Fashion
Rare Beauty and BÉIS debut travel-inspired “Beauty On-the-Go” capsule
Published
November 3, 2025
Rare Beauty and BÉIS have joined forces to release a limited-edition “Beauty On-the-Go” collection, announced across their verified Instagram and TikTok pages. The collaboration unites founders Selena Gomez and Shay Mitchell, longtime friends who expressed their excitement online, emphasizing their shared passion for beauty and travel.
The collection includes three essentials — the Blush Case (US$28), the Makeup Brush Pouch (US$24), and the Large Cosmetic Pouch (US$74). Each item blends BÉIS’s functional travel design with Rare Beauty’s minimalist aesthetic.
The Blush Case features a built-in mirror and key clip, while the Makeup Brush Pouch includes elastic loops and a wipe-clean lining. The Large Cosmetic Pouch features brush holders, adjustable dividers, and an insulated pocket — a detail showcased in Rare Beauty’s official TikTok video.

Inspired by Rare Beauty’s best-selling Soft Pinch Liquid Blush shade Worth, the collection is described on the brands’ social media as “designed for early drives, unexpected detours, jet lag, wrong turns, and every mile in between.”
The BÉIS × Rare Beauty collaboration launches November 3 exclusively online at rarebeauty.com and beistravel.com.
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Fashion
Nigeria’s textile imports up 47.43% YoY in Jan-Sept 2025
The country imported textile and textile materials worth N 228.83 billion in the first quarter (Q1) this year, N 337.12 billion in Q2 and N 248.32 billion in Q3.
Industry experts blame policy failure, weak execution of credit initiatives, abandonment of promised institutional reforms, pervasive corruption and structural bottlenecks like weak cotton farming, insecurity and the inability to scale locally-produced polyester for the decline, according to Nigerian media reports.
Nigeria’s textile imports rose to N 814.27 billion in January-September 2025—a 47.43-per cent YoY rise despite repeated government claims of the sector’s revival.
Rising imports indicate a weak domestic textile industry.
Industry experts blame policy failure, weak execution of credit initiatives, abandonment of promised institutional reforms, pervasive corruption and structural bottlenecks for the fall.
Hamma Kwajaffa, director general of the Nigerian Textile Manufacturers Association, lamented that the 10-per cent tax on imported textiles—which was introduced when the ban on textile imports was lifted so that the amount collected can be ploughed into domestic textile production—has not been directed to improve the private textile sector.
Kwajaffa pointed to the failure to create a dedicated textile development fund domiciled with the Bank of Industry.
Conflicting positions among top officials had stalled any action related to the sector and repeated workshops and announcements without execution had yielded no tangible outcome, Kwajaffa added.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
CFDA to implement fur ban at NYFW from September 2026
Fashion
ECB keeps interest rates unchanged, upgrades growth outlook
According to updated Eurosystem staff projections, headline inflation is expected to average 2.1 per cent in 2025, easing to 1.9 per cent in 2026 and 1.8 per cent in 2027, before returning to 2.0 per cent in 2028. Inflation excluding energy and food is forecast at 2.4 per cent in 2025, gradually declining to 2.0 per cent by 2028. Inflation for 2026 has been revised upward, mainly due to expectations that services inflation will fall more slowly than previously anticipated, the Governing Council of the ECB said in a press release.
European Central Bank has kept its key interest rates unchanged, maintaining confidence that inflation will stabilise at the 2 per cent target.
Updated projections show inflation easing gradually over the coming years, with a slight upward revision for 2026 due to persistent services prices.
Economic growth forecasts have been revised higher, supported by stronger domestic demand.
The ECB also revised its economic growth outlook higher compared with its September projections. Growth is now expected to reach 1.4 per cent in 2025, 1.2 per cent in 2026 and 1.4 per cent in 2027, with expansion projected to remain at 1.4 per cent in 2028. The improvement is driven largely by stronger domestic demand across the euro area.
The Council reiterated its commitment to ensuring that inflation stabilises sustainably at the 2 per cent target. It emphasised that future monetary policy decisions will remain data-dependent and assessed on a meeting-by-meeting basis, without pre-committing to any specific interest rate path.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)
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