Gender is a hot topic in broader culture and retailers are tapping into the phenomenon with their own definitions of gender, through unisex, gender-neutral and androgynous lines.
In an editorial this week, Tory Burch shared the reasons why she decided to establish November 8 a paid company holiday in an effort to increase voter turnout. Her op-ed comes on the heels of a venture led by the CFDA and Condé Nast to register voters through its #runwaytoregistration...
Clothing on Project Runway's latest season can be directly shopped off the runway on eBay, for the first time. While proceeds go to charity, agency experts say the partnership is huge for eBay, and is a just another example of the wider shift to see-now-buy-now and increasing audience engagement.
As the fashion industry adapts to rapid technology growth, with a refined focus on areas like sustainability and diversity, schools are struggling to keep up with the pace. Professors and administrators are failing to integrate these issues into their curriculums and delineate a clear path for students to tackle the...
Streetwear magazine Highsnobiety's latest theme was independence, and it chose former One Direction singer Zayn Malik for one of its four covers. As part of its digital strategy to reach new audience, Malik's cover did just that. The publication saw its Instagram followers increase by 4,500 followers in the two...
As fashion brands continue to delve into the world of chatbots, messaging platform Kik is offering a new capability for its own fashion and beauty chatbots to enhance the shopping experience.
On this week’s Glossy Podcast, Stacie Brockman, now co-founder of Metier Creative and previously an editor at one of the original blogging networks The Coveteur, laid bare how fashion influencers got to this point.
Japanese brand Anrealage decided to take an antithetical approach to Paris Fashion Week, asking viewers to keep their eyes glued to their phone screens rather than the models.
Bloggers, fashion photographers, and editors alike, including Tommy Ton, Susie Lau and BryanBoy, took to social media to dispute the claims that their profession is frivolous, receiving widespread support from fans, who have decried Vogue’s “mean girls style condescension.”