“Being one of the sixth-largest retail tenants in US malls, the situation goes further than tank tops at startlingly cheap prices and rip-off clothes made with the labor of the suffering…”
Close to 50K people united the last day of May, on the street of downtown Montréal, to call for justice. It was peaceful, impressively organized and human.
“To be black, to be Hispanic, to be Asian; to be First Nation or Indigenous, to be queer or differently-abled; to exist on the outskirts of society is to be taught to be on the wrong side of history.”
“Ya sea a metros o kilómetros de casa, no temas a lo que se avecina, sino de donde te encuentras”.
“La moda seguirá su camino, solo que de ahora en adelante tenemos que tener muy claro que somos nosotros y nosotras las que tenemos la directiva, no al inverso”.
“Being one of the sixth-largest retail tenants in US malls, the situation goes further than tank tops at startlingly cheap prices and rip-off clothes made with the labor of the suffering…”
Fashion biggest night found its solace somewhere over the rainbow to honor queer culture and all of its campiness.
After Monaco, Bob & Dolores Hope property in Palm Springs, Brasil’s Mac Niteroi, Japan’s Miho Museum and the Fondation Maeght at the French Riviera, Ghésquiere will continue its architectural journey.
After MACROFEST, there is one name in everyone’s mouth: 17-year-old designer Christian Olarte, who paid tribute to Panama Canal French administration with his debut collection.
“La moda seguirá su camino, solo que de ahora en adelante tenemos que tener muy claro que somos nosotros y nosotras las que tenemos la directiva, no al inverso”.