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Search resuls for: "Stella McCartney"


4 mentions found


Nudged by private equity funds, those supplying the booming luxury goods industry are now finding strength in unity. Largely family-owned and small in size, these businesses often struggle to meet the changing needs of the luxury brands they work for. "Luxury brands have been growing exponentially: our customers needed us to grow with them," said Nicola Giuntini, whose Tuscany-based company makes luxury coats and jackets for brands including Celine, Burberry (BRBY.L) and Stella McCartney. PRODUCTION NICHESItaly's manufacturing sector has also been a hunting ground for big luxury brands keen to secure their supply chain. Italian private equity firm XENON International, for example, has bet on producers of materials and finishes for luxury items which it has grouped together in MinervaHub.
Mary J. Blige, who is headlining a stadium tour this year, is one of the many women breaking style rules into her 50s. The “Don’t Worry Darling” director joined the throngs of fans dressed in their Styles-jubilant best, with a strong contingent in Ms. Wilde’s age bracket and well above. They text, they email, they flag me down in our newly hopping office. What does a non-Olivia-Wilde woman over the age of 30—and all the way up to, say, 101 (here’s looking at you, Iris Apfel! )—wear to a concert or similarly raucous nighttime party?
Fashion companies are planning to buy more recycled fibers as part of a wider trend of businesses using their spending power to foster innovative, low-carbon suppliers. Owners of fashion brands H&M, Zara, Gucci and Stella McCartney were among companies that said Monday they would collectively buy 550,000 metric tons of alternative fibers to make textiles and packaging, such as those made from agricultural residues or recycled materials. The planned purchase represents only a small portion of their total output and no deadline...
Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, released a video on YouTube appearing to show him in a heated conversation with Adidas executives about their Yeezy partnership. He seems to show them porn and says they've "done wrong" by him by stealing his ideas, he says. A 30-minute video called "Last Week" released Monday seemingly shows a conversation between West and Adidas employees in which he shows them a pornographic video and accuses the company of stealing his ideas. In part of the video, West is seen sitting with four men, whose faces are blurred, and he shows them porn on his phone. In September, West had said he planned to "go it alone" after his contracts with Adidas and Gap expire.
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