We're thrilled to welcome Jill Manoff as editor-in-chief of Glossy.
In an ongoing effort to eschew harmful chemicals in its clothing production, Levi Strauss & Co. announced it will be pushing suppliers to avoid petroleum-based materials, instead opting for items made using natural resources, including bacteria, fungus, yeast and methane gas.
Let’s get it straight: Birchbox is not a sampling company. That may surprise you: The New York-based beauty firm is perhaps best known for its beautiful boxes of makeup samples that get delivered to customers every month. But Katia Beauchamp, co-founder of Birchbox, is adamant that it’s about much more...
The Supreme Court began oral arguments yesterday on Varsity Brands vs. Star Athletica, a case that may have significant implications for the fashion industry. The nation’s highest court will rule on copyright law on specific designs that are historically emblematic of the ensemble, namely chevron, stripe and zig-zag patterns. The...
Mannequins appeared in the Chanel storefront on Rodeo Drive in Los Angeles last week wearing colorful head covers in the style of a hijab, reflective of a growing trend to attract the growing number of wealthy Saudi Arabian shoppers in the area. The Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board’s 2014...
Agencies are often brought on by fashion brands to help with rebranding, repositioning within the market, as well as digital and media strategies. But like any multi-layered business, these partnerships come with challenges and confessions. We speak to four creative directors about what it's really like.
Kering -- the parent company to luxury brands including Gucci, Balenciaga and Alexander McQueen -- is teaming up with the New School’s Parsons School of Design to launch a mobile app designed to measure the environmental impact of fashion designs.
There's a dizzying number of research reports on how millennials shop and the generation certainly doesn't have one way of doing things. Glossy took to the street to ask six millennials about their shopping habits to get a better idea.
Companies like Sprouting Threads and Rockets of Awesome offer subscription services with simple models for parents who don’t need the same level of consultative services for their children as they do for identifying appropriate office wear.