logo
Chloé taps Claudia Schiffer to front Chemena Kamali's first summer collection

Chloé taps Claudia Schiffer to front Chemena Kamali's first summer collection

Fashion Network08-05-2025
A radiant is the face of Chloé 's latest campaign. The 54-year-old German top model has been tapped to front the campaign for the first summer collection designed by German stylist Chemena Kamali, who was appointed creative director of the Richemont -owned Parisian label in October 2023. The 'Chloé à la plage' collection is inspired by the films of Eric Rohmer, blending romanticism with insouciant simplicity.
Schiffer's long blonde hair and spontaneous sensuality have been lensed by British photographer David Sims in a warm, sun-drenched atmosphere. Schiffer is pictured lying on a sofa wearing a swimsuit or a frilled embroidered cotton top and white lace knickers, and slouched on a hammock in white high-waisted jeans and a guipure-collar tank top. The collection also includes flowing dresses, lightweight blouses, floral skirts, crocheted ensembles, shorts, handbags, costume jewellery and sandals.
'Claudia Schiffer has always embodied the kind of cross-generational femininity characteristic of Chloé. When I first met her, I was struck by her natural beauty and authenticity. Her confidence, independence and empathy are a genuine source of inspiration,' said Kamali in a press release. 'For me, summer is a feeling, a memory of escapades, freedom and light-heartedness, and Claudia clearly brings this emotional link with summer to life, a feeling full of sparkle and intimacy,' she added.
The collection is available from May 7 at Chloé stores, on the label's e-shop, and in the 'Chloé à la plage' temporary stores open in Saint-Tropez, Capri and Monte Carlo throughout the summer. Prices range from €350 for the bikini bottom to over €3,500 for the long dress in embroidered lace.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

By order of 007: Peaky Blinders' creator to write next James Bond film
By order of 007: Peaky Blinders' creator to write next James Bond film

Euronews

timea day ago

  • Euronews

By order of 007: Peaky Blinders' creator to write next James Bond film

Well, this is coming together rather brilliantly, isn't it? Following the announcement that Arrival and Dune director Denis Villeneuve will direct the next James Bond film for Amazon MGM Studios, it has now been announced that British screenwriter Steven Knight will be on scripting duties. Knight is best known for creating the hit TV show Peaky Blinders, as well as SAS Rogue Heroes, A Thousand Blows, The Veil and All the Light We Cannot See. He also wrote the screenplays for the Oscar-nominated films Eastern Promises and Spencer, as well as three films that he also directed: Hummingbird, Locke and Serenity. Knight's upcoming projects include the hotly anticipated Peaky Blinders feature film for Netflix, The Immortal Man. Une publication partagée par Amazon MGM Studios (@amazonmgmstudios) There is no official release date or title for the 26th 007 movie – and still no official news regarding the casting of James Bond. Following 2021's No Time To Die, Daniel Craig's swansong as the martini-swigging secret agent, there have been several rumours regarding who will don the tuxedo next. From Aaron Taylor-Johnson to three reported studio favourites, all bets are (still) off. In March, it was announced that the long-serving producers of the films, Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, had stepped away from the creative process and handed over full control to Amazon. This ended more than 60 years of the Broccoli family's control over the Bond estate. Since then, the development of a new Bond adventure has been a high priority. Fans have expressed fears over Amazon's control of the beloved film franchise, and rightly so. However, considering the current creative roster, it's hard to deny that things aren't looking promising for James Bond's next outing on the big screen.

Who is the British porn actress who brought UK viewers to their knees?
Who is the British porn actress who brought UK viewers to their knees?

Euronews

timea day ago

  • Euronews

Who is the British porn actress who brought UK viewers to their knees?

Warning: This article refers to practices and contains language which some readers may find offensive. A new documentary came out this week in the UK, titled 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story. Airing on Channel 4, the new film has caused quite the stir among viewers who were shocked to discover all about Blue and her story. For those with scrupulously clean internet histories, Bonnie Blue – real name Tia Billinger – is a 26-year-old British pornographic actress who made headlines earlier this year when she claimed to have had sex with 1,057 men in a single day (12 hours, to be precise), in an attempt to set the world record for the most number of sexual partners in one day. In case you were wondering, the record had been held since 2004 by pornographic film actress Lisa Sparxxx, who reportedly had sex with 919 men in one day. Bonnie Blue then doubled down in June, when the controversial performer announced a 'petting zoo' event in which she would be naked and tied up inside a glass box in a private house in London – with the aim of letting 2,000 men have sex with her. This announcement got Ms Blue banned from the OnlyFans platform for violations of its policy against 'extreme challenges'. She then made an appearance on Andrew Tate's podcast, which did nothing to diminish the flames of controversy. Worse, she said she wouldn't mind sleeping with the manosphere-peddling troll who the UK Crown Prosecution Service charged for rape and human trafficking in May. For months, Bonnie Blue has been the subject of countless articles, ranging from ragebait tabloid fodder to more thoughtful pieces like a Guardian article in which Eva Wiseman wrote: 'While (...) Blue's intentions and morals and psychic damage have been frequently interrogated, the men lining up to be the 20th or 60th person to penetrate a stranger for three minutes while a guy does card tricks outside, have been granted barely a glancing thought. The intentions and morals of these men were not of interest, because… it's normal! Normal to take sex when it's offered, normal to commodify the body of a woman, normal to go home afterwards, to live in the world unaccountable.' There, now you're all caught up and your search history remains spotless. You're welcome. A post shared by Euronews Culture (@euronewsculture) 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story aired on Channel 4 on Tuesday (with a warning at the start), and ever since, the complaints and moral outrage have been coming in thick and fast. Channel 4 justified their decision to include graphic sex scenes in the documentary, stating: "The explicit content in the documentary is editorially justified and provides essential context; making pornographic content is Bonnie's job, and this film is about her work and the response to it." Commissioning Editor Tim Hancock said before a screening of the doc: 'I believe it is Channel 4's job to tell stories like this, trying to get behind the truth of the headlines. We film real stories in real time. We are very proud to do films like this.' Meanwhile, director Victoria Silver said: 'Bonnie Blue refuses to conform to public opinion and lives life by her own rules. At a time when factual TV is awash with retrospective stories, I wanted to capture the energy of a live and evolving story, with a woman at the heart of it who's living her life in such a bold way.' Still, none of those statements silenced outraged voices, who were also quick to highlight that the doc's release came days after the Online Safety Act was introduced in the UK – an act designed to stop children from viewing pornographic images and videos online through age verification checks. 'Channel 4 has sunk a new low,' wrote one X user. 'Why is there a documentary on Bonnie Blue? Why are they trying to normalise her deviancy on national television?' "So Bonnie Blue gets a documentary on channel 4 where she can promote and glamorise her lifestyle for the kids watching at home but we need IDs to see posts on X because 'we need to protect the kids'," another wrote. 'Uk Gov: let's ban saucy content and protect our kids. Channel 4: let's show a film about Bonnie Blue being ploughed by 1000 guys.' Beyond (and because of, let's face it) the moral panic and media frenzy, is the doc itself worth watching? Once again, Euronews Culture bit the bullet for the sake of your sensitive peepers and can reveal that 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story does not live up to the real-life controversy or the discourse around her. While it would have been interesting to examine the possible dichotomy of Billinger / Blue being either an empowered sex-positive entrepreneur – as she has become one of the highest earning content creators to have appeared on OnlyFans and earned a million pounds from her '1,000 men' stunt - or dangerously pandering to toxic male fantasies (or both), the doc doesn't delve all that deep into what lies behind her story. Or what Channel 4 referred to in the synopsis as 'what's really going on behind those steely blue eyes.' Viewers just get to witness her vacant stare. They do get to go behind the scenes and see how Blue prepares for her infamous world record. This includes numerous condoms, quite a bit of numbing lube, and several balaclavas for anonymity and throughout, the mood veers from fascinating to downright icky ('Barely legal or barely breathing… come and rearrange my insides'). What you don't get in this documentary, however, is any proper insight into the polarising Blue or the way the content creator deals with being accused of being an agent of the patriarchy and the numerous insults thrown her way. You wish that Victoria Silver had challenged her more and gone into detail regarding what's at the heart of moralising online debate. Is it a return to prudishness? Is it Blue's desperate need to be provocative with her outspoken fascination with infidelity or taking people's virginities? Is it the ethical concerns that the actress triggers and how her business threatens feminist values? Is it that people can't quite fathom how her mum, who appears in the documentary, is supportive of her daughter's actions? Or is it the fact that a sex-negative society can't handle a woman doing what she wants with her body and dismisses the male roles in this world record to better hide the contradictions of an Online Safety Act? All questions which didn't have to be answered but which definitely merited at least a look-in. 'Everyone says my brain works different. I'm just not emotional,' says Blue in the documentary. 'I can control my emotions. If I don't want to get upset, I won't get upset.' 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story may or may not get you upset, uncomfortable or feeling dirty. But one thing's for sure – you won't emerge particularly enriched from the experience.

Beloved British children's author Allan Ahlberg dies aged 87
Beloved British children's author Allan Ahlberg dies aged 87

Euronews

timea day ago

  • Euronews

Beloved British children's author Allan Ahlberg dies aged 87

Celebrated British children's author Allan Ahlberg has died aged 87, his publisher Penguin Random House has confirmed. Ahlberg wrote 150 books, including beloved titles like 'The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters', 'Funny Bones', 'Burglar Bill', 'Peepo!' and 'Each Peach Pear Plum'. He worked with his first wife, Janet, an award-winning illustrator, for these classics – which sold millions of copies around the world. The prize-winning 'The Jolly Postman', published in 1991, has sold over six million copies. In Euronews Culture's The Books That Made Us, we described "The Jolly Postman"'s 'wild and varied characters' and the happiness that decries from reading such a joyful book. After Janet's death in 1994, he worked with other illustrators like Raymond Briggs and then went on to collaborate with his daughter Jessica for books like 'Half a Pig'. Ahlberg also made headlines in 2014 when he refused a lifetime achievement award because it was sponsored by Amazon, which was facing criticism over its tax arrangements. Francesca Dow, head of children's literature at Penguin Random House, said: "Allan was one of the most extraordinary authors I have had the privilege and pleasure to work with. His brilliant books – so many of them created with his late wife, Janet, the highly talented illustrator – have been described as 'mini masterpieces'.' She added: "Allan's are some of the very best – true classics, which will be loved by children and families for years to come. Dear Allan, we will all miss you enormously." Fellow children's author Michael Rosen said in a tribute on X: "You were a pioneer of great children's literature, both in picture books and poetry. You were clever, funny and wise. My children loved your books. So did and so DO I." Born in Croydon in 1938, Ahlberg was adopted into a working-class family living in the West Midlands town of Oldbury. He worked as a postman and gravedigger before training to become a teacher at Sunderland Teacher Training College, where he met Janet. Ahlberg is survived by his wife Vanessa, daughter Jessica and stepdaughters Saskia and Johanna.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store