What does it take to become one of the 20 hottest brands in the world?

 

 

The hottest 20 fashion brands of the moment.

Global fashion search platform Lyst analyses the online shopping behaviour of more than nine million shoppers. Its Lyst Index is a quarterly ranking of fashion’s hottest brands and products.

@valentino

In the two years since The Lyst Index launched, three brands have appeared every quarter: Balenciaga, Gucci, and Vetements – with Balenciaga and Gucci consistently placing among the top three brands. Off-White and Valentino have made the hottest brands list for every Index bar one.

While brands rise and fall, with Bottega Veneta and Loewe being two new additions this quarter, the hottest brands form an exclusive club: to date, just 25 brands have made the cut. 80% of the brands from the first edition of The Lyst Index are still in the report, and on average fewer than two new brands join the ranks each quarter.

“So what does it take to become one of the 20 hottest brands in the world? Beyond creating desirable collections and products that are widely promoted and sold, capturing consumers’ imagination, this quarter we deep dive into two years of data from The Lyst Index to reveal the attributes and strategies shaping the 20 hottest brands,” shared lyst.com.

@gucci

Lyst identified that the 20 hottest brands in the world do these 12 things:

1. Sell Womenswear and Menswear;
2. Make great sneakers;
3. Featured a prominent logo;
4. Hit the pricing sweet spot;
5. Have a star designer;
6. Get a CEO with a 10 year plan;
7. Be Euro-Centric;
8. Have a Heritage or be a Brand New;
9. Dominate Social Media;
10. Create Major Viral Celebrity Moments;
11. Collaborate and extend the brand;
12. Move towards a sustainable future.

Versace Cruise 2020 Collection; @versace

95% of this quarter’s hottest 20 brands are based in Europe

65% of the top 20 brands’ creative directors have a public social media presence, with an average of 2 million followers each. The most followed is Balmain’s Olivier Rousteing with 5.5 million Instagram followers, although several including Bottega Veneta’s Daniel Lee and Alexander McQueen’s Sarah Burton eschew public profiles. This quarter, social mentions spiked around Demna Gvasalia announcing his departure from Vetements, and Virgil Abloh taking some time away from Off-White. This suggests consumer interest in the designers behind the brands remains high.

The average age of the top 20 brands’ creative director is 47 – Miuccia Prada is the oldest at 70, and Bottega Veneta’s Daniel Lee is the youngest at 32 – and on average they have held the role for 11 years. Currently, just 25% of the top 20 brands have female creative directors, and 90% of the creative directors are white. Addressing diversity and inclusion is a priority among the top 20, with Kering recently appointing a Chief Diversity, Inclusion, and Talent Officer. The average tenure of a CEO in the top 20 brands is slightly shorter than the creative directors at 9.5 years, and 15% are female.

The majority of this quarter’s top 20 brands are based in Italy (50%) or France (25%). Five are located elsewhere: Alexander McQueen and Burberry (UK), Loewe (Spain), Nike (US) and Vetements (Switzerland). All of the top 20 brands show collections at Milan or Paris Fashion Week, with three exceptions: Burberry, which shows at London Fashion Week, and Nike and Stone Island, which don’t hold regular fashion shows.

With the exception of Vetements and Off-White, at five and seven years old respectively, many of this quarter’s top 20 brands have decades of heritage. 20% is more than 100 years old, while 45% are 50-100 years old. But the youngest of the group, Vetements, has made the hottest brands list for every Index.

@stone island

The hottest 20 fashion brands of the moment, according to Lyst Index:

1. OFF-WHITE;
2.BALENCIAGA;
3.GUCCI;
4. VERSACE;
5. PRADA;
6. VALENTINO;
7. FENDI;
8. BURBERRY;
9. SAINT LAURENT;
10.VETEMENTS;
11. STONE ISLAND;
12.NIKE;
13. GIVENCHY;
14. MONCLER;
15. DOLCE & GABBANA;
16. BOTTEGA VENETA;
17. ALEXANDER MCQUEEN;
18. MOSCHINO;
19. BALMAIN;
20. LOEWE;

@gucci

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Café V x Sugalabo V: Louis Vuitton announces its first ever café and restaurant

 

 

 

With its never-ending embrace of innovation, Louis Vuitton has opened its first café and first restaurant on the top floor of the new store in Japan. The Café V spans a vast terrace, a bar and the exclusive Cocoon Room.

@Louis Vuitton

Louis Vuitton celebrates unique ties with Japan with opening of new flagship in Osaka.

Louis Vuitton inaugurated its new Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji flagship store on February 1st. Rola, Suzu Hirose, Takanori Iwata, Ebizo Ichikawa and Dan Carter were among the guests who attended the flagship’s opening, which featured a special live performance by the J-Pop group JO1 and DJ Sarasa. Designed in close collaboration with architects Jun Aoki and Peter Marino, the store welcomes Café V, the first-ever Louis Vuitton café, as well as its first restaurant, Sugalabo V, offering cuisine with Franco-Japanese influences.

Louis Vuitton has been present in Japan since the opening of its first store in Tokyo in 1918 and has always shared a close affinity with the Land of the Rising Sun. The new Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji is emblematic of this special relationship.

Designed by Japanese architect Jun Aoiki, who has worked with Louis Vuitton on many projects over the years, the store is an invitation to embark on a sea-faring journey. The building evokes the billowing sails of traditional Higaki-Kaisen cargo ships, a tribute to Osaka’s nautical spirit.

Architect Jun Aoki is known for his work on a number of landmark Louis Vuitton stores in Japan and around the world, including New York’s Fifth Avenue Maison.

Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji flagship store; @Louis Vuitton
Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji flagship store; @Louis Vuitton

Vast spaces are worked in subtle contrasts to elegantly marry spectacular halls with intimate spaces.

Over four levels, the style that has made the trunkmaker renowned around the world blends with Japanese materials such as woodwork and origami washi paper.

Twenty contemporary artworks curated by Peter Marino are featured alongside vintage Louis Vuitton trunks. Bursts of color in works by Vik Muniz, Polly Apfelbaum, Kimiko Fujimara and other artists offer a counterpoint to the building’s sleek lines.

There is also a discreetly concealed door to the Sugalabo V restaurant, proposing a unique dining experience. Both the café and restaurant are overseen by Japanese chef Yasuke Suga, a protégé of Joël Robuchon whose Tokyo restaurant Sugalabo topped 2019 world’s best restaurants ranking by “La Liste”. At
the Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji, Yasuke Suga proposes a cuisine that melds both French and Japanese inspirations, featuring the vast diversity of Japanese products.

Louis Vuitton Café V at Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji flagship store; @Louis Vuitton
Sugalabo V at Louis Vuitton Maison Osaka Midosuji flagship store; @Louis Vuitton

 

Gen.G x Benefit Cosmetics blend the worlds of beauty and gaming

 

Putting on your ‘Game Face’ means getting ready to own your day.
Global esports organization Gen.G and Benefit Cosmetics Partnership Encourages Women to Put on Their Game Face.

Gen.G x Benefit Cosmetics blend the worlds of beauty and gaming; @benefitcosmetics.com

LVMH-owned Benefit Cosmetics, the San Francisco-based makeup brand, and Gen.G, one of the leading esports organizations connecting the U.S. and Asia, announce one of the first cross-industry campaigns between beauty and gaming. Gen.G and Benefit Cosmetics campaign focuses on women’s empowerment across the gaming landscape.

Ranked #6 in the inaugural Forbes list of the world’s most valuable esports companies, Gen.G is the only major organization that owns and operates top teams in the world’s leading esports markets — China, South Korea, and the United States. Its unique portfolio of teams, winners of 7 global championships to date, includes the Seoul Dynasty franchise of the Overwatch League; 2014 & 2017 League of Legends world champion team in South Korea; the world’s top all-female Fortnite team, based in Los Angeles; and the NBA 2K League’s historic expansion franchise in Shanghai.

Gen.G x Benefit Cosmetics digital partnership will include a weekly video series capturing the beauty routines and real stories of four professional female gamers and streamers on Benefit’s Instagram and YouTube channels.

The five women featured for this campaign are: Eleanor Barnes, @Snitchery (host), Kristen Valnicek, @KittyPlays, Gina Darling, @MissGinaDarling, Nicki Taylor,@nickitaylor, Jayden Diaz, @Your Princess.

These videos offer an in-depth look at the day-to-day realities of being a female online, both in the gaming and beauty communities.

The series host is Eleanor Barnes, the influencer known as Snitchery who blends the worlds of beauty and gaming. In each episode, Barnes and the gamer guests will open up about what it’s like to be a woman sharing their lives online, and teach each other more about their daily trials and triumphs. Barnes will create a customized makeup look for each of the women based on their individuality and what makes them feel empowered, AKA: their “Game Face.”

“After serving women for more than 40 years in the beauty business, we at Benefit know how empowering makeup can be when women use it as a tool for expression, creativity, and self-love,” said Lisa Li, Director Global Digital Marketing, Benefit Cosmetics. “Women make up almost half of the audience watching and playing games.”

Kicking off the series’ first episode will feature one of the world’s most popular players, Kristen Valnicek also known as “KittyPlays.” Valnicek was also named Gen.G’s Head of New Gaming Initiatives in 2019.

“I’m thrilled that Gen.G and Benefit are working together to bring a sense of belonging and community within gaming for women,” said Valnicek. “There are so many amazing women in the gaming community, and I am excited that through partnerships like this, women can take the spotlight and feel confident about their gameplay.”

“We want all players to feel like they belong in the gaming community regardless of gender,” said Gina Chung, Gen.G’s VP of Brand, Activation & Apparel . “Our vision is to create an inclusive environment for all, which is why we prioritize initiatives focused on equality and fairness. Working with Benefit is a great example of how the gaming audience is vastly growing and how esports organizations can step up to create positive communities for female gamers. ”

With more than 2,700 BrowBars and 85 boutiques worldwide, Benefit has become the brow destination for both product and service. The prestige beauty brand is part of the world’s leading luxury products group, Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy.

@benefitcosmetics.com