Blog

  • Hermès’s Véronique Nichanian to step down after 37 years

    Hermès’s Véronique Nichanian to step down after 37 years

    Become a Vogue Business Member to receive unlimited access to Member-only reporting and insights, our Beauty and TikTok Trend Trackers, Member-only newsletters and exclusive event invitations.

    It’s the end of an era at Hermès. The house’s artistic director of menswear Véronique Nichanian is stepping down after 37 years, Hermès confirmed on Thursday. She will present her last collection during Paris men’s week in January. It’s understood that her successor will be appointed in the coming days.

    Nichanian began her career at Cerruti before being poached by Hermès’s chief executive Jean-Louis Dumas in 1988 to lead menswear. She became known for her inventive, wearable designs, grabbing attention with high-quality materials and a beautiful colour palette. Her Spring/Summer 2026 collection was “breathable clothing, just some lightness, softness, sensuality in the silk, in the prints,” she told editors after the show. She introduced a monkey print on tote bags. “Just for fun. It can’t do any harm in this world.”

    Nichanian becomes the latest luxury designer to leave a creative vacancy at a major fashion house following the SS26’s big reset, which saw 15 designer debuts. But Nichanian is a particularly notable exit: she had the longest tenure of a serving creative director in fashion.

    On her decision to step down, she told Le Figaro in an exclusive interview: “I still love this job. However, I believe that to practice it the way I like to, it now requires more and more time — and today, I want to devote that time to other things… Hermès has, above all, shown great elegance by allowing me to choose the moment that felt right to step down. I’ve been thinking about it and discussing it with Axel and Pierre-Alexis Dumas for a year or two now. It’s time to pass the baton.”

    Hermès’s financial performance has continued to defy the ongoing luxury slowdown. The company posted 8 per cent growth in the first half of 2025, with ready-to-wear and accessories growing 5.5 per cent in the period.

    Comments, questions or feedback? Email us at feedback@voguebusiness.com.

    More from this author:

    What’s Sephora’s secret recipe?

    LVMH fashion sales down 2% in Q3

    Maria Grazia Chiuri returns to Fendi as chief creative officer

    Continue Reading

  • Cell Signaling-Inspired DNA Sensor Enables Molecular Detection from Single Blood Drop

    Cell Signaling-Inspired DNA Sensor Enables Molecular Detection from Single Blood Drop

    The sensing principle of these sensors is straightforward: the molecular target or drug to be monitored (shown in green in the illustration above) can interact with a specific DNA molecule, called aptamer (yellow molecule). Upon binding…

    Continue Reading

  • Color Health, Google Cloud team up for accessible breast screening

    Color Health, Google Cloud team up for accessible breast screening

    Color Health and Google Cloud are partnering on an accessible breast cancer screening initiative in recognition of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

    The companies are combining Color Health’s oncologist-led Virtual Cancer Clinic with Google Cloud to…

    Continue Reading

  • Spotify’s Custom Playlist Cover Art Tool Arrives in Brazil With a Night of Self-Expression — Spotify

    Spotify’s Custom Playlist Cover Art Tool Arrives in Brazil With a Night of Self-Expression — Spotify

    Music and art came together for one special night last week at ZIV Gallery, an iconic art space in São Paulo, Brazil. The occasion? The launch of Spotify’s playlist cover…

    Continue Reading

  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

    Continue Reading

  • PapSCAR Prevalence May Predict Cardiac Death in Patients With Dilated Cardiomyopathy

    PapSCAR Prevalence May Predict Cardiac Death in Patients With Dilated Cardiomyopathy

    Patients with dilated cardiomyopathy have an increased risk of papillary muscle scarring (papSCAR), which was found to be independently associated with cardiac death, heart failure events, and arrhythmia events in a recent study published in…

    Continue Reading

  • Artists outside London ‘underrepresented on Mercury prize shortlist’ | Mercury prize

    Artists outside London ‘underrepresented on Mercury prize shortlist’ | Mercury prize

    Former Mercury prize nominees have said acts outside London are underrepresented in the awards, with 130 more nominees coming from the capital than the next most-shortlisted region over the prize’s 34-year history.

    The awards ceremony will take…

    Continue Reading

  • Overheating Bat Boxes Place Bats In Mortal Danger During Heatwaves

    Overheating Bat Boxes Place Bats In Mortal Danger During Heatwaves

    Staying cool during heatwaves is challenging for small creatures, but the problem could be even more extreme for nocturnal creatures that are unable to move to cooler locations while slumbering. ‘Roosting bats may face lethally high…

    Continue Reading

  • New Analysis Could Map Ancient History Of Earth’s Surface

    New Analysis Could Map Ancient History Of Earth’s Surface

    New Haven, Conn. — Earth’s Ediacaran Period, roughly 630 to 540 million years ago, has always been something of a magnetic minefield for scientists.

    During earlier and later time periods, tectonic plates kept a steady pace, climate…

    Continue Reading

  • Solidarity and shared optimism take centre stage at 1-54 fair – The Art Newspaper

    Solidarity and shared optimism take centre stage at 1-54 fair – The Art Newspaper

    Many eyes in the international art world are on Nigeria this autumn, thanks in part to Tate Modern’s blockbuster Nigerian Modernism exhibition (until 10 May 2026), and an explosion of activity in the country itself, including the opening of the…

    Continue Reading