Fashion
Turnbull & Asser appoints Roberto Menichetti as creative director
Published
December 8, 2025
Turnbull & Asser has appointed the highly experienced Italian designer Roberto Menichetti to be its new creative director. In his new role, Menichetti will oversee all of the label’s creative direction including bespoke shirting, tailoring, outerwear, and accessories, the 140-year-old British shirtmaker and outfitter said in a release.
The appointment marks a return to London for Menichetti some two decades after he departed Burberry, where he played a dynamic role in reviving that the UK’s largest luxury label.
“Roberto’s appointment reflects our ambition to bring fresh energy to our wardrobe while remaining true to the craftsmanship that has defined Turnbull & Asser for over a century. His proven ability to modernise heritage houses while respecting their DNA makes him the perfect partner as we look to the future. That future continues to be shaped by the skill of our artisans in London and Gloucester and by our enduring belief in ‘Made in England’. We are confident that Roberto’s international experience and proven creative leadership will ensure the continued success and growth of our house,” said James Fayed, chairman of Turnbull & Asser, in a release.
The business, which counts King Charles among its customers, has not made a profit in the past nine years. Owned by Ali Fayed for almost 40 years, it is now managed by his son James. In its most recent financial year, Turnbull & Asser made a pre-tax loss of £1.37 million, as annual revenues edged lower to £9.3 million. The company boasts a famous flagship store in Mayfair, and e-tailing business, and distribution across US department stores.
Born in the US but raised in Italy, Menichetti first gained attention when designing the menswear collection in an austere, minimalist style for Jil Sander. While with the German company, he was also credited with developing the first co-branding between high fashion and sportswear in a linkup with Puma.
The Menichetti family are highly experienced apparel manufacturers based in Gubbio, Tuscany, and have produced collections for such brands as Prada, Dolce & Gabbana, Versace, and Marzotto.
Menichetti joined Burberry in 1998 blending English heritage, Winsor elegance, and rugged functionality with considerable success. He also launched Prorsum, Burberry’s ready-to-wear line, helping to double annual sales over his five-year tenure to £675 million. In 2000, Anna Wintour presented Menichetti with the honour of Designer of The Year from The Fashion Group International.
Menichetti was also creative director of Celine for two seasons, slotting in between the Michael Kors and Phoebe Philo eras at the key French marque within LVMH Group. Subsequently, he held consultative design roles for brands such as Cerruti, Brema, and Chinese label JH 1912.
“Turnbull & Asser represents more than a brand; it is a living expression of British style and elegance, carefully built over generations. It is remarkable that the house has preserved its identity so faithfully and is untouched by passing trends, carrying it forward to the present day with care and dedication under James and his family. To be entrusted with its creative future is both an honour and a responsibility. My philosophy has always been to seek the essence of form- clarity, proportion and timelessness- rather than the noise of passing trends,” said Menichetti, who in recent years has divided his time between his art studio in Los Angeles, raising his son in California, and his atelier in Gubbio.
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Fashion
EU green mandates and the Vietnam T&A industry
With sustainability benchmarks rising, companies are rethinking how they produce and deliver, pivoting toward greener, more circular models that reduce waste, emissions, and resource use.
The stakes are high. In 2025, Vietnam’s exports to the EU reportedly reached $56.2 billion, up 10.1 per cent year on year, underscoring how pivotal Europe is for the country’s manufacturing base.
Vietnam’s textile and footwear exporters are accelerating sustainability efforts as stricter EU regulations reshape market access requirements.
Rising compliance pressure from measures such as CBAM and ESPR is pushing manufacturers toward circular production, cleaner technologies and greater supply-chain transparency, though limited green finance remains a major challenge for smaller firms.
The EU market, nevertheless, comes with its own challenges as access to this market increasingly depends on meeting strict environmental and product-design requirements.
The EU is rolling out an ambitious sustainability agenda, including the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR). Together, these measures are changing what global suppliers must document, design, and decarbonise.
ESPR shifts expectations toward durability, repairability, and recyclability, while pushing manufacturers to reduce products’ overall environmental footprint. Supply chains are also expected to become more transparent through Digital Product Passports, and practices such as destroying unsold goods being phased out gradually.
For Vietnam’s exporters, compliance is becoming a baseline requirement to keep EU orders and remain competitive.
Recognising this, both the Government and industry players are stepping up. Vietnam’s long-term development strategy for textiles and footwear, which stretches to 2030 with a vision toward 2035, places sustainability at its core. The plan charts a path toward efficient, environmentally responsible growth anchored in a circular economy, where materials are reused, waste is minimised, and production cycles are closed rather than linear.
Crucially, it also provides a legal backbone to help businesses align with global sustainability trends.
On the ground, change is already underway. Textile and apparel manufacturers are investing in renewable energy, upgrading machinery, and fine-tuning production processes to cut emissions and resource use. These shifts are not just about compliance; they are about future-proofing operations in a market where green credentials increasingly determine who wins contracts.
However, the transition has not been entirely seamless. A key barrier seems to be access to green finance, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises. Large firms can more readily fund clean technologies and certification, while smaller suppliers often struggle to fund the shift, risking exclusion from high-value export markets if they cannot keep pace.
There is also a growing recognition that policy support needs to go further. As Vietnam leans into a circular economy, industry voices are calling for a more cohesive and comprehensive framework, one that not only sets clear standards for circular products but also actively incentivises recycling, cleaner production, and sustainable innovation.
Without this, progress risks being uneven, with smaller firms left behind.
Momentum is, nevertheless, building as manufacturers and policymakers push for better-aligned standards and support mechanisms. The goal is to narrow the gap between sustainability ambition and day-to-day implementation across the sector.
The aim is clear: create an ecosystem where businesses of all sizes can invest in circular solutions, strengthen their export capabilities, and meet the EU’s exacting standards head-on.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DR)
Fashion
Vietnam’s flat apparel exports hide the real trade signal
Fashion
Bangladesh net FDI inflows up 39.36% in 2025
The increase was driven primarily by higher reinvested earnings and intra-company loans, indicating continued engagement by existing investors with Bangladesh.
Reinvested earnings rose by 318.25 per cent, from $103.79 million in 2024 to $434.10 million in 2025, while intra-company loans increased by 25.68 per cent, from $621.96 million to $781.68 million.
Bangladesh’s net FDI inflows increased by 39.36 per cent last year to $1,770.42 million compared with $1,270.39 million in 2024, the Bangladesh Bank said.
The increase was driven primarily by higher reinvested earnings and intra-company loans.
Reinvested earnings rose by 318.25 per cent, from $103.79 million in 2024 to $434.10 million in 2025, while intra-company loans rose by 25.68 per cent.
Equity capital remained broadly stable, rising by 1.84 per cent, from $544.64 million to $554.64 million in 2025, a release from Bangladesh Investment Development Authority said.
Greenfield project announcements declined by 16 per cent in 2025.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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