logo
Posse Is the Aussie Label Behind Your Dream Summer Capsule—Here's How to Shop Its Cult-Favorite Styles as an Insider

Posse Is the Aussie Label Behind Your Dream Summer Capsule—Here's How to Shop Its Cult-Favorite Styles as an Insider

Vogue14 hours ago

Photo: Courtesy of Posse
With a uniform of coordinating separates and elegant dresses, Posse founder Danielle Mulham embodies the laidback yet polished ease that anchors her brand's spirit. 'I've always been drawn to simplicity since I was quite young,' she previously told Vogue. 'I just love the look of wearing classic pieces with minimal makeup and tousled hair. I think that's a very Australian way of dressing—not too done up, just effortless.'
It's little surprise that since founding her label in 2016, countless women have sought to recreate her signature minimalist polish. Already a go-to for fashion insiders, it was Sofia Richie Grainge that really put the brand on the map after she was spotted in the Emma vest and skirt set during her Côte d'Azur wedding weekend in 2023. Meghan Markle, Katie Holmes, and Selena Gomez have all been spotted in her designs, too.
Beyond the label's beloved sets, Posse's timeless take color and romantic print (polka dot! gingham! floral!) will bring a burst of feel-good energy to your warm-weather wardrobe. Round out your summer capsule with Vogue-loved brand as an Insider with 20% off your first order.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Men's Swimwear Gets Casual At Miami Swim Week 2025
Men's Swimwear Gets Casual At Miami Swim Week 2025

Forbes

time4 hours ago

  • Forbes

Men's Swimwear Gets Casual At Miami Swim Week 2025

MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA - MAY 31: Will Gholston, Tampa Bay defensive end, walks the runway at the Love For Upcycling Tampa Bay Fashion Experience show during Miami Swim Week Powered By Art Hearts Fashion at Eden Roc Hotel on May 31, 2025 in Miami Beach, Florida. (Photo byfor Art Hearts Fashion) The Art Hearts Fashion organization has been a premier platform for trendy swim and resort wear while delivering energetic showcases and runways of over 30 designers during Miami Swim Week 2025. Throughout the week, events happened across familiar and iconic Miami venues, including the Eden Roc and Miami Beach Botanical Garden. Miami hotspots Strawberry Moon, located at the Goodtime Hotel, LIV Nightclub, and E11EVEN Miami, were also involved in the festivities, highlighting the Miami poolside vibe and nightlife energy. Mister Triple X: Boundary-pushing menswear from Idol Jose and Mister Triple X, all captivating audiences and setting new trends for the Summer season. This year's event was a fusion of tailored fashion for men from brands like Joseph Auren and Love For Upcycling and bold garment applications from David Tupaz, Sugarpuss, and Henri Costa. Boundary-pushing menswear from Idol Jose and Mister Triple X, all captivating audiences and setting new trends for the Summer season. Styx Athletics: The week featured vibrant poolside showcases and high-energy nightlife events at Strawberry Moon, LIV, and E11EVEN. From eco-conscious upcycling to Western-inspired beach glam, swimwear runways like Ca Rio Ca, Coyote Jocks, Styx Athletics, and Alessandra By Bikini Beach were complemented with innovative designs, redefining the modern menswear category. Designers presented bold colors, daring cuts, and inclusive sizing, ensuring every man can feel confident and stylish in wearing less this summer. Papi Swim and Berry Beachy hit the runway with matching sets for couples. The sibling brands Berry Beachy Swimwear and Papi Swim made waves with their coordinating his-and-hers collections while celebrating queer love in colorful resort style. Vibrant prints and flattering silhouettes were designed to empower every body type, reinforcing inclusiveness as a style note. David Tupaz: Art Hearts Fashion returned as a defining force at Miami Swim Week 2025; included tailored menswear by Joseph Auren and Love For Upcycling, along with daring runway moments from David Tupaz, Sugarpuss, Henri Costa, Idol Jose, and Mister Triple X. Papi Swim's slogan is 'Every Body Has a Papi Body,' a tongue-in-cheek approach to acknowledging the 'Dad-bod,' embodies its mission of size-inclusivity and body positivity. Sleek, tropical-print swim trunks are designed for confidence and figure-hugging fits for flexing those muscles, displaying functionality and fashion-forward styling. Berry Beachy's matching women's pieces complemented the menswear, creating a unified aesthetic for poolside glam. Papi Swim: Art Hearts Fashion returned as a defining force at Miami Swim Week 2025, presenting over 30 designers at venues like Eden Roc and the Miami Beach Botanical Garden. 2025 Arun Nevader Capelle Miami, the luxury men's swim brand founded by Venezuelan designer Antonio Rojas, debuted its Summer 2025 Collection with a pop-up at the Strawberry Moon rooftop restaurant and pool venue, for a day-party vibe to test out swimwear onsite. The brand's signature compression-lined trunks blended performance and style with bold colors inspired by Miami's vibrant energy. Size inclusivity remained a cornerstone of the collection, with options ranging from XS to 6XL, ensuring every man could find his perfect fit. The retro 80s influences met modern street style with wearable trunks for the city streets and the beach. The attention to detail, from the moisture-wicking fabric to the sleek waistbands, highlighted Capelle's commitment to quality and innovation. Love For Upcycling Tampa Bay Fashion Experience show during Miami Swim Week Powered By Art Hearts Fashion at Eden Roc Hotel on May 31, 2025 in Miami Beach, Florida. (Photo byfor Art Hearts Fashion) 'We're not just creating swimwear, we're curating a lifestyle,' said Rojas, whose brand is toted by GQ and Esquire as 'the only swim trunk worth buying.' The collection displayed Capelle's ability to merge practicality with high fashion while solidifying its place as a men's swimwear market leader. Each piece is crafted as a hybrid short for premium swimwear and high-functioning activewear throughout those vacation days or if coastal. Capelle's signature compression liner, an innovation engineered for premium support, breathability, and lasting comfort, introduces a watercolor-shifting technology line of the swim trunks, allowing for all-day performance without compromising style or expression. Love For Upcycling Tampa Bay Fashion Experience show during Miami Swim Week Powered By Art Hearts Fashion at Eden Roc Hotel on May 31, 2025 in Miami Beach, Florida. (Photo byfor Art Hearts Fashion) The made-to-order brand Love For Upcycling showcased another collection of innovative upcycling and use of recycled materials to create denim-fused, summer trousers. Born from old coffee bean bags, the canvas fabric stood out on the runway, crafted as a casual option for hanging close to shorelines. Love For Upcycling is a brand championing sustainability and conscious fashion, reconstructing pieces that tell a story as meaningful as their design approach and aesthetic. Several designers brought provocative, high-energy aesthetics to the runway, proving that men's swimwear is no longer just about basic trunks. Sugarpuss, often playful and cheeky with its designs, bold prints, and daring cuts, presented unconventional silhouettes, with men in refreshing looks of traditional swimwear. Mister Triple X: Art Hearts Fashion returned as a defining force at Miami Swim Week 2025, presenting over 30 designers at venues like Eden Roc and the Miami Beach Botanical Garden. Highlights included tailored menswear by Joseph Auren and Love For Upcycling, along with daring runway moments from David Tupaz, Sugarpuss, Henri Costa, Idol Jose, and Mister Triple X. Mister Triple X came with an edgy, fetish-inspired collection, leaning into fantasy. As a risk-taker, designer Erik Rosete featured harness details, metallic accents, and body-conscious fits. Making a bold statement about self-expression and confidence in men's swimwear, Rosete, the Founder and President of Art Hearts Fashion, publicly stated, "Miami Swim Week is more than a series of runway shows - it's a cultural movement. We bring together designers from around the globe in a space where fashion meets fun, inclusivity, and pure Miami energy. It's the ultimate celebration of swimwear and self-expression, and [each] year we raise the bar." David Tupaz: Art Hearts Fashion returned as a defining force at Miami Swim Week 2025, presenting over 30 designers; included David Tupaz, Sugarpuss, Henri Costa, Idol Jose, and Mister Triple X. Coyote Jocks offered a nostalgic take on classic swimwear with retro-inspired briefs with a modern twist. Fit and fabric ensured comfort and style, coinciding with the brand's attention to detail. David Tupaz and Henri Costa made runway reveals with elevated resort wear, offering sharp tailoring and tropical motifs. Seamlessly transitioning from beach to bar, the inspiration for these collections presented transitional resort wear for both sophistication and relaxation. Sugarpuss: Art Hearts Fashion returned as a defining force at Miami Swim Week 2025, presenting over 30 designers at venues like Eden Roc and the Miami Beach Botanical Garden. One of the biggest trends this season was the fusion of Western and swimwear aesthetics with Berry Beachy's 'Gone Country' runway. Showcasing fringe details, cowboy hats, and rhinestone-embellished trunks were playful yet luxurious. Capelle Swim also embraced the trend with denim-inspired swim shorts and leather accents. The unexpected combination of rugged Western elements with sleek swimwear created a striking contrast that resonated with the fashion-forward crowd. The latest trend reinvents classic styles and creative boundaries in the swimwear industry. Joseph Auren: Art Hearts Fashion returned as a defining force at Miami Swim Week 2025, presenting over 30 designers at venues like Eden Roc and the Miami Beach Botanical Garden, including tailored menswear by Joseph Auren and Love For Upcycling, along with daring runway moments from David Tupaz, Sugarpuss, Henri Costa, Idol Jose, and Mister Triple X. Beyond the collections, Miami Swim Week Powered by Art Hearts Fashion was a cultural movement that blended fashion with live performances, immersive parties, and celebrity appearances. Giannina Azar opened her show with fire dancers, while Love for Upcycling brought live parrots on the runway. Keeping the Miami fashion crowd indulged throughout the week, nightly afterparties at LIV Nightclub and E11EVEN Miami featured performances by Ty Dolla Sign and Jaden Smith. The vibrant nightlife scene was rounded out each day of runway shows and networking opportunities, with Miami's legendary party culture infusing the Swim Week energy.

Guys, Give Navy a Rest. A Skeptic's Guide to Wearing Color (and White Jeans) in 2025
Guys, Give Navy a Rest. A Skeptic's Guide to Wearing Color (and White Jeans) in 2025

Wall Street Journal

time6 hours ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Guys, Give Navy a Rest. A Skeptic's Guide to Wearing Color (and White Jeans) in 2025

When it comes to donning color, men tend to be boring, rarely venturing beyond gray, navy or maybe (gasp!) a lilac button-up. But lately, that timidity seems to be ebbing. On the recent fall menswear runways, royal purple and 'Brat'-lime green made a splash—and store owners report that style-conscious shoppers are more regularly branching out into subtle shades like olive green and ochre. 'We've definitely seen a shift toward more guys buying color,' said Justin Felizzari, owner of New York menswear store Cueva, which sells pieces such as terracotta-hued tailoring by Studio Nicholson. At Canoe Club in Boulder, Colo., the shop's co-founder Timothy Grindle says Japanese brand Auralee's punchy red designs are in high demand. 'Most men aren't looking for a bright head-to-toe look,' said Felizzari. 'They just want one piece that adds something special to their closet.'

Jai Courtney On ‘Dangerous Animals' And Missing Out On ‘Jack Reacher'
Jai Courtney On ‘Dangerous Animals' And Missing Out On ‘Jack Reacher'

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Forbes

Jai Courtney On ‘Dangerous Animals' And Missing Out On ‘Jack Reacher'

Jai Courtney attends the Los Angeles premiere of 'Dangerous Animals' at the Egyptian theatre in ... More Hollywood, California. If Dangerous Animals actor Jai Courtney has learned anything in his career, it's never to let a character's death stand in the way of a potential franchise. "I'll get quoted, so I've got to be careful here because I've put my foot in it in the past when it comes to characters returning," the Australian says with a laugh. "As a great director once told me, in this kind of world, you can break all the rules that you establish. Sequels, prequels, who knows? The important thing is that I had fun with this character. If someone wants to do it again, I'm fu**king there." The American-Australian survival horror film sees Courtney play Tucker, a shark-obsessed serial killer who kidnaps people, holds them captive on his boat, and then feeds them to the deadly predators, videotaping their gory demises. However, he meets his match when he abducts a rebellious surfer called Zephyr, played by Yellowstone's Hassie Harrison. R-rated Dangerous Animals lands exclusively in theaters on Friday, June 6, 2025. While Tucker appears to be out of the picture, his reign of terror might not be over. "He could be part of a larger group of psychos," the actor muses. "It could be the beginning of a long-running series where we explore one tape in every episode. The sky's the limit." Courtney's killer is the latest solid entry in a lineage of heinous killers in Australian horror and is arguably the best since John Jarratt's Mick Taylor in Wolf Creek. However, they're different beasts. "There are easy comparisons to make in that you're dealing with an Aussie serial killer and characters that fall into that web. That's where, thematically, the bad marriage ends," Courtney muses. "I guess there's some familiar territory between the two. Wolf Creek made a splash when it was released, and I think it opened up a world that people were perhaps aware of, but it was familiar and terrifying. It was enough to scare people from driving across the Nullarbor Plain in Australia or wherever it is. Dangerous Animals will probably have a similar impact. Wolf Creek has achieved contemporary iconic status, so if people enjoy this enough to group it in with that in years to come, that's something to be proud of." Similar to British bad guys in movies, an Aussie villain has a certain quality that sets them apart from American psychopaths. The Suicide Squad and Terminator Genisys actor acknowledges this and leans into it but can't quite put his finger on what the difference is. "I feel like it's something that we did just breaks the mold," he says. "When you're looking at it through a lens from America, there's a certain level of intrigue around it. We are countries with a rich history that isn't necessarily widely understood in this part of the world. Australia is synonymous with all kinds of dangerous, creepy crawlies." "The number of times I speak to someone, and they're like, 'I always wanted to go to Australia, but the flights are too long, and doesn't everything they want to kill you?' Maybe something about Dangerous Animals leans into that a little further than people want it to, but it's taking something that people want to know, and it's just far enough away from their reality that it elevates the threat." Jai Courtney in 'Dangerous Animals.' Dangerous Animals is only the third movie from director Sean Byrne, and it's the first he has filmed that he didn't write. Something that appealed to Courtney was the fact the filmmaker likes to "mash stuff up" when it comes to genre movies and "has an attachment to certain themes." "He's very musical," the actor explains. "He has an enormous appreciation for needle drops within things. I liked his work. I saw The Loved Ones when it was released years ago, and then I watched The Devil's Candy in reference to meeting him and discussing this, and I think he's an adventurous filmmaker. He really understands story, temperature, and volume when it comes to this genre. It's not a space I've played in before, so to work with someone who gets that was comforting; I had to lean on him for a lot of that because style changes when you're dealing with all the elements that will feed into the atmosphere you're going to build when you watch a movie, particularly in this world." "I urge people to see this in a cinema because our sound design is so huge. The experience of being out on the water, with all that industrial material clanging and banging, adds up to a visceral experience and the threat we're dealing with. You've got to adapt to a little bit of that when you're when you're performing, and it's hard to do. Having someone in the driver's seat who you know has confidence in knowing when to dial things up or down was really beneficial. It was a story he wanted to tell. Sean is such a sweetheart and is so easy to work with and collaborate with. It was also an element of coming into this and saying, 'Let me do what I want to do with it.' He's prescriptive in some ways and also very trusting. He knew I had an understanding of Tucker, even though it wasn't territory I'd ever played in before. There was something that I felt was necessary for this to work, and he allowed me to do that." A great example of that is a scene where Tucker, slightly drunk and high on a cocktail of mayhem and toxic masculinity, dances in his underwear to classic rock. There's a sexual vibe to the scene that gives off strong Buffalo Bill in The Silence of the Lambs and was a sequence created specifically for Courtney. "Sean told me the other night that apparently they wrote that in to send me the script. I don't recall the exact quote, but Troy Lum, one of our producers, mentioned that actors enjoy having a moment where they're behind the curtain. They were trying to find a beat that felt completely self-indulgent yet distinct from the performance. Tucker is a very performative character with everyone, and he's this guy who loves the sound of his own voice. I think the dance intended to give him space to have a party on his own. We don't see a lot of that because we're with him and another character for most of the movie in some way or another. It was out of my comfort zone and completely unrehearsed and unchoreographed. It was just me, Shelley Farthing-Dawe, our director of photography and the camera operator. He got in there handheld, in that sort of galley in Tucker's kitchen, and he's having a little party. We just went for it. We cranked up the old Aussie anthem, Evie by Stevie Wright, and blasted it twice in a row, and that was that. We all went home." Jai Courtney in 'Dangerous Animals.' Next on Courtney's schedule after Dangerous Animals is War Machine, which he also shot in his native Australia. Not much is known about Netflix's science fiction action film, in which he co-stars with, among others, Alan Ritchson, best known for his titular lead role in Prime Video's hit Jack Reacher TV show. Courtney, of course, starred in the 2012 Jack Reacher movie headlined by Tom Cruise and had his eye on a return to the Reacherverse via the small screen. "I've seen the show, and I remember when that was casting, I was like, 'Wait, I'm big enough to play Jack Reacher,' and they were like, 'No, that's too close to home,' which was a bummer at the time," he laughs. "I never got to look in." "Alan's great in that, and he's great in War Machine. I admire that dude and what he's doing. It's weirdly cool to see big, burly blokes getting roles because there was such a fear for a while. I know we've always had iconic action stars with certain physiques, but as someone who's not small, it's nice to see dudes in dramatic roles who aren't getting pigeonholed so much. He's getting a chance to do that with a lot of the work he's setting up, so props to him," the Dangerous Animals actor concludes. "I can't wait to see how that movie does."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store