Junya Watanabe has opened his latest menswear show at Paris Fashion Week with beige hunting jackets paired with discreet shirts and ties.
With a Filson partnership, Junya Watanabe takes us on a time warp back to the hipstery 2000s — plaid checks and all.
Amid an uncertain political climate, designers at the latest menswear show in Paris sent messages of resilience and resistance down the runway. Among the key looks was a reimagined “hipster” for 2025.
Junya Watanabe unveiled its Fall/Winter 2025 collection during Paris Fashion Week. Check it out below:
Junya Watanabe has opened his latest menswear show at Paris Fashion Week with beige hunting jackets paired with discreet shirts and ties PARIS -- Beige hunting jackets with oversized pockets ...
PARIS (AP) — Beige hunting jackets with oversized pockets, paired with discreet shirts and ties, opened Junya Watanabe’s latest menswear show at Paris Fashion Week Friday. It was a deceptively ...
More Kiko Kostadinov x ASICS magic was accompanied by Willy Chavarria’s adidas takeover, six new collaborations from the world of COMME des GARÇONS and other eye-catching designs.
The French capital had quite the roster this season, from Willy Chavarria’s Paris debut to an LV show that brought Pharrell Williams and Nigo back together, and loads more.
The menswear trends stemming from the fall 2025 collections this month paint a picture of an industry in transition. Designers often talk about liminal spaces, contrasts, and juxtapositions, and while they often reference their collections and the “tensions” they imbue their clothing with in their quest for novelty,
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All the Collaborations We Saw at January Men's Fashion Week
Winter 2025 Men's Fashion Month in Europe has come to a close. As to be expected, we got a look at a plethora of new collaborations from our favorite designers who showed in Milan and Paris. There were big link-ups like Pharrell's latest Louis Vuitton collection designed with his longtime friend and mentor Nigo.
The legendary American-made shoes were a hallmark of menswear's lumbersexual moment, but they've always been impervious to wherever the trend cycle heads next.
These collections and collaborations deserve a second look.