To mark the 130th anniversary of its legendary Monogram, Louis Vuitton turns to Zendaya, and the result feels intimate rather than monumental. This is not a loud anniversary campaign. It is a quiet, romantic reflection on style as companionship, not ownership.
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Bluemarble Menswear F/W 2026
The Fall–Winter 2026 menswear collection from Bluemarble feels like a deliberate pause. Less noise. More intention. Under the creative direction of Anthony Alvarez, the Parisian label enters a phase of introspection where the creative gesture sharpens and the silhouette is refined. The exuberant volume of previous seasons gives way to craft, to the hand, to details that reward close inspection.
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Jacob Elordi for Esquire UK
“I’m very afraid. The older I get, the more nervous I become.” It is not the kind of sentence you expect from someone whose career has accelerated at this speed, with this much certainty, and this many eyes watching. Yet that vulnerability sits at the center of Jacob Elordi’s conversation with Esquire UK, and it is what makes the feature linger long after the last page.
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Bella Hadid is Rococo Cool in Miss Sixty S/S 2026 by Gabriel Moses
Bella Hadid returns as the face of Miss Sixty in the Spring-Summer 2026 campaign, delivering chaos, drama, and style all at once. Shot by Gabriel Moses and styled by Frederic Saint Parck, the campaign reimagines Marie Antoinette as a modern rebel romance deconstructed, low-rise, and unapologetically undone. It’s decadent, irreverent, and fully captivating.
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The Russians Are Coming by Andreas Fux, 1992
Andreas Fux’s photographic series The Russians Are Coming captures a moment suspended between systems, identities, and attitudes. Shot in 1992, just after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the work focuses on young Russian men navigating public space with a mix of charm, bravado, and quiet vulnerability. The result feels intimate without being intrusive. Curious without being exploitative. These images observe masculinity as it unfolds rather than performs
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Louis Vuitton’s Spring Summer 2026 ft. Jennifer Connelly
Louis Vuitton’s Spring Summer 2026 campaign understands something important. Softness is not weakness. In fact, it can be the most commanding presence in the room. Starring Jennifer Connelly and photographed by Cass Bird, the campaign unfolds like a slow, confident exhale. Calm. Considered. Completely in control.
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Olivia Rodrigo for Miu Miu S/S 2026 by Jamie Hawkesworth
Olivia Rodrigo is the perfect center for this world. She carries sweetness and defiance in equal measure, which mirrors Miu Miu’s ongoing obsession with contradiction. She floats, but she does not drift. There is intention in her stillness. She is joined by Sateen Besson, Li Gengxi, Suzanne Lindon, Rachel Agbonze, and Amelie Sante, creating a cast that feels thoughtful rather than decorative. Together, they move through golden light as if it is part of the styling itself. Nothing feels staged. Everything feels lived in, even in the clouds.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.