| CHLOE MALLE HEAD OF EDITORIAL CONTENT, VOGUE U.S. @CHLOEMALLE |
CHLOE MALLE HEAD OF EDITORIAL CONTENT, VOGUE U.S. @CHLOEMALLE |
|
|
This Malle Wear is safe to click! Each Thursday, I'll be sharing an update on everything I've loved or can't stop thinking about in the world of Vogue and beyond.
It's been a busy week at Vogue: we launched our Spring cover on Tuesday, featuring the inimitable RosalÃa—my first big print moment—and it has been a thrill to celebrate that. It's also New York Fashion Week and finally temperatures have crept above freezing in New York City, which means I can wear my the Row suede booties again and not worry about black ice. |
|
|
Our spring cover star and a style star on the rise |
|
|
When Lux came out in November, RosalÃa became the patron saint of the entire Vogue office. We marveled at the 14 languages she sings in on the album, at her transcendent fashion choices, and even the halo bleached into her hair. We all wanted her for a cover as soon as possible—and photographer Alastair McClellan and Vogue's new Contributing Style Director Carlos Nazario created the most transporting, romantic shoot on the beaches of Malibu. In the cover photo, RosalÃa wears new Dior couture, which we photographed in December before it debuted on the runway in January. For her story, Abby Aguirre met RosalÃa while she was filming Euphoria season three, and the two of them went deep on RosalÃa's wide-ranging references for her music—from Ursula K. Le Guin to the Koran.
My colleague Jill has a stack of '90s Vogues in her office, and I have been taking one home each night to read on the 1 train. After seeing the spring 2026 collections, we all came back talking about fashion's continued reverence for '90s minimalism, and I took home a great issue from 1999 featuring Gwyneth Paltrow in Calvin Klein. It sparked an idea in the office: Why not try the new '90s silhouettes on Apple Martin, Gwyneth's 21-year-old daughter?
We loved the shoot that came out of that: Luca Galasso and Letty Schmiterlow captured an excited young woman on the brink of post-collegiate life. (We also managed to dress Apple in a bubblegum-pink Calvin Klein outfit that Gwyneth would later wear on Good Morning America!) Apple's Beauty Secrets video that accompanies the story is equally adorable and endearing. |
|
|
More moors, chic fish, and Rococo dreams |
Chelsea Hotel On Super Bowl Sunday, we traded quarterbacks for paperbacks (hehe) and invited friends of Vogue and Vogue Book Club members to a British tea at the Chelsea Hotel, followed by an early screening of Wuthering Heights (which opens tomorrow) and a live conversation between me and writer and director Emerald Fennell for The Run-Through. I method-dressed for the occasion, wearing the most beautiful Edwardian-style Erdem floral-printed leather jacket with a matching silk blouse featuring an "E"—for Erdem, but also Emerald? And Emily Brontë?
You can find the podcast here, and hear Emerald talk about being a slut when she read Wuthering Heights for the first time. |
The Breuer Building I love to see New York through the lens of fashion week, and rediscover great locations designers choose for their shows. So far, the highlight for me has been Tory Burch at the Breuer building on Madison. Long the Whitney Museum, then the Met, briefly the Frick, and now the headquarters of Sotheby's, it is a very special place to stage a show and Tory's great new collection looked beautiful against the warm wood panels installed for the occasion.
Also, slinky sardine brooches and necklaces were a motif of Tory's show, which reminded me of our popular story on the sardine fast and other tributes to the tiny but protein-mighty fish. |
The Frick The Gainsborough exhibition opens at the Frick today! I can't wait to go. Laird Borelli-Persson did what she does best and situated current fashion within its historical context, making the most amazing comparisons between SS26 runway collections and Gainsborough's rococo portraits. |
Valentine's Day, the Winter Olympics, and "Love Story" |
|
|
|
0 comments:
Post a Comment