea was not to make it a fashion product… What matters is the emotion it evokes,” added Jean-Claude Ellena, the master perfumer behind the creation.
The collection, comprising four signature colognes created by Ellena, is now available through the company’s e-commerce platform, priced at €180 per bottle. Each fragrance comes in a bottle inspired by Balearic jars, a design originally created by André Ricard in 1962, and is housed in a terracotta-coloured case that evokes the earth and Mediterranean warmth.
One of the collection’s standout fragrances is a reinterpretation of the classic Agua Brava, which retains its aromatic character while evolving towards more woody notes, while Agua Lavanda Iris revisits the historic 1940 launch, combining lavender with iris. Agua Noble is inspired by a conversation between Ellena and Puig and evokes Andalusian leather with hints of citrus and white musk. Finally, Agua Mediterránea is presented as an entirely new creation, centred on the fig leaf as a symbol of the Mediterranean, alongside mastic, wild mint and cedar.
Founded in Barcelona in 1914, the family-owned company, which spans fashion, fragrances, make-up and skincare, is present in more than 150 countries and has its own offices in 32 markets.
In its 2024 financial year, Puig posted record net revenue of €4.79 billion, up 11.3% on the previous year. Continuing this trend, the company’s net sales reached €2.299 billion in the first half, representing an increase of 7.6% on a like-for-like basis (LFL, at constant scope and exchange rates) and 5.9% in reported terms, outpacing the premium beauty market.
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More lucrative than a car boot sale and more cost-effective than a shopping trip: that’s the pitch behind Wherewear, a French peer-to-peer fashion rental platform. Launched in 2023 by Victoire Tassin and Yasmine Brunet, the company aims to reach 150,000 female users within 18 months.
Yasmine Brunet and Victoire Tassin, founders of wherewear – @ofeliaemephoto
Eight years ago, the two entrepreneurs met at Printemps, both working as product managers on apprenticeships. After a spell at Ba&sh, Brunet returned to Printemps. To help Tassin, who was in the midst of a recruitment process at Yves Saint Laurent, she lent her the jumpsuit that helped her land the job and return to Printemps. This is the “genesis” of Wherewear, as Tassin sums it up: a loan of a garment between friends.
Since then, Wherewear has launched, first as a website and now as an app, with an interface that sits somewhere between Vinted and Airbnb.
“We also want to create a genuine social network feel. That’s why, on wherewear, the profile page resembles an Instagram profile. We recommend photos of the clothes being worn in real-life settings, precisely to convey what we want a garment to express,” explained Tassin.
wherewear won the IFM Incubator Pitch last September – @ofeliaemephoto
Thanks to their work and their concept, the two entrepreneurs were named winners of the IFM Incubator Pitch last September. After numerous meetings and training sessions, the Wherewear founders took home the €10,000 prize, invested in visibility (with Univers Presse), but above all gained exposure before industry figures. In 2024, Tassin and Brunet also joined the La Ruche incubator, focused on CSR issues.
Short-term development focused on France
In the medium term, the company plans to open its wardrobe to menswear and childrenswear, and to expand to the rest of the world. While serious competitors already exist elsewhere, such as By Rotation in the UK, other markets appear more accessible to the two co-founders. That will come later. By 2026, Wherewear hopes to establish itself as a go-to solution in France, particularly beyond the capital, where the vast majority of rentals take place. For the time being, in-person handovers are particularly common.
wherewear encourages users to post photos of the clothes being worn – wherewear
To finance its operations, Wherewear takes a commission from the owners. For example, for a dress bought for €250, the company recommends listing it at €40 for four days. The renter will pay the shipping costs but will get a dress at a more affordable price than buying new, and the owner will receive €32 after wherewear’s commission, with the option to rent it out again afterwards. A deposit is required at the time of rental to guard against damage to the item.
With a 100% repeat rate and an average of five daily sessions per user, the app now lists 3,000 items and has 1,500 registered customers since last June. Having grown purely organically to date, Wherewear plans to raise funds. Its founders hope to raise between €300,000 and €500,000 to finance further development of the app and boost its visibility.
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To move beyond its identity as a retail brand and make it easier to identify the labels that now span the different facets of its offering, the Kiabi group has unveiled a new logo: a stylised “K” that will appear across the logos of all its entities.
Kiabi
This “K”, framed by a thick white outline, appears in the top right-hand corner of the Kiabi Home logo, as well as on the logos for Beebs, dedicated to second-hand, and Kitchoun, the brand for shoes for babies from birth to nine months.
“This new adventure represents our transition from a fashion retailer to an ecosystem of brands and services, centred on a strong promise: to always do more for families,” the group said on social media.
“More than just a symbol, [this new logo] embodies our evolution, our new identity and our ambition. It reflects the quality, style and accessibility that define Kiabi’s DNA, upheld every day by our teams around the world.”
As FashionNetwork.com recently noted, Kiabi is now at the helm of a growing portfolio of brands in the French apparel market. With revenue of €2.5 billion in 2024, Kiabi currently has a network of 647 stores and 10,000 employees across 83 countries.
The family fashion brand recently used Circular Fashion Week, held in Lille on 4 and 5 December, to formalise its membership of the Dutch Denim Deal coalition, which aims to scale up the recycling of jeans into new garments.
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Mac Cosmetics has appointed Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Chappell Roan as its newest global brand ambassador.
Mac taps Chappell Roan as global brand ambassador. – Mac Cosmetics
In this role, Roan is set to appear in international campaigns beginning in 2026, and bold creative moments as part of a long-term partnership with the brand.
“Partnering with Mac feels full circle. This brand has always made space for people like me; since day one they’ve embraced art, queerness, drag and self-expression,” said Chappell, known for her theatrical onstage personas and advocacy for LGBTQIA+ communities.
Roan’s first campaign for the brand, photographed by Inez & Vinoodh, features a theatrical look with her signature cloud-white complexion, erased eyebrows and a Cool Teddy lip combination. Makeup artist Andrew Dahling described the look as a modern interpretation of androgyny, drawing from film noir and 1930s military references layered with Roan’s signature high-glam style.
“I’m so excited to welcome Chappell Roan as Mac’s new brand ambassador. She is one of the most exciting and powerful artists of this generation; a true creative force who uses beauty as a form of bold, emotional storytelling,” said Nicola Formichetti, Mac Cosmetics global creative director.
“Chappell represents a generation that values authenticity, queer joy and fearless self-expression, which aligns perfectly with Mac and our mission of ‘All Ages, All Races, All Genders.’ Her love for her community, especially her commitment to LGBTQIA+ voices and rights, reflects the heart of what Mac has championed since the beginning. We’re thrilled for everything we’ll create together.”