Elle Says Will Drop Fur From Magazines Worldwide

Elle will soon be fur-free in terms of both editorial content and advertising - JOEL SAGET AFP/File
Elle will soon be fur-free in terms of both editorial content and advertising - JOEL SAGET AFP/File
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Elle Says Will Drop Fur From Magazines Worldwide

Elle will soon be fur-free in terms of both editorial content and advertising - JOEL SAGET AFP/File
Elle will soon be fur-free in terms of both editorial content and advertising - JOEL SAGET AFP/File

Elle magazine announced on Thursday it will stop using fur in all its editorial and advertising content worldwide, becoming the first major publication to do so.

The monthly lifestyle magazine, which originated in France and is owned by French media group Lagardere, comes out in 45 different editions around the world.

It has some 33 million readers from Mexico to Japan, with 100 million monthly online visitors, AFP said.

But Elle's international director Valeria Bessolo Llopiz told a conference organized by The Business of Fashion publication that fur was no longer acceptable.

"The presence of animal fur in our pages and on our digital media is no longer in line with our values, nor our readers," she said.

"It is time for Elle to make a statement ... rejecting animal cruelty," she told delegates in Chipping Norton, in Oxfordshire, southern England.

Instead, she said the magazine wanted to "increase awareness for animal welfare" and "foster a more humane fashion industry".

The magazine has signed an undertaking to drop fur that is already in force in 13 of its editions.

Twenty more will impose the measure from January 1, 2022 and the rest will start a year later.

Welcoming Elle's decision, PJ Smith, director of fashion policy for the Humane Society of the United States, said he looked forward to other fashion magazines following suit.

"This announcement will ignite positive change throughout the entire fashion industry and has the potential to save countless animals from a life of suffering and a cruel death," he told the conference.

"Fur promotions belong only in the back copies of fashion magazines from days gone by," the UK director of animal rights organisation PETA, Elisa Allen, told AFP.

She welcomed decisions by publications including British Vogue, InStyle USA, Cosmopolitan UK, and the newly launched Vogue Scandinavia for rejecting fur on their editorial pages and expects the move to soon extend to advertising.



Emporio Armani Collection Captivates with Textures, Softness at Milan Fashion Week

Models present creations by Emporio Armani during the Milan Fashion Week, in Milan, Italy, 18 January 2025. The Fall/Winter 2025/2026 collections are presented from 17 to 21 January 2025. EPA/MATTEO CORNER
Models present creations by Emporio Armani during the Milan Fashion Week, in Milan, Italy, 18 January 2025. The Fall/Winter 2025/2026 collections are presented from 17 to 21 January 2025. EPA/MATTEO CORNER
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Emporio Armani Collection Captivates with Textures, Softness at Milan Fashion Week

Models present creations by Emporio Armani during the Milan Fashion Week, in Milan, Italy, 18 January 2025. The Fall/Winter 2025/2026 collections are presented from 17 to 21 January 2025. EPA/MATTEO CORNER
Models present creations by Emporio Armani during the Milan Fashion Week, in Milan, Italy, 18 January 2025. The Fall/Winter 2025/2026 collections are presented from 17 to 21 January 2025. EPA/MATTEO CORNER

Giorgio Armani kept his youth game sharp with an Emporio Armani menswear collection presented during Milan Fashion Week on Saturday that was all about texture and glistening surfaces.
Titled “Seductive,” the 90-year-old designer’s Fall-Winter 2025-2026 collection for youthful dressers invited the touch: velvet three-piece suits decorated with delicate watch chains, fine ribbed lurex knitwear, luxurious corduroy pants that puddled around lug sole shoes.
Urban outerwear included belted trenches, sleek, oversized leather coats with deep slits for big steppers and long fake furs. Silken scarves were knotted like a tie, for a tromp l’oeil wave beneath blazers.
The runway show in Armani’s theater opened and closed with a soundtrack of blowing wind, beckoning cold, perhaps as a hex against global warming. Mountaineers toting climbing gear and decked out in color-block parkas in shades of purple, pink, olive and brown opened the show. An urban couple dressed for a party and bundled against the elements closed it.
Armani, dressed in his trademark navy blue, took a bow for the fashion crowd, then posed with models before greeting VIPs, including US actor Toby Wallace, Chinese actor and singer Zeng Shunxi, and model Lennon Gallagher.
Trend Watch: Faux fur collars. Body-con fine knits that glisten. Cap of all sorts, but especially a neat leather beanie.