New York Times reporter/critic, Culture and Style: nyti.ms/hSgPt2 IG GuyTrebay
His gifts propelled him to a pioneering career as a photographer and filmmaker. His taste made him an enduring avatar of style.
A show at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston tracks gender-bending through a century of clothing that defied rigid rules of sexuality.
There was a rhinestone-glove invitation and a “Billie Jean” set. And Virgil Abloh said the star inspired the layered gray suits and skirt-trousers.
Multi-ethnic models, sporty footwear and gender-fluid styles stood out on the fall show runways.
At the Pitti Uomo trade fair, people with social media posses of their own disclose some personal “likes.”
Luca Guadagnino has long dreamed of being an interior designer. Inside a former silk mill on Lake Como, he got his shot.
Brands are now racing to capture the market of young people who strive to live gender identities that fit.
His men’s wear models mirrored the world. And so did the clothes.
In Milan, Prada and Fendi pile on the accessories (and short shorts) while Giorgio Armani continues to play it cool with colors.
In shows like Versace and Marni, it seems as if crowdsourcing now shapes the creative process.
The sartorial order of the day is anything but refined. In fact, as designers like Demna Gvasalia and Rick Owens are proving, it’s downright fugly.
A hero among the men’s wear set, Mr. Peskowitz has brought his urban sensibility to the West Coast, where he runs the cult boutique Magasin.