True Religion has teamed up with Von Dutch on a limited-edition holiday collection that unites two icons of early 2000s fashion.
True Religion and Von Dutch team up for limited-edition holiday collection. – True Religion x Von Dutch
The collection reimagines signature elements from both brands with washed fleece, baggy denim, flame motifs, and rhinestone embellishments across men’s and women’s styles. Highlights include cropped baby tees, varsity jackets, oversized hoodies, and low-rise jeans.
“Our design approach wasn’t about a throwback or revival, but about mixing legacy and new in a way that feels completely fresh,” explained Tina Blake, creative director and senior vice president of design, merchandising, and brand image, True Religion.
“We took what originally made both brands iconic—bold stitching, statement logos and a fearless attitude—and reimagined it all for today. This new collection celebrates the shared DNA of two iconic brands and redefines it for a new generation.”
The collection launches with a campaign featuring reality TV personalities Chelley, Clarke Carraway, Iris Kendall, and Jeremiah Brown—spotlighting the collaboration’s connection to pop culture.
“This collaboration represents the evolution of two cultural forces that helped define a generation,” said Kristen D’Arcy, chief marketing officer and head of digital growth, True Religion.
“In the early aughts, fashion, music and entertainment collided in new and exciting ways and both True Religion and Von Dutch were right at the center of it all. This partnership captures that same spirit for True Religion today. It’s a reflection of how we create cultural relevance through the right collabs, at the right time, with the same on trend talent and influencer strategies.”
Earlier this month, True Religion unveiled its 2025 holiday campaign, fronted by Grammy Award–winning artist, entrepreneur, and philanthropist Ciara.
Not a label, not a lobby, not even a legal entity. That is how Arielle Lévy, president of the Une Autre Mode Est Possible (UAMEP) collective, characterises this nascent union. Animer, an acronym for “Acteurs Nationaux Indépendants Mode Engagée Régénérative,” aims to shine a light on all the initiatives undertaken by fashion stakeholders, from producers to brands, who are advancing responsible, regenerative fashion in France.
The union was founded by eight collectives involved in regenerative fashion – UAMEP
The union was officially launched on Monday January 19, following the petition initiated by Arielle Lévy against Shein in response to the watering down of the anti–fast fashion law. Titled “Paris deserves better than Shein,” the petition drew nearly 140,000 signatures. “I wanted us to unite because I realised how strong the civic voice was,” explains Arielle Lévy. “These collectives are doing superb work and, at a certain point, there is a desire to close ranks, to make society together,” she says.
“Breaking the isolation of initiatives across the regions”
In addition to UAMEP, a number of other collectives are behind Animer, including Fashion Revolution France, L’Âme du Fil (Angers), Collectif Baga (Marseille), Café Flax (Clermont-Ferrand), Le Comptoir de la mode responsable (Poitiers), Le Conservatoire de la Mode Vintage (Isère), and La Grande Collecte/Textile Lab (La Rochelle). “It’s a union of independent collectives, committed to their local areas and sharing the same societal project,” Arielle Lévy emphasises.
The union hopes to represent all French territories – Collectif Baga
The union plans to focus its efforts on the ground, working across supply chains, regions, practices and even our shared imagination. With “hundreds” of stakeholders already on board via the various founding collectives, Animer is built on ten key ideas: dignity, value-sharing, traceability as a common language, less and better, circular design, smart re-localisation, carbon sobriety, inclusion and plurality, cooperation rather than “sterile competition”, and proof through action.
Animer’s founders plan to bring together all the initiatives active in regenerative fashion across the country. The union hopes to become a preferred interlocutor in defending a societal project focused on respect for the earth, and for men and women. With the help of Fashion Revolution, it aims to act in the national interest by engaging the general public and the country’s institutions.
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French cosmetics giant L’Oreal said on Wednesday it will set up a beauty tech hub in the south Indian city of Hyderabad with an initial investment of over 35 billion rupees ($383.4 million).
L’Oréal
The hub aims to be a global base for AI-driven beauty innovation, create 2,000 tech jobs through 2030, and speed up the rollout of advanced AI beauty solutions, the company said in a statement.
Nicolas Hieronimus, L’Oreal’s CEO, and the state government of Telangana formalized the partnership at the World Economic Forum, Davos.
Telangana has rapidly emerged as a key investment and technology hub in southern India.
Bilateral trade between India and France stood at $15 billion in 2024, and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron have been forging warmer ties.
The two sides have also been working to recast their tax treaty since 2024 to modernize it by adapting global standards on tax transparency, Reuters reported in December.
Swarovski on Tuesday announced the appointment of Sindhu Culas to the role of president, general manager, North America at the Austrian jewelry maker.
Sindhu Culas – Courtesy
Based in the luxury firm’s New York City office, Culas will be responsible for “maximizing the Swarovski physical and digital presence and overall brand affinity in the U.S.,” according to a press release.
“We are thrilled to welcome Sindhu to Swarovski. Her vast leadership experience and passion for the brand make her an exceptional addition to our team,” said Kolja Kiofsky, chief commercial officer, Swarovski.
“With Sindhu guiding our next chapter in North America, we are looking ahead to an exciting future filled with creativity, operational excellence, and meaningful growth under our LuxIgnite strategy.”
A retail veteran with over 25 years of experience across omni‑channel retail and institutional investment management, Culas joins the crystal jewelry maker from G-Star, where she served as CEO of North America at the British denim and apparel brand.
She began her career as a buyer and planner at Macy’s, Talbots, and Lord & Taylor before being promoted to strategy and brand management at Macy’s. Later on, the executive served as senior vendor manager at Amazon and as senior vice president of e‑commerce and strategy for Calvin Klein.
“Watching Swarovski’s brand repositioning and momentum in recent years has been inspiring,” said Culas, in response to her new appointment.
“I’m excited to join this exceptional team, collaborate across the business, and help strengthen our position while accelerating growth throughout North America. It’s a remarkable moment for the brand, and I’m thrilled to contribute to the journey ahead.”