Fashion
Grace Wales Bonner is new Hermès menswear creative chief
Published
October 21, 2025
Grace Wales Bonner has been a rising star for some time and now she’s really hit the big time with news on Tuesday that she’s the new creative director of menswear at French luxury house Hermès.
It will be a while before we see her full impact on Hermès though. The 35-year-old menswear specialist who launched her own label in 2014, won’t show her first collection for the ultra-luxury label until January 2027.
The UK-based designer, who has a collaboration with Adidas, will also continue with her own label.
She’s succeeding the top flight’s longest-standing creative chief with Véronique Nichanian stepping down from the brand after a tenure of 37 years.
Nichanian’s final show will be this January and the label won’t show its SS27 collection (which will be created by the studio) at the runway event in June 2026.
Pierre-Alexis Dumas, general artistic director of Hermès, said of its new menswear creative chief: “I am really pleased to welcome Grace to the Hermès artistic director family. Her take on contemporary fashion, craft and culture will contribute to shaping Hermès men’s style, melding the house’s heritage with a confident look on the now. Grace’s appetite and curiosity for artistic practice strongly resonate with Hermès’s creative mindset and approach. We are at the start of an enriching mutual dialogue.”
She in her turn said she was “honoured” and that the role is a “dream”.
As mentioned, Wales Bonner has been a rising star for some time and was tipped to eventually land at the design helm of one of the industry’s major labels.
The English-Jamaican designer was trained at Central Saint Martins and set up her namesake label as soon as she graduated, initially focusing on menswear but introducing womenswear in 2018.
Big-league awards have been coming thick and fast including the emerging menswear designer title at the British Fashion Awards (2015), the LVMH Young Designer Prize (2016) and the CFDA International Men’s Designer of the Year (2021).
She’s also dressed A-list celebrities including Lewis Hamilton and FKA Twigs.
But the Hermès job is undeniably her biggest role yet. And while running a category at any major house is always a challenge, she’s arriving at a time when ready-to-wear is on an upswing for the brand with sales rising strongly.
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Fashion
Removing NTBs could boost trade with US: Bangladesh commerce minister
Addressing these issues would also facilitate Bangladesh’s greater access to US development assistance and financing programmes, he said after meeting US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs S Paul Kapur in Dhaka.
Cutting unnecessary complexities and eliminating selected non-tariff barriers could significantly boost US investment in Bangladesh and enhance the country’s appeal as a foreign investment destination, according to Commerce, Industry, and Textiles & Jute Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir.
Addressing these would also facilitate greater access to US development assistance and financing programmes, he said.
The meeting focused on strengthening bilateral trade ties, expanding investment into new sectors, improving digital infrastructure and deepening overall trade and investment cooperation.
Certain procedural and policy-related bottlenecks continue to affect the investment climate, the minister observed.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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The announcement was made during a summit in Brussels, where leaders from both sides emphasised the need to deepen transatlantic trade amid global economic uncertainty and shifting geopolitical dynamics.
Canada and the EU have agreed to modernise the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) following a summit in Brussels.
It aims to reduce trade barriers, support SMEs while expanding co-operation in digital services and cross-border data flows.
Leaders including Ursula von der Leyen said it will strengthen economic resilience, diversify trade partnerships and secure supply chains.
The initiative seeks to update the 2017 free trade deal by reducing remaining non-tariff barriers, improving regulatory co-ordination and creating clearer investment dispute mechanisms, particularly to support small and medium-sized enterprises.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has set a target of doubling Canada’s non-US trade within the next decade, positioning Europe as a key partner in achieving that goal. According to Canada’s Trade Minister Maninder Sidhu, the effort aligns with the country’s broader strategy to diversify trade beyond its largest partner, the United States, which currently accounts for nearly 70 per cent of Canadian exports and leaves the country vulnerable to shifts in American trade policy.
The agreement also launches talks on a digital trade framework covering data flows, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence regulation and digital services.
Maros Sefcovic, the EU’s Commissioner for Trade and Economic Security, said the initiative reflects the growing importance of digital commerce, noting that more than 40 per cent of EU-Canada services trade is already delivered digitally.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen highlighted that the partnership would support sustainable development, innovation and secure supply chains, particularly in areas such as rare minerals, clean energy and advanced technologies.
The modernisation effort underscores both partners’ commitment to strengthening economic resilience, promoting sustainable trade practices and deepening cooperation in the digital era.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (CG)
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