fashion
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All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes. Olivia Rodrigo has been making headlines during her Guts world tour with the latest being her duet with special guest Sheryl […]
All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
Lenny Kravitz enters his golden era in a new collaboration with Ray-Ban featuring a limited-edition pair of gold Ray-Ban Reverse Sunglasses. The capsule collection debuted on Friday (March 15) and puts a rock and roll twist on the eyewear brand’s newest Reverse sunglasses line, which you can buy online now.
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There are three shades to choose from: gold, black and dark gray or silver. Each pair of limited-edition Reverse sunglasses will also come etched with the “Again” singer’s iconic signature making it essential for fans to add to their collection or a must-have gift for music lovers.
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Unlike your traditional Ray-Ban Aviators, the Reverse style comes with a concave design and lenses that aim to reduce reflections up to 70% at wavelengths the eye is most sensitive to, according to the official product description. Plus, if you’re looking to cut down your carbon footprint, these sunglasses use bio-based lenses and frames to expand your eco-friendly fashion.
Keep reading to buy Lenny Kravitz x Ray-Ban online.
Lenny Kravitz x Aviator Reverse Limited
Only 1,000 pairs of these luxurious gold Aviator Ray-Ban Reverse sunglasses were made, which means once they’re sold-out, there most likely won’t be a restock. Not only were the sunglasses designed with Kravitz, but they feature a premium gold frame and gold mirror lenses as well as limited-edition packaging and a case signed by the artist.
Lenny Kravitz x Aviator Reverse
Completing the collection are a silver and black style, which are designed with polished metal frames and reflective lenses to help protect your eyes from damaging sunrays. The versatile shades can be dressed up or down thanks to both colorways’ neutral coloring. Each pair also comes with a protective case to keep the sunglasses safe and secure when not in use.
The “TK241” singer is no stranger to the sunglasses brand, having been spotted wearing the Ray-Bans on numerous occasions, including paired with his giant oversized scarf that broke the internet back in 2012, and more recently, at his Hollywood Walk of Fame induction ceremony.
“As a lifelong fan of Ray-Ban, their timeless style has always resonated with me,” Kravitz says, in a statement. “The Ray-Ban Reverse collaboration is a dream come true, allowing me to merge my love for music and fashion with such an iconic brand. It’s about breaking boundaries, embracing individuality, and seeing the world from a new perspective through those innovative lenses.”
For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best sunglasses deals, sunglasses under $25 and Prada sunglasses sales.
All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes. Justin Timberlake is making an unforgettable comeback after reuniting with his *NSYNC bandmates for a one-night only concert in Los Angeles […]
All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
Jennifer Lopez is proving Y2K style remains supreme in one of her most recent streetwear outfits, which put the popular Mini Platform Uggs on display. After releasing the movie This Is Me Now: A Love Story to coincide with her latest album release, the “Jenny From the Block” singer took some time to hit the gym before her upcoming tour in a cozy yet chic outfit featuring the Ugg boots, a matching athleisure set and accessorized with a Hermès Birkin bag.
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J. Lo is among the celebrities who are part of Ugg fan club, especially for this style, as she’s also been spotted wearing the exact Uggs boots with a pair of overalls while out and about with her husband Ben Affleck.
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Jennifer Lopez is seen on March 07, 2024 in Los Angeles.
Bellocqimages/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images
In the past, Uggs were considered controversial for their deemed “ugly” style, but the “Love Don’t Cost a Thing” singer has proven that the shoe brand isn’t just relevant, but a fashion must-have.
Social media users have been clamoring to get their hands on their own pair of the Mini Platform Uggs and while many sites are sold out, Billboard Shopping has found a few options to buy platform Uggs online.
Ugg Mini Platform Boot
$169.95
$169.95
$170
The Ugg Mini Platform is ready to elevate your outfits in height and trendiness with its quality suede material and overlock stitch detailing that can pair with jeans or sweatpants. Your feet with be praising the fluffy interior that’s soft and heat-insulating to keep you comfortable during colder days.
Do Platform Uggs Run Big?
Amazon reviewers have noted that the platform Uggs do run big and suggest sizing down for a more snug fit. For those who bought their normal size instead of a smaller fit, reviewers claim you can wear them with thick socks and be comfortable.
Do Platform Uggs Stretch Out?
If the shoes feel a bit snug at first, some reviewers have noted that the Ugg Mini Platforms will expand with time. One verified Amazon reviewer even noted “After doing lots of research, these will stretch out so although they’re tight at first, give it a bit and they will stretch out.” Hey, if it’s good enough for J. Lo, it’s good enough for us.
For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Ugg slipper dupes, platform boots andknee-high boots.
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MSCHF, the Brooklyn-based art collective that landed on many radars with the release of their Big Red Boot just dropped a new boot that’s sure to get people talking once more. Tapping legendary Brooklyn native Spike Lee, MSCHF is set to release its new 2X4 Boot that is most certainly a riff on a classic boot beloved by many in New York and abroad.
As spotted on Nice Kicks, it appears that the MSCHF 2X4 Boot is an elaborate return shot at VF Corp, the company that owns Timberland. According to the outlet, the 2X4 Boot is in response to VF Corp taking legal measures to halt the sale of the brand’s Wavy Baby shoe collaboration with Tyga, which took the classic Vans silhouette and added some wavy flair. Max B would’ve loved these sneakers, if you catch our drift.
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The latest from MSCHF is a continuation of the brand’s satirical outlook as the brand pokes fun at Timberland, owned by VF Corp, which also serves as the parent company for Vans.
Vans successfully won an appeal to prevent MSCHF from selling its “Wavy Baby” shoes and the Brooklyn-based art collective has returned to troll Vans’ parent company, VF Corp, with a knock-off boot of its subsidiary Timberland brand.
The 2X4 Boot drops on March 19 and retails for $400. We expect this one to have a nice run similar to the Big Red Boot and the backstory is one for the ages.
Check out MSCHF here.
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Photo: MSCHF
All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes. Fresh off finishing her debut album, Ice Spice is showing off her fashion chops as the face of Alexander Wang’s spring […]
Two New York residents who are staples of the intersecting cultures of music and fashion have linked up, as Ice Spice meets Alexander Wang. The “Princess Diana” rapper has been tapped by the fashion house as the face of its new S24 campaign. Ice Spice modeled an array of chic looks as part of the […]
Only one name comes to mind when you see an outfit comprised of an oversize sweatshirt, a high ponytail and thigh-high heeled boots: Ariana Grande. Over the past decade, Grande has defined pop culture — not just through her eight Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 singles and her five Billboard 200-topping albums, including 2018’s Sweetener, 2019’s thank […]
John Richmond is a product of the British resourcefulness that has not stopped leaving its mark on fashion and music since the post-war period. An internationally renowned fashion designer, the fashion press associates him with rock n’ roll and punk, but with his works he embraces all the British musical genres that have influenced the rest of the world.
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He arrived in Italy in the early ’80s after earning a degree in Fashion Design at London’s Kensington University, and collaborated with brands that, in those years, were anticipating trends: Armani and Fiorucci. English individualism, which he himself talks about in the interview, is probably the reason why in 1987 he created the brand that bears his name.
He has a style that still influences international fashion today, thanks to his now iconic jeans model with the writing “RICH.” In the early 2000s, logo mania swept through many other brands.
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John Richmond, however, is not just fashion. Artists who perform with his clothes have included Madonna, George Michael, David Bowie, Mick Jagger, Annie Lennox, Axl Rose, Bryan Adams, Michael Jackson, Britney Spears, Lady Gaga and many others.
What is the song that most represented your youth?
It’s still one of my favorite songs of all time: “Life on Mars?” by David Bowie.
What musical memories do you have from your adolescence?
If you grew up in the early ’70s you can only have fond memories. We went dancing in teenage discos where Northern Soul reigned, a fantastic genre popular in the north of England. In particular, I used to go to the Wigan Casino, a renowned venue at the time. It was all a combination of things: music, clothing, appearance, style, attitude. A poor country can give you opportunities: in those years the youth were very disillusioned. Since then, all the things I’m interested in are driven by music. I grew up in Manchester, a very post-industrial, depressing place, but the great thing was we had some amazing clubs and a great music scene. After punk came new wave and then the New Romantic movement. There were artists for whom style, appearance, clothes were really important. Everyone knows Bowie’s songs, but they also know everything about his style: clothes, hairstyles, accessories, makeup. Bowie wasn’t just a singer: he embodied a powerful style.
Why has the United Kingdom, which sometimes appears to be such a detached country, been able to strongly influence the world of style, also in music?
First of all, we are able to laugh at ourselves, and that’s important. Then we live on an island, so we are completely isolated. When you have nothing else, you are forced to be creative. There were a lot of young people who didn’t have many opportunities. I think they were courageous, because they found within themselves the strength to move forward, not to remain isolated. If I look at other countries, there are great leaders in various sectors and people follow that one model, as if they don’t want to dare. In Italy, for example, there is a well-defined style. In England, if I see someone doing something in a certain way, I will do everything I can to do it better, certainly to do it my way: we English have an attitude for individuality.
As an expert in both sectors, what is the relationship between music and fashion?
I summarize it in one of my slogans: “Punk is an attitude, not a trend.” Punk is now much better known as a fashion style than for music. Punk music didn’t last long, but it never stopped permeating fashion. It came to life in the years when the fashion press was starting to become important. People who knew music well worked there. It was therefore easy to find mutual contamination in those pages. London was the site of these changes. I think of Terry Jones who, with Face and then i-D, was one of the most famous and innovative editors-in-chief. At the end of the ’80s music videos arrived, which had the same impact on the audience that TikTok has today. There was no artist who didn’t accompany his or her songs with a music video. We can therefore imagine the importance of clothes, makeup and hairdressing. In those years, if an artist needed an outfit, he or she would go and get it personally. You didn’t go to artists and say, “Here’s my dress, I’ll pay you to wear it at the Oscars.” Musicians would come to my shop, buy clothes and wear them. I remember funny things: the New Kids on the Block arrived on a small street getting out of a white limousine that couldn’t turn the corner and had to reverse. I worked with people like Depeche Mode, Eurythmics, George Michael. Now we realize that we were lucky protagonists of moments that changed the history of these two sectors: we were in the right place at the right time.
If you had to choose one music artist to best represent you, who would it be?
For me there is no absolute icon. I like to see how my clothes are interpreted by those who buy them. I’d rather think of a style. Rock n’ roll is certainly what has most pervaded my works. But I always want to evolve in line with what music offers: today I look a lot at hip-hop.
When do you listen to music?
Always. I only work with music in the background. I particularly love Gilles Peterson from BBC Radio 6 because he’s always looking for new things. Compared to before, I also changed the listening mode. I used to buy – let’s say – Horses by Patti Smith, come home, lie down in a dark room and listen to it for hours without stopping. Today I prefer to listen to what is offered to me by radio and platforms.
Besides “Life on Mars?”, what are some other songs that you would never delete from your playlist?
I would choose an album, The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd. Also, a few weeks ago there was an incredible Brazilian song featured on Gilles Peterson’s show. It is “Vento de Mayo” by Seu Jorge, produced by Miguel Atwood-Ferguson. I would add another album: Roxy Music’s debut, that really changed British music. And then the Sex Pistols, who influenced music all over the world.
If you wrote a song, what lines would it start with?
I could make the first line of Patti Smith’s “Gloria” my own: “Jesus died for somebody’s sins, but not mine.” As a boy who grew up in a Catholic context, attending a Roman Catholic school, these words had a strong impact on me. It was a powerful and liberating realization, taking away that sense of having to carry the sins of others on my shoulders.
Adding to an arsenal of fashion partnerships such as Dior and Cartier, Jisoo is the new face of Self-Portrait, marking several firsts for the BLACKPINK superstar and the London-based fashion house.
Following previous Self-Portrait muses such as Naomi Campbell, Kate Moss, Gigi Hadid, Emily Ratajkowski, Irina Shayk, Bella Hadid, Kate Moss and Phoebe Dynevor, the news not only marks the brand’s first time having a musician front the accessible line since its 2013 founding, but also serves as Jisoo’s first contemporary fashion campaign following the February announcement of her own label and agency, Blissoo.
Billboard has a look at the Spring/Summer 2024 collection, including an exclusive photo of Jisoo in a blue dress from the campaign. Captured in South Korea by photographer Yoon JiYong (who shot the artwork for Jisoo’s ME solo album, her 2023 ELLE Korea cover, as well as lensed her bandmates Rosé, Lisa and other top K-pop stars), Self-Portrait founder and creative director Han Chong describes Jisoo’s campaign in a press release as showcasing “her beauty, both inside and out, to be front and center of this first series of portraits we shot together in Seoul.”
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BLACKPINK self-portrait
©self-portrait/Yoon JiYong
Chong notes that the collaboration is a natural step after first connecting with Jisoo around BLACKPINK’s debut in 2016.
“We first started dressing Jisoo over seven years ago, sparking a relationship that we hope will continue for many more years to come,” he tells Billboard. “Aside from the pieces she has worn on and off stage, my favorite moment has to be when we were together on set for this shoot — Jisoo gravitated towards her favorite pieces immediately, and so we let her choose what she wanted to wear for the campaign. It needed to feel real and authentic to where Jisoo is in her life right now, and for me, knowing that she felt like the best version of herself brought me such satisfaction and joy.”
Citing Jisoo’s “Flower” and BLACKPINK’s “Pink Venom” and “Shut Down” as favorites, Chong adds that the goal is “wanting to capture Jisoo in an honest and authentic way — it’s our take on modern portraiture. She is evolving into her next chapter as an independent artist, and there is something so empowering about that. I hoped to shine a light on Jisoo on this important moment in her life and career.”
Chong says Jisoo’s indie move — which includes a renewed contract for BLACKPINK under YG Entertainment — influenced the timing to officially team with Jisoo for the accessibly priced fashion line, which has been worn by musicians including Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, Rosalía, Olivia Rodrigo and BLACKPINK.
“When it comes to our campaign casting, I’m always inspired by women who inspire our audience and women who are truly themselves,” says the Penang, Malaysia–born creative. “It’s something which has become a constant thread running through our campaigns. We then look to tailor each campaign or creative to the face of that moment, making it a celebration of the personality which we hope shines through in the images. With Jisoo, I was really interested in where she is on her journey, stepping into solo projects and celebrating her transition into independence. The first set of images captured through a series of portraits bring to life her journey into womanhood.”
The items Jisoo showcases — including the pale-pink sequin minidress with black trim, the orange and pink rhinestone embellished minidress and the blue minidress with the very appropriate flower embellishments — are all available online, in Self-Portrait stores globally and through its international network of retailers as part of the new collection.
See photos from Jisoo’s Self-Portrait campaign below:
Jisoo for self-portrait
©self-portrait/Yoon JiYong
Jisoo for self-portrait
©self-portrait/Yoon JiYong