Now sitting at the top of the luxury pyramid, the longtime acolytes employed rich textures and sophisticated details to dandify their signature silhouettes.
For his latest Vuitton collection, Pharrell Williams tapped his best bud Nigo to be co-creative director. And Bernard Arnault made it back from the Trump inauguration to see it.
Louis Vuitton men's creative director, Pharrell Williams, drew his audience to a rear courtyard of the Louvre Museum after dark on Tuesday for a fall-winter catwalk show, kicking off Paris Fashion Week with a line-up of jazzed up streetwear.
Pharrell Williams took his Louis Vuitton men's footwear to a new dimension for fall/winter 2025. Indeed, the French brand's men's creative director used an oversized volume to make a new shoe statement this season – most notably with the new LV ButterSoft sneaker.
Standout bags included the Speedy which appeared in yuzu yellow, sencha green, and sakura pink. Additionally, the Speedy appeared in an indigo blue edition dyed according to Japanese tradition, and a golden edition with a white monogram was created to evoke kinsugi pottery.
Celebrities including Bradley Cooper squeezed into Louis Vuitton as the brand transformed the Louvre’s historic heart into a stunning stage for Paris Fashion Week.
Future, Aaron Pierre, Travis Scott, Skepta, Tosin Cole, Idris Elba and more attended Pharrell and Nigo's Louis Vuitton PFW show.
From Nigo's Birkin bags to Pharrell's gilded Blackberry—the creatives' personal effects are going up for sale.
The iconic Louvre became the backdrop for a high-octane fashion spectacle as Louis Vuitton unveiled its latest menswear collection during Paris Fashion Week. Hollywood star Bradley Cooper and a roster of global celebrities joined the event,
Pharrell Williams and Nigo, longtime friends and creative collaborators, team up to unveil Louis Vuitton's highly anticipated Fall/Winter 2025 collection.
Belgian designer Walter Van Beirendonck said Wednesday that the fashion world was "afraid" of US President Donald Trump and failing to speak out against him for commercial reasons.