Paris-based brand Sandro has debuted a Louise Bourgeois-inspired collection almost a quarter-century after the great French-American artist unveiled her most famous work.
The collection comes to market amid a powerful creative surge at Sandro, which staged an impressively elegant presentation of its latest ideas inside the Musée Bourdelle earlier this month.
Spiral-striped sunhat and minimalist white tank top nod to Louise Bourgeois’ symbolic motifs. – Louise Bourgeois x Sandro
Twenty-five years ago, Bourgeois’ legendary giant spider named “Maman” dwarfed the Turbine Room when Tate Modern was opened on the banks of the Seine. Though the Sandro collection is far more about spirals than spiders, the house’s founder and artistic director, Evelyne Chetrite, delves deeper into the artistic universe of Louise Bourgeois. Hence, this Spring/Summer 2025 collection plays on the symbolic resonance of spirals to Bourgeois, which evokes memories of her childhood.
Highlights include pale blue and white linen tea dresses, halter-neck picnic dresses, azure and cream geometric-pattern poplin cotton blouses, and black and white spider-web tops and pants.
The Paris-born but New York-based artist Bourgeois worked frequently with textiles, using fabrics from her own wardrobe and home as raw materials in her creative process—ideas that find their roots in her own parents’ art gallery, which dealt mainly in tapestries.
Selection of spiral-themed pieces from the Louise Bourgeois-inspired collection by Sandro. – Louise Bourgeois x Sandro
“Long before upcycling became a trend, Louise Bourgeois had already integrated it into her creative process. This attention to extending the life of materials resonates particularly with Sandro’s values and has inspired the design studio,” Sandro explained in a release.
Earlier in March, Sandro held a swish cocktail in the Montparnasse museum, where the latest looks were positioned on stockmen among the great works of sculpture by Antoine Bourdelle.
For women, the highlights included très chic funnel-neck suede curvy blousons worn with ruffled denim skirts and double-face wool coats paired with worn jeans and silver-tipped suede biker boots. These looks stood proudly beside a giant “Death of the Last Centaur” plaster statue.
For men, the presentation featured flared-pants suits with double-breasted jackets in pebble-dash wool, surgically cut burgundy leather jerkins, and 10-button tobacco wool double-breasted coats with real dandy insolence.
Graphic spiral-print slip dress with delicate strap detailing from Sandro’s Spring/Summer 2025 line. – Louise Bourgeois x Sandro
Sandro is a Parisian brand that has long been a leader in the accessible luxury segment. It is known for its men’s and women’s collections, which are both refined and quirky, with an added dose of bold attitude this season.
Evelyne Chetrite, founder and creative director since 1984, is noted for her precise aesthetic: modern, sophisticated clothing that doesn’t cause much pain at the cash register. Since 2008, Ilan Chetrite, Evelyne’s son, has been developing the Sandro Homme line, focusing on classics reimagined with a modern touch—a little like Bourdelle, whose mum was a weaver by profession.
Sandro boasts over 750 points of sale worldwide. Today, it is the key brand in the Sandro, Maje, and Claudie Pierlot Group, known as SMCP.
It’s turning out to be a very busy spring on the tech front for The Very Group. Fresh from unveiling a new Beauty Inspiration Hub for its signature brand, the digital fashion retailer has now turned to expanding its data-led creative expertise by launching HelloStudio for other businesses.
Targeting external brands, the new proposition “will provide a multi-channel creative service which taps into the latest technology, offering bespoke and tailored content that connects brands to their consumers”.
And “a rich history of delivering creative campaigns to captivate audiences, including those for global brands” will be at the heart of the HelloStudio offer.
Leveraging The Very Group’s 1.4 million daily site visits, 4.3 million active customers and tech capabilities, HelloStudio “will utilise the retailer’s wealth of customer data throughout the ‘ideation’ process to collaborate with brand partners on new concepts”, it said.
The launch of the new creative solution follows the roll-out of Very Media Group, which combines the internal retail and data expertise of The Very Group and the retail media knowledge of its in-house SMG team.
The HelloStudio team’s experience spans big household names across diverse categories, from Adidas and Apple, to Levi’s, Ray-Ban, Meta and SharkNinja, “helping deliver material increases in key measures such as sales, return on ad spend and social conversions”.
Julie Phelan, head of Creative at The Very Group said: “We’ve been working with brands, delivering eye-catching creative campaigns for years now, so while the proposition is new, working with brands has been at the heart of The Very Group for a long time.
“We have a proven record of conceptualising and delivering channel bespoke content which customers love. There is no channel after thought or retrofitting in our work. Plus, we harness and embrace new technology to enhance our rich content.”
Mass-market fashion retailer New Look has announced that it will “supercharge digital growth” on the back of a £30 million investment from its shareholders.
New Look
The money will be spent on its data, AI and e-commerce platforms “to enhance [the] seamless, personalised shopping experience for its 10 million customers” and it aims to double digital orders from £500 million to £1 billion by 2030, targeting a 10% online market share by FY28
The company, which is already one of the UK’s biggest names in UK womenswear for the 18-44 age range, said the “opportunity is clear. The UK has an online womenswear market of £4.3 billion. New Look already has market-leading positions in several key categories1: #1 in dresses, #1 in outerwear, #1 in footwear and #1 in denim, and over 10 million engaged customers”.
It’s understandable that the business wants to leverage this into a much bigger digital business, although it must be said that it hasn’t exactly neglected the online market thus far.
Over the past five years it has invested “significantly” to elevate its digital capabilities, upgrading its website and app, building a social media community of 7 million followers, and creating a proprietary Enterprise Data Platform with a leading tech stack.
Using data and AI it said it will be able to provide its customers with “hyper-personalised marketing and a tailored shopping experience, leading to higher satisfaction and lower return rates”.
So there’s obviously more to do and the new investment should take it to the next stage. The funding will be strategically deployed across four key growth areas.
The first is data-driven innovation – enhancing insights, decision-making, and customer personalisation; expanding the proprietary Enterprise Data Platform to deliver even more hyper-personalised shopping experiences; and leveraging real-time analytics to improve supply chain speed and efficiency, and anticipate customer trends.
Next is technology investments such as optimising the app and online shopping journey; improving search and product discovery to make it easier for customers to find what they want; and streamlining the checkout experience, improving the customer journey and driving sales growth.
The third growth area is loyalty and engagement – “cementing New Look’s market dominance and fashion authority”. It aims to achieve this by leveraging its “strong brand and sustainability credentials, using AI-driven insights to refine product development” to create collections that are “trend-led, great value and [with] high-quality design”. It also aims to consistently deliver in its best-selling categories to reinforce its market-leading position; and introduce new digital initiatives for its loyalty programme, Club New Look, to offer members exclusive rewards, products and promotions to enhance engagement and loyalty.
The final growth area is ‘customer migration’, streamlining and elevating the customer journey. It also includes optimising the store network to underpin digital initiatives in selected retail locations, strengthening in-store digital engagement; and drawing on learnings from recent upgrades to flagship stores in Manchester and Bluewater “where digital enhancements have delivered double digit like-for-like sales growth”.
CEO Helen Connolly said: “Our goal is to be the number one online destination for feel-good fashion, powered by our loyal customer base and proven digital model. This new capital injection means we can ramp up our digital operations, enhance customer service, and drive growth and achieve our goal of £1bn online demand by 2030.”
Temperley London makes the kind of clothes that have staying power, so it’s no surprise that they’re popular pieces on resale sites. It’s even less of a surprise that the company itself has now launched into the UK resale market with Temperley Vintage.
It said the dedicated resale platform offers “a simple and authenticated way to buy and sell original Temperley London pieces. Rooted in the brand’s philosophy that garments should be cherished, repaired, and passed on, this initiative provides customers with the opportunity to give their treasured items a second life while ensuring quality, authenticity, and a seamless experience”.
The company has come up with a “streamlined process [that] ensures a seamless experience, backed by the brand’s guarantee”.
Sellers can request an immediate quote, send items in free of charge, and receive a credit payout within days and with the promise of no hidden costs or fees.
It added that every item undergoes “rigorous checks, repairs, and cleaning to ensure it meets Temperley London’s exacting standards” and there’s also a 14-day return policy.
Alice Temperley, founder and creative director, said the launch “feels like a natural extension of the brand, allowing the Temperley London community to give their items a second life, and for others to find that archive piece they have always been looking for”.