Fashion
Tomorrowland founders tap Olivier Theyskens to launch fashion label Boloria
Translated by
Nazia BIBI KEENOO
Published
September 10, 2025
Olivier Theyskens is back in the spotlight with a new fashion house. Boloria, as it is called, has just been created in Antwerp by Belgian entrepreneurs Manu and Michiel Beers, founders of the famous electronic music festival Tomorrowland and owners of the events and lifestyle company Weareone.world.
In addition to the renowned Belgian designer, the two brothers have enlisted the services of Belgian photographer Willy Vanderperre for the launch of this house, “which marks the group’s debut in the fashion world.” As the brand states, Olivier Theyskens’ creative vision “is marked by a timeless visual identity designed by the photographer,” who has long worked with Raf Simons, among others.
Willy Vanderperre signed Boloria’s first corporate campaign, featuring four black-and-white shots that reveal a figure with a hidden face, who could just as easily be a man or a woman, wearing a dark suit with a few couture details highlighted in the construction. “Anticipatory and allusive, expressing an aesthetic language that informs and inspires creativity, these photographs invite interpretation. They open a dialogue, starting a new conversation before the first Boloria collection in 2026, the next step in its history.”
These are essentially the only elements revealed about this new brand, which clearly aligns with the experimental, minimalist style of Belgian fashion. In a press release, the brand underlines this affiliation: “Boloria is based on typically Belgian values — sensitivity, integrity, emotional resonance — which have always inspired Theyskens’ work and approach to fashion.”The company’s Antwerp headquarters are also in line with this approach and ‘an uncompromising quest for beauty.’”

Trained at the La Cambre school in Brussels, Olivier Theyskens launched his own brand in 1997, only to suspend it in 2002. He then moved on to artistic direction roles at Rochas, Nina Ricci, and Theory, followed by a period at Azzaro, accumulating a wealth of experience before relaunching his house in 2016.
Known for his pared-down style tinged with gothic romanticism, it’s his skillset as much as his sensibility that these new fashion players have come to seek out. The press release states that “Boloria represents a new, unique, and long-term collaboration between Theyskens and the Belgian group Weareone.world, the first step in an ongoing partnership for multifaceted creative initiatives.”
In the twenty years since the launch of the Tomorrowland festival in 2005 in the town of Boom near Antwerp, brothers Manu and Michiel Beers have built a global entertainment group, active in “festivals and events, music, experiences, leisure, lifestyle, architecture and interior design, as well as fiction,” with offices in Brazil, France, Thailand, and Ibiza. According to the group’s balance sheet, quoted by Belgian website Les Grandes Fortunes, Weareone.world’s sales reached €244 million in 2024, with a net profit of €23.8 million. The company employs nearly 400 people.
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Fashion
EU to levy €3 customs duty on small e-commerce parcels from July 2026
EU officials said the measure aims to address unfair competition faced by EU sellers, alongside concerns over consumer health and safety, widespread fraud, and environmental impact linked to high volumes of low-value imports. Around 93 per cent of e-commerce flows into the EU are expected to fall under the scope of the new duty, the Council said in a press release.
EU Council has agreed to impose a fixed €3 (~$3.52) customs duty on small parcels valued below €150 entering the bloc from July 1, 2026.
The temporary measure targets e-commerce imports, addressing unfair competition, fraud, and safety concerns.
It will apply mainly to goods sold by non-EU sellers registered under the Import One-Stop Shop and remain until a permanent customs reform takes effect.
The €3 rate will apply to goods sold by non-EU traders registered under the EU’s Import One-Stop Shop for VAT purposes. The Council clarified that this customs duty is separate from a proposed handling fee being discussed under the broader customs reform and the EU’s multiannual financial framework.
The temporary duty will remain in force until a permanent system agreed in November 2025 comes into application, which would remove the €150 duty-free threshold altogether and subject all such goods to standard EU tariffs. The European Commission will periodically review whether the duty should also extend to goods sold by traders not registered under the Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS).
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)
Fashion
IKKS: Paris commercial court approves acquisition bid by Santiago Cucci and Michaël Benabou
Translated by
Nicola Mira
Published
December 12, 2025
On Thursday December 12, the Paris commercial court decided on the future of French premium ready-to-wear retailer IKKS. At the end of a receivership procedure involving several purchasing bids for IKKS, the court has approved the offer by Santiago Cucci, who was named president of the group’s holding company HoldIKKS last year, and Michaël Benabou, co-founder of event sales site Veepee.
The court’s decision has put an end to months of uncertainty for IKKS’s employees. According to figures drawn up by the receivers at the end of August, the group’s staff numbered 1,287 worldwide, 1,094 of them in France. At the time, the group had 473 stores between France and 11 other countries, plus headquarters in the town of Saint-Macaire-en-Mauges and offices in Paris.
IKKS gave a design make-over to its collections in summer, and in September it applied for receivership, after the group’s main shareholders, US investment funds Avenue Capital, CarVal Investors and Marathon Asset Management, expressed their wish to sell the company.
The IKKS group, which operates the eponymous brand as well as One Step and ICode, is still a leading international ready-to-wear retailer in the premium segment, operating several hundred retail outlets (between directly owned and franchised stores, and concessions) in nine countries. The path to new ownership has been complex, since the group was split in several entities, and none of the purchasing bids referred to the group as a whole.
The winning bid’s details
Cucci and Benabou have convinced the court after recently revising their bid upwards. Initially, the bid related to 141 stores, 88 of them directly owned, and 391 company employees.
The deal was clinched after the bid was extended to include 219 stores in France: 92 of them directly owned, 100 franchised, plus 27 Galeries Lafayette concessions. The employees associated to the directly owned stores are 546.
Benabou and Cucci, a former senior executive at Levi’s and a strategic advisor to G-Star, have taken over the IKKS business and are planning to operate a more streamlined store fleet. They will focus on womenswear and menswear, while childrenswear has been put on hold.
The dossiers given to prospective buyers indicated that the IKKS brand accounted for 80% of the group’s revenue, that 64% of its revenue was generated by womenswear, 21% by childrenswear, and 15% by menswear. When the company applied for receivership, direct retail accounted for 77% of revenue, e-commerce (both B2B and B2C) for 20%, and the remaining 3% was generated through the wholesale channel.
Rejected bids
The bid by sustainable fashion brand Faguo, which had been revised to include 15 stores and 30 jobs, was rejected. French group Beaumanoir (which owns womenswear brands Morgan and Caroll) had teamed up with Faguo, offering €1 million to buy the IKKS brand name and some of the stores.
Another rejected bid was put forward by Salih Halassi’s company Amoniss, a shareholder in Pimkie which recently acquired Christine Laure and Chevignon. It initially bid for a minimum of 168 stores and 393 employees.
BCRI Holding, which recently bought Café Coton, initially offered to buy 67 stores with a total of 426 employees. While AA Investments (owner of Smallable, L’Exception and Bonne Gueule) was interested in IKKS’s intangible assets. Verdoso, new owner of The Kooples, withdrew its bid before the November 28 hearing.
Since none of the bids related to the Icode and One Step brands, and to IKKS childrenswear, some of the latter’s stores in France have now closed. The new owners are therefore concentrating on the IKKS brand, out of a group fleet that had 550 stores as of the end of 2024, though streamlining measures started in H1 this year.
The brand’s employees are now hoping IKKS will be able to regain momentum as a recognised name in the premium ready-to-wear segment.
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Fashion
Bangladesh industrial importers get 3-yr usance term for capital goods
A circular by the central bank said the policy update follows the decision reached at the 186th meeting of the Scrutiny Committee on Foreign Loan/Supplier’s Credit of the Bangladesh Investment Development Authority (BIDA). The aim is to facilitate industrial growth.
Bangladesh Bank recently announced that authorised dealers may now allow their industrial importers to import capital goods on a usance term of up to three years under supplier’s or buyer’s credit.
The aim is to facilitate industrial growth.
However, usance period for import of spares will not be more than 360 days in all cases, a circular by the central bank said.
”The usance tenure shall also be applicable to such imports by industrial enterprises operating in export processing zones or private export processing zones/economic zones/hi-tech parks and other areas designated as specialised zones by the government. However, usance period for import of spares will not be more than 360 days in all cases,” the circular added.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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