Moynat, an LVMH-owned trunk brand, has opened on Paris’ famed Ave. Montaigne.
LVMH-owned luggage brand Moynat has opened its second Paris boutique, at 34 Avenue Montaigne. The 430-square-foot store features a limited-edition capsule collection, archival trunk displays, and on-site bag personalization, reflecting the brand’s focus on intimate, craft-driven retail and its growing appeal among younger shoppers drawn to the maison’s wealth of heritage and design.
Tyler Mitchell’s photography features in the newest season of The Bear.
Two photographs by Tyler Mitchell appear in the fourth episode of The Bear‘s new season, hanging in the home of chef Sydney Adamu, played by Ayo Edebiri. The featured works include Untitled (Kiki and Stephan Dancing) and Untitled (Group Hula Hoop), both of which explore the theme of everyday Black joy—a subject that echoes the episode’s quieter, character-driven focus. Mitchell acknowledged the cameo on Instagram, lightly teasing the character’s unconventional framing choices.
A restoration of the Vatican Museums has revealed two previously unknown Raphael frescoes.
A decade-long restoration of the Vatican’s Hall of Constantine has revealed that Raphael himself painted two allegorical figures—Justice and Friendship—using an experimental oil technique previously thought to be absent from the room. The discovery rewrites long-held assumptions that his assistants completed the space alone after his death in 1520. Metal nails found beneath the plaster further support that Raphael had begun preparations to continue work before his passing.
Beyonce gracefully and safely navigated a set malfunction at her Houston Cowboy Carter concert.
During her Cowboy Carter tour stop in Houston, Beyoncé calmly handled a mid-show set malfunction when her suspended red Cadillac prop tilted unexpectedly during “16 Carriages.” After safely exiting the vehicle, she reassured the crowd and continued the performance. The incident prompted a slight program change the following night, but Beyoncé later acknowledged the moment with humor on social media.
Amid a record heatwave, Paris Men’s shows went on—with shirt-and-tie dressing all over the runways.
Despite a record-breaking heatwave, Paris Fashion Week Men’s charged ahead with designers embracing polished silhouettes and surprising restraint. Shirt-and-tie dressing made a strong return across runways—from Saint Laurent’s fluid tailoring to Junya Watanabe’s avant-garde spin—alongside nods to American prep and pajama dressing. The season balanced theatrical moments with quietly radical propositions, underscoring fashion’s continued appetite for reinvention even in a saturated market.
Today’s attractive distractions:
American Airlines has a luxe new first class suite on its Boeing 787-9s.
A National Gallery of Victoria exhibition spotlights Vivienne Westwood and Rei Kawakubo.
The newest Aman property will open later this month in the Dolomites.
You should know the six women defining motorsport racing.