“We can’t be silent,” Winfrey wrote. “We have to use whatever megaphone we have to cry for justice.”
Category: Fashion

(TrendHunter.com) The Chloe x Halle Fendi Campaign is an especially notable one as it marks the first time that the Italian fashion house gave up creative control on its campaign and handed the reins over to sisters…

(TrendHunter.com) Luxury fashion house Gucci introduces its latest Gucci Print Arm Denim Jacket, which takes a classic light washed denim jacket and reworks it in a new angle. The piece joins the house’s…
“This speech was a recounting of thoughts that so many women and femme people have carried since the time we were children.”

(TrendHunter.com) Gucci Mx is a new project that’s said to “deconstruct preconceived binaries and question how these concepts relate to our bodies,” and it offers a completely non-binary, genderless…

(TrendHunter.com) The fashion industry is turning a year of disruption into opportunity by going digital, as seen by the new RUNWAY360 platform from the CFDA. It’s no secret that many fashion shows are now…
The show, adapted from the book of the same name, depicts horror that’s all too real.
The show is based on ‘Rodham,’ Curtis Sittenfeld’s 2020 novel that rewrites Hillary’s history.
For Pride Month, WWD asked young Black creatives to share their coming-out stories. While Pride Month is over, the challenges facing the LGBTQ community, and their experiences, require more than a once-a-year focus. So WWD reached out to more Black creatives about their own coming-out stories to keep the conversation going.
El Lewis
My coming out was more of an invitation in. The first person in my family I felt most comfortable enough to tell was my mother. I remember the moment being fueled with liberation and I just proceeded to tell her the full truth about myself and my interests. It was a candid conversation that was uncompromising, yet vulnerable. It felt like I opened the door and it was her choice to walk in and have a seat.
Lex Porter
First, I’d like to introduce myself. My name is Lex, my pronouns are she/her/hers and I identify as a lesbian. I recently started a podcast called “She|Her|Dyke” to create a space where masculine-presenting women can share their stories and day to day struggles.
“Coming out” was never a thing to me. At a young age I knew I was different, but I was unaware of the need to “come out” about it. I
Follow WWD on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.
It’s become the unofficial uniform of “checking out.” But who, exactly, gets to do that?