Pharrell Williams teams with Nigo for Vuitton show at Louvre
Louis Vuitton’s Paris Fashion Week show took over the Louvre with a star-studded crowd and a killer collab between Pharrell and Nigo, mixing Americana streetwear with Japanese flair. View on euronews
K-pop group SEVENTEEN teamed up with Pharrell Williams for Bad Influence, a track debuted at Louis Vuitton's Fall-Winter 2025 Menswear show, sparking excitement for its future release.
Regarding streetwear-influenced collections, one of the most anticipated shows for Fall/Winter 2025 Paris Fashion Week was Louis Vuitton's show, and Mens Creative Director Pharrell Williams didn't disappoint.
Pharrell Williams commenced Men’s Paris Fashion Week with a streetwear-heavy show for Louis Vuitton. The brand’s creative director, 51, designed the collection with his old friend and artistic director of Kenzo, Nigo.
Grammy-winning producer and Louis Vuitton Men’s Creative Director Pharrell Williams teamed up with K-pop boy group Seventeen to release a new single, “Bad
Bradley Cooper, Idris Elba, Adrien Brody, Travis Scott, Callum Turner, Aaron Pierre, and many more celebrities appeared at Pharrell Williams' latest Louis Vuitton menswear show at the Louvre Museum in Paris on Tuesday,
A new year means a new collection from Pharrell Williams, the men’s director for Louis Vuitton. At his latest show during Paris Fashion Week, some of the most popular Black celebrities in the world showed up in stylish fits.
Retired Lieutenant General Kao An-kuo is now considered Taiwan's highest-ranking retired officer charged with spying for China. Five others, including Kao’s partner, were also charged with violating the National Security Act.
Unlike his regular dreads and twist sponge curls Afro, his look was bold, daring, and unapologetically stylish, ensuring he left a lasting impression.
Pharrell went back to his roots for LV's Paris Fashion Week show. He infused streetwear and positioned the label as the luxury gold standard.
At the heart of the collection bloomed the “Field Flower” print, a vibrant ode to the photographs of Sir Paul’s father, Harold. This floral motif, adapted from Harold’s lens, cascaded across shirts, ties, and luxurious jacquard knitwear, weaving a poignant thread of personal history into the fabric of the collection.