🎯 Today's Fashion Pulse
Anne Hathaway Stuns in Red Louis Vuitton at ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ Premiere
Anne Hathaway debuted a striking red Louis Vuitton dress paired with minimalist platform sandals at the New York world premiere of “The Devil Wears Prada 2.” The event also saw Simone Ashley finish a head‑to‑toe Prada look with metallic pumps and Meryl Streep in a Givenchy ensemble, underscoring the film’s high‑fashion vibe.
🚀 Top Fashion Headlines

Stone Island’s Immersive Milan Design Week Installation with NM3 Is All About ‘Touch and Feel’
Featuring a singular jacket in different technical iterations – an ode to founder Massimo Osti’s ‘No Seasons’ concept – the installation doubles as a space for ‘community and music’
Wallpaper*
Versace's 2026 Watch Collection Brings Italian Style to Your Wrist
Explore five new styles from the Versace Watches summer 2026 collection.
W Magazine

When Exactly Did the Coachella Aesthetic Become so Soulless?
Music festivals are meant to be a bit disgusting. If you’ve never waded through ankle-deep mud to a festering, overused portaloo, have you ever really lived? This griminess has left its muddy footprints all over festival fashion, too. It’s Keira Knightley and Jamie Dornan in mud-splattered jeans, or Sienna Miller draped in a grey hoodie with an unlit cigarette drooping from her mouth. It’s weathered, functional and slightly undone. While British festivals conjurehellip; read more raquo;
Dazed

Fatigue Pants Are the Toughest Trousers in Your Spring Arsenal
Give a hearty salute to the trousers you'll never get tired of wearing.
GQ

Guys Are Wearing Slutty Little Reading Glasses Now
From fictional BDSM doms to neo-soul-mode Jack Harlow, men are reaching for techy, erotic frames—and the ophthalmological thirst has never been higher.
GQ
💬 Top Fashion Social Posts

Tweet by @Jakewoolf
Went to the stone island HQ in Italy and all I got was to see was a jacket that will haunt me forever—this blue chore jacket from 1982 It’s made from a cotton hemp that was printed with indigo dye and then enzyme washed, which is an insane way to make clothes but rocks https://t.co/3OBGqBk0nv
Thread by @Die_workwear
It's because polo shirts trace back to polo, tennis, and golf, which were elite male activities. They were first worn by British colonial elites and then the American middle-class in suburban country clubs. During the 20th century, these two classes shaped our notions of what it meant to look "respectable," and thus their sportswear was allowed into business settings. By contrast, garments coded as working-class — such as football jerseys or basketball shorts — enjoy no such privilege.