Spotted: the queen who turned fashion into anarchy and made history look like a joke worth telling. From safety pins on King’s Road to wedding gowns that screamed rebellion, Vivienne didn’t just design clothes—she staged cultural revolutions. Anglomania? A Rococo riot with a punk twist. Bridal 25/26? A silver-haired goddess in liquid satin proving age is the ultimate power move. Love her or roll your eyes, Westwood left us one truth: fashion isn’t about blending in—it’s about burning the rulebook and owning the ashes.
Rick Owens exists at the intersection of defiance and devotion. A designer whose work transcends trend and season, Owens has built not just a fashion label, but a full-fledged universe—one forged in the heat of contradiction. From his early days in Los Angeles crafting raw, low-budget pieces to his reign as the high priest of post-apocalyptic elegance, his journey is as radical as his silhouettes.
They said fashion was dead. Margiela resurrected it. From a playground runway in a forgotten orphanage to porcelain-drenched ghosts strutting under Parisian fog—Maison Margiela has never played by the rules. In our latest deep dive, we unravel the house’s wildest moments: the rebel debut in ‘90, the quietly genius 2004 collection, and Galliano’s jaw-dropping 2024 show that blurred the line between theatre, memory, and madness.