
Issey Miyake transforms the Cartier Foundation into living sculpture garden with light and movement
This
Paris Fashion Week
season finds the Miyake house in the midst of transition. In January, Paris bid adieu to Homme Plissé — Miyake's pleated cult favorite that had anchored the city's menswear calendar since 2019 — as the brand shifted its focus to nomadic shows, most recently appearing under the Tuscan sun. The torch in Paris has now been passed to IM Men, the last line personally conceived by Issey Miyake before his death in 2022. Thursday's show marked IM Men's return to the Paris stage, under the direction of designers Sen Kawahara, Yuki Itakura, and Nobutaka Kobayashi.
A kinetic dance of light and fabric
The theme, 'Dancing Texture,' nodded to the ceramic artistry of Shoji Kamoda, but also to the surreal choreography on display. Models appeared to roll, tilt, and swing through the light, their movements somewhere between ballet and a slow-motion video game. Occasionally, a guest would squint, unsure if they were watching a runway show or a heat-induced hallucination.
The crowd — equal parts Parisian cool, visiting editors, and those for whom a pleated culotte is a spiritual calling — dodged the sun's glare and fanned themselves in the heat, shifting for both comfort and the best sightline. The first model glided out in a mad, angular hat, setting the tone for a parade of tin man-meets-space ninja silhouettes designed for dance floors or distant planets.
The clothes themselves looked as if they had been engineered for a new climate — or perhaps a new species. Surfaces peeled, rippled, and shimmered, metallic foils flashed against the sun, and jacquard weaves evoked the carved waves of Kamoda's ceramics. Vermilion and white motifs burst forth alongside a near-neon green, courtesy of upcycled fishing nets. A coat unzipped into a dramatic collar while some blousons and pants, when laid flat, formed perfect circles — a wink at Kamoda's wheel-thrown plates.
Miyake's restless legacy, risk and reinvention
Miyake, who died in 2022
, loomed large over the collection, his vision unmistakable in every engineered pleat and playful transformation. IM Men is the last line he conceived — a living laboratory for innovation, risk, and occasional absurdity, now energetically interpreted by a younger team. Even in his absence, his legacy is alive in every joke, fold, and jolt of surprise on the runway.
Born in Hiroshima in 1938, Miyake rose from postwar Japan to become a global force, transforming fashion in the 1980s and '90s with his radical, sculptural vision. He pioneered heat-set pleating and created lines like Pleats Please and A-POC that blurred the boundaries between art, science, and daily life. Miyake's designs liberated fabric, allowing it to move with the body and imagination alike.
Of course, the fashion house's embrace of the avant-garde still courts danger. Thursday's spectacle occasionally veered into excess, with kinetic art and sci-fi headgear that threatened to upstage the clothes themselves — a familiar Miyake risk. But the best moments, like a pared-back tangerine overcoat that floated past, proved restraint can sometimes steal the show.
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San Francisco Chronicle
3 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Fans celebrate the 80th birthday of the Moomins, Finland's most lovable literary cartoon family
TAMPERE, Finland (AP) — The Moomins, Finland's most lovable literary cartoon family, are celebrating their 80th birthday this year. The chubby, white, hippopotamus-like characters have captivated readers worldwide since author and illustrator Tove Jansson published 'The Moomins and the Great Flood' in 1945. The children's book featuring Moomintroll and Moominmamma in their search for the missing Moominpappa. Jansson, a Swedish-speaking Finn who died in 2001, went on to write eight more books, multiple picture books and a comic strip about the Moomins in Swedish. The series, set in the fictional Moominvalley, has been translated into more than 60 languages, and sparked movie and TV adaptations, children's plays, art gallery exhibitions and an eponymous museum — plus theme parks in Finland and Japan. Finnair, the national carrier, has even put Moomins on its airplanes. On Saturday, fans flocked to Tampere in southern Finland — home of the Moomin Museum — to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the 1945 publication as well as Jansson's Aug. 9, 1914, birthday. Fans from childhood to adulthood For Rosa Senn of the United Kingdom, the festivities reminded her of her childhood. Her Norwegian mother, a fan since her own youth, read all of the tales to Senn and her sister growing up. 'Moomins have been such a special thing in my life, my whole life," Senn said. "I just carried that love for Moomin, for Tove Jansson, with me into my adult life.' When Senn met her now-wife, Lizzie, they were initially in a long-distance relationship for the first year and a half. Senn introduced Lizzie to the books and the couple used a plush doll of Moomintroll to feel closer to each other while they were apart. The doll was the ringbearer at their wedding, and they traveled to Tampere on their honeymoon. The Senns also made an Instagram page documenting the trio's adventures, which now has nearly 11,000 followers. The social media account has connected them with Moomin fans all over the world, including Stefanie and Michael Geutebrück from Germany. Moomin merchandise Stefanie Geutebrück said she remembers falling in love with the Moomins while watching their animations during her childhood in East Germany. She also brought the Moomins into her husband's life, to the point where they also traveled to Tampere for Saturday's entertainment. "Now he's a total fan and our apartment looks like a Moomin shop,' she said. Beyond the Geutebrücks' home, Moomin merchandise is hugely popular. There's a massive market for Moomintroll, Moominmamma and Moominpappa souvenirs across the globe, and secondary characters like their friends Stinky, Sniff, Snufkin, Snork Maiden and Hattifatteners are also well-loved. 'The Moomin mug is one of the best-known collector items worldwide,' Selma Green, director of the Moomin Museum, said. 'You buy a Moomin mug, you like the characters, you maybe see something on TV — but we all go back to the books, the original illustrations.' Depictions of the character Stinky, described as a lovable rogue who has captured Moominmamma's heart, generated debate and outcry in Finland this summer after reports emerged in Finnish media that Stinky was removed from murals in an exhibit at the Brooklyn Public Library in New York due to concerns that the cartoon might be perceived as racist. Jansson's drawings of Stinky shows the character with a dark, fuzzy body, with skinny legs and antennae. He has a reputation as an unsuccessful criminal — whose plans get foiled or he gets caught in the act — with an appetite for furniture and other wooden things. 'To me, this became as quite a big surprise because I have more thought about Stinky being close to a mole or a vole," Sirke Happonen, a Moomins scholar and associate professor at the University of Helsinki, said of the library's decision. "He's an interesting character in many ways, like controversial and fun.' Moominvalley as an escape The Moomin stories honor the idea of family as a flexible concept. Diverse gender roles and queer themes also come across in Moominvalley, as well as in Jansson's other works, reflecting her LGBTQ+ identity. Her partner of more than 45 years, engraver and artist Tuulikki Pietilä, was memorialized as the character Too-ticky in 'Moominland Midwinter.' The couple lived in Helsinki and spent their summers on the small rocky island of Klovharu in the Gulf of Finland until the 1990s. Jansson's stories also reflect war and catastrophe. The first book, 'The Moomins and the Great Flood,' features the displaced Moomin family and was published in the final months of World War II. The conflict had ruined Finland, even though it had remained independent, and one of the author's brothers went missing during part of his time at the front. While Jansson sought to portray Moominvalley as an escape, Moomin stories have always had a mixture of peril and comfort. 'Her first Moomin book came out in a dark era. She felt it was very difficult to paint, and she started writing what she called a fairy tale, but she excused herself not to include princesses or princes,' Happonen said. Moominvalley was borne of a need to find beauty at a time when Jansson's existence, along with everyone else in Finland, felt frail. 'I think she wanted to make a contrast — Tove Jansson loved contrasts — by writing about this beautiful world, full of friendship and love,' Happonen said. __ Dazio reported from Berlin.


Buzz Feed
3 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
29 Aesthetic Products You Need For Your Kitchen
A strawberry milk jug vase that is way too ~kewt ~ to put in a fridge. Use it as a flower vase, a bookend, or just the cutest decor item on a shelf in your aesthetic kitchen. With its soft pink tones and a nostalgic milk carton design, it's basically built for the 'gram. A vintage-inspired, velvet rug to bring in that quiet luxury feel to your kitchen. Not only is it giving chic, Parisian antique market find, but it's low-pile, slip-proof, and totally washable. So basically, the dream for anyone who wants their space to look curated, but also needs something durable to survive their kids and pets. A chic toaster that will make even your frozen waffles feel beautiful. With its compact form, wrap-around cord storage, and hidden crumb tray, it keeps your kitchen looking clean and uncluttered. Best of all — the fun, modern color options and sleek shape will not only elevate your countertop, but also blend seamlessly into any design aesthetic — from minimalist chic to cozy farmhouse. A set of bow-inspired picture frames because your Instax photos deserve better than the junk drawer. They're magnetic — so stick them to your fridge or your hood range to add a softer, curated aesthetic to your kitchen. Whether you're framing snapshots, a to-do list, or this week's meal prep, these frames will give you a glam gallery wall look on your fridge with minimal effort. A set of stunning peel-and-stick tiles that make your walls look like they flew here first class from Italy. They're heat-proof, waterproof, and easy to clean. With a realistic marble texture and geometric flair, they give luxury energy without stress, mess, or soul-crushing contractor quotes. Just clean the surface, peel, stick, and enjoy! A sleek, two-tone kitchen fountain because it's totally the jewelry your sink didn't know it needed. It has a stylish and elegant black and gold coating that is anti-rust and anti-corrosion, which means it'll never lose its luster. And it's fingerprint-resistant, heat-proof, and has a pull-down sprayer. Basically, it's for people who want their tap water served with ✨flair.✨ A pink Dutch oven (from Paris Hilton's kitchen line!) that you'll actually want to leave on your stove for guests to see. With its heart-shaped silhouette and luxe gold knob, it will truly be a joy to cook with — but even more delightful to serve from. It is perfect for one-pot meals or small-batch baking and will be a breeze to clean with its smooth enamel interior. Whether you're cooking stew or baking sourdough, it will be love at first simmer. A checkered dish drying mat to keep your sink or your coffee bar dry, but most importantly, *stylish*. This colorful cutie is super absorbent, anti-slip, and somehow makes drying dishes feel like a design moment. Whether you're air-drying mugs or making matcha, this vegan leather mat is putting the "fun" in functional, OK?! A set of pretty cabinet pulls because your drawers are yearning for you to upgrade those boring builder-grade knobs. They're easy to install, comfy to grip, and look way more expensive than they are. With their geometric design and polished finish, they will serve minimalist vibes with just a *sprinkle* of opulence. A stained-glass transom window to turn regular ol' sunlight into a literal masterpiece. This floral-meets-geometric glass panel gives an elegant vintage vibe to any space. Made with real stained glass and copper foil detailing, it is the perfect, swoon-worthy addition that your guests will not be able to stop talking about. A ceramic fruit bowl that will have your fruit looking like it belongs in a still life painting. This bowl has three legs, pottery-style speckles, and a dreamy crème color that will add modern charm to any counter. Use it to display fruit, snacks, or just as a centerpiece on your dining room table. A ceramic serving dish so artsy, your friends will think you got it at the MoMA. With bold, dancing silhouettes and a glossy finish, this Matisse-style piece transforms any snack spread into a conversation starter. Whether you're serving apps or just leaving it out to serve as art, it's bringing "hostess with the mostess" energy. Bonus: it's oven- and microwave-safe, because art can be practical, too. A set of unique serving utensils because whoever said not to play with your food has clearly never met these whimsical wooden serving spoons. Made from natural wood with an oiled finish, these spoons are built to last and will serve up smiles and conversation at your dinner table for years to come. They're shaped like flowers and tiny hands, because ✨why not?✨ and are safe for use with nonstick pans. A handmade ceramic plate that serves elegance, but can also serve food if you need it, too. With blush pink swirls and glints of real gold, they're perfect for plating salad, sweets, or staging your takeout like you cooked it yourself. One glance, and your guests will forget the food and just compliment the plates. Or a 16-piece dinnerware set to make your boxed macaroni look like it belongs in a magazine. Not only is it stunning with its timeless marble pattern, but it's microwave-, dishwasher-, AND freezer-safe — so gorgeous and low maintenance, the two best phrases. A modern-shaped flatware set for people who want their table to look so pulled-together, your guests would rather admire the forks instead of use them. With a satin finish and balanced feel, this stainless steel set is elegant enough for your next dinner party and sturdy enough to survive daily dishwasher cycles. Even your mismatched thrifted plates will look like works of art next to these babies. A Beast blender so that you can feel effortlessly chic as you blend your morning smoothie. Whether you're whipping up dips, drinks, or dressings, it handles tough ingredients like ice and coffee beans with ease, all without hogging counter space (or ruining your vibe with clunky parts) — because let's be real, form and function matter. A pink frother to whip your matcha, lattes, and protein drinks into foamy perfection. With its eye-catching shimmer and elegant gold display stand, this frother is guaranteed to be a countertop centerpiece at your coffee bar. Your mornings are about to get a lot more 🎶G-L-A-M-O-R-OUS — ooo the frothy, frothy🎶. A set of vintage-inspired mugs that look like something you'd discover in a luxe, aesthetic café. Made from thick, lead-free glass with a gorgeous embossed texture, these mugs are perfect for anyone who loves a clean, elegant look with a bit of whimsy. And the see-through design lets your colorful lattes, teas, or even layered yogurt parfaits look and feel like art. A cloud-shaped coaster because who says coasters have to be boring?! These eye-catching acrylic beauties combine sleek lines with natural, imperfect curves to create a look that's both ~vibey~ and artistic. Crafted from a durable, heat-resistant acrylic with a mirrored gold sheen, they will protect your surfaces while looking ridiculously good doing it. Annnnd they wipe clean in seconds, making them just as practical as they are pretty. A colorful Mackenzie-Childs teapot that feels equal parts farmhouse and fine art. With its signature hand-painted checkerboard pattern and elegant curved wood handle, it looks more like a countertop sculpture than cookware. Whether you're pouring tea or just admiring its charm, it adds a warm, inviting touch to any stove top. A set of slim oil dispensers so that you can finally ditch the mismatched chaos of store bottles/cans. This stunning dispenser duo features a streamlined silhouette, precise pour control, and 42 (!!) waterproof minimalist labels that will make every meal prep going forward feel just a little more elevated. Whether it's olive oil, vinegar, or your go-to sauce, these elegant glass dispensers turn everyday ingredients into a display-worthy moment. A salt and pepper grinder set for fans of cozy minimalism or rustic design —aka a comfy European café. This set truly brings a handcrafted feel to your kitchen or dining table with its earthy wood tones and soft matte finish. With the easy-grip design and adjustable grind settings, they will deliver perfectly ground spices every time (and look good while doing it). A gold geometric wine rack to add an effortlessly stylish edge to your kitchen. Whether on a countertop, bar cart, or open shelf, this compact stunner will have your wine doing double duty as home decor — turning your favorite bottles into a minimalist statement piece. A fancy set of square wineglasses because just like Olivia Pope, your kitchen is only full of wine and popcorn (I mean, truly, do you need a kitchen for anything else?). With their modern silhouette and hand-blown craftsmanship, these glasses are as stunning on display as they are in use. Whether you're setting the mood for a cozy dinner or impressing guests at a party, these are guaranteed to spark compliments — and maybe even a toast or two. Or, a set of stemless margarita glasses for those of us that prefer a cocktail hour (or two — hi, yes, me)! Crafted with a clean, contemporary shape and a sturdy base, these crystal-clear, fluted glasses look just as good sitting out as they do in your hand. Even if you don't drink alcohol, these will make you want to drink water with your pinky up. A stylish Our Place Wonder Oven that is so multifunctional, it can basically replace six kitchen appliances — saving you not only countertop space, but also serious coins because you'll never let anything go to waste. Whether it's reviving that sad slice of pizza or giving leftover, limp fries their crunch back, this aesthetic little powerhouse air fries, toasts, bakes, broils, and even steams your food to juicy, flavorful perfection — faster than your oven and with way less cleanup. Your leftovers might even taste *better* than they did the first time. And their Dream Cooker for anyone who is ready to say goodbye to bulky eyesores on their kitchen counters. With its sleek finish, minimalist interface, and neutral tones, this multi-cooker was made to complement your kitchen — not clutter it. It can pressure cook, sauté, slow cook, sear (80% faster, no less), with a nonstick, ceramic coating that handles everything from oatmeal to braised short ribs like a champ. Cute and wildly efficient? We stan a double-threat queen. A colorful measuring cup set to give you a hit of dopamine as you whip up your morning coffee. Each spoon and cup is labeled with clear, engraved measurements and the durable plastic holds up to hot or cold ingredients. And while they are easily stacked, they also come with a ring clip to keep them all together.


Newsweek
20 hours ago
- Newsweek
NY Man Killed in Puerto Rico Planned to Attend Bad Bunny Concert
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A 25-year-old U.S. tourist from New York was fatally shot in Puerto Rico early Sunday, the Associated Press (AP) reported. The victim, identified as Kevin Mares, was struck in the abdomen in a shooting at a nightclub and later died in the hospital from his injuries. Mares had traveled to the San Juan area to attend a Bad Bunny concert schedule for Sunday as part of the singer's residency, according to AP. Newsweek reached out to the Puerto Rico Police Bureau via email Sunday during non-working hours for more information. Why it Matters The death of a U.S. tourist visiting for a concert underscores concerns about visitor safety and local crime trends on an island that depends heavily on tourism revenue. Bad Bunny's residency at the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum, which started in July and runs until September 11, draws thousands of fans, increasing the number of visitors in San Juan neighborhoods. What To Know Mares and three other people were at a club in a nightspot known locally as "Shelter for Mistreated Men" in La Perla, a neighborhood in San Juan, AP reported. The shooting occurred at 4 a.m. local time after an argument and injured two other people, Sergeant Arnaldo Ruiz, of the Homicide Division of the Criminal Investigation Corps of San Juan told local news outlet El Nuevo Dia. Ruiz said the other two people injured, a 45-year-old woman and a 46-year-old man, were siblings. Bad Bunny performs onstage during Night One of Bad Bunny: "No Me Quiero Ir De Aqui" Residencia En El Choli at Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot on July 11, 2025 in San Juan,... Bad Bunny performs onstage during Night One of Bad Bunny: "No Me Quiero Ir De Aqui" Residencia En El Choli at Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot on July 11, 2025 in San Juan, Puerto Rico. More Photo byMares was found with gunshot wounds and taken to Río Piedras Medical Center, Ruiz told El Nuevo Dia. Puerto Rico recorded 277 killings so far this year, down from 325 in the same period last year, according to the AP. La Perla has a documented history of drug trafficking and violence, and federal law-enforcement action in 2011 produced arrests and a decline in some criminal activity, though isolated violent incidents have continued to occur there. The neighborhood gained broader visibility after it appeared in the music video for the 2017 hit "Despacito," which contributed to perceptions that parts of Old San Juan had become more tourist-friendly, according to the AP. What People Are Saying Sgt. Arnaldo Ruiz, a homicide detective with the Puerto Rico Police Department told El Nuevo Dia: "We are still very preliminary to establish a motive for the facts. We cannot rule out anything while the interviews are completed." What Happens Next Police continue to investigate, interview witnesses and search for the shooter; authorities have not yet released a suspect description. Local prosecutors will make a decision on charges once investigators identified a suspect and established a motive.