• ART,  CULTURE

    Ben Kimura and the Art of Gay Visibility in Japan “さぶ / SABU” Magazine Covers

    The covers of さぶ / SABU from 1991 feel like quiet acts of courage. Bold, intimate, and unapologetically sensual, they exist at the intersection of art, identity, and underground publishing. Created by Ben Kimura, these images are not just magazine covers. They are historical markers. At a time when queer representation was still largely hidden or coded, SABU offered visibility. Not diluted. Not softened. Fully formed.

  • FASHION

    Jimmy Choo S/S 2026 Les Fleurs ft. Kiki Willems

    Jimmy Choo’s Spring Summer 2026 campaign understands that femininity is never one note. Titled Les Fleurs, the new story plays in the space between softness and structure, fantasy and control. It is romantic, yes, but it is also alert. A daydream that keeps its eyes open. Shot by Quentin de Briey and styled by Jane How, the campaign stars Kiki Willems, who moves through the imagery with an ease that feels both serene and sharp. This is Jimmy Choo leaning fully into its Future Feminine ethos, where beauty is layered, contradictory, and confident enough to hold opposing moods at once.

  • FASHION

    Hunter Schafer, Liu Wen, Carey Mulligan, and John Glacier for Prada SS 2026 campaign by Anne Collier

    Prada’s Spring Summer 2026 campaign does not just present clothes. It questions the act of looking at them. Starring Hunter Schafer, Liu Wen, Carey Mulligan, and John Glacier, the campaign feels like stepping inside a fashion thought bubble, clever, conceptual, and quietly playful. Created in collaboration with American artist Anne Collier and photographed by Oliver Hadlee Pearch, the imagery turns advertising into its own subject. Prada is not selling fantasy here. It is dissecting it.

  • FASHION,  Menswear

    Miguel Ángel Silvestre photographed by Valero Rioja

    Miguel Ángel Silvestre steps fully into fantasy in this editorial portrait series photographed by Valero Rioja for Numéro Netherlands. This is masculinity turned up so high it loops back on itself. Hyper masculine, unapologetic, and knowingly theatrical, the images flirt with excess in a way that feels deliberate rather than performative. From the first frame, the tone is clear. Leather dominates the narrative. Heavy, polished, and sculptural, it shapes Silvestre into something larger than life. Broad shoulders, cinched waists, commanding stances. The silhouettes exaggerate power, but there is a wink beneath the surface.

  • FASHION

    Paul Mescal by Elizaveta Porodina

    Paul Mescal has never been afraid of vulnerability, but this editorial takes that instinct somewhere far darker. Captured by fashion photographer and artist Elizaveta Porodina for British GQ, the portrait series leans into surrealism, discomfort, and a kind of glamorous horror that lingers long after you scroll past it. This is not a soft or flattering portrayal. It is haunting. It is strange. And it is deeply intentional. From the first image, Mescal appears wide eyed and exposed, as if caught mid transformation. There is a sense of catabolism running through the story. Beauty breaking down. Elegance unraveling. The body and face become sites of tension rather than reassurance.

  • FASHION,  Menswear

    Tom Hiddleston by Photographer Jason Hetherington

    Tom Hiddleston has always understood the power of presence. In the January and February 2026 issue of High Life Magazine, the actor appears in a fashion editorial photographed by Jason Hetherington that places him within sweeping, grand architectural settings. The result feels intentional and composed, a meeting point between classical structure and modern refinement.

  • Menswear

    François Arnaud by Samuel Fournier

    François Arnaud has long occupied an interesting space in contemporary culture. An actor known for intensity and range, he has also become a quietly influential style figure, admired for how naturally he moves between softness and strength. In a portrait editorial photographed by Samuel Fournier for Nuvo Magazine, Arnaud leans fully into that balance, delivering a version of masculinity that feels relaxed, self-assured, and deliberately undone.

  • FASHION

    Carla Rey by Andrew Yee | Editorial

    Photographed by Andrew Yee for Vogue Czechoslovakia, model Carla Rey steps into the streets of New York with a presence that feels both assured and cinematic. Styled by Marco Antonio, with hair by Julia Kana and makeup by William Murphy, the editorial captures a version of power that does not rely on excess. Instead, it finds strength in restraint, allowing contrast and atmosphere to do the heavy lifting.

  • FASHION,  Menswear

    Mike Monroe by Luke Young NY Captures Quiet Mornings and Sculpted Presence

    n the Mike Monroe by Luke Young NY editorial series, the atmosphere feels like the pause between sleep and the first cup of coffee, soft, intentional, and quietly observant. Shot in a chic apartment setting under natural, diffused light, the series highlights male model Mike Monroe in a way that privileges presence and ease over ostentation. The images embrace stillness, letting light, space, and form define the mood.