Fashion
UK launches consultation to reform $135.08 bn design sector
																								
												
												
											
The UK Government has launched a major 12-week consultation, running from September 04 to November 27, 2025, to overhaul the UK’s design protection framework and strengthen its £100 billion (~$135.08 billion) design sector.
The Intellectual Property Office is seeking views from independent creators, luxury brands, and other professionals. With around 80,000 businesses and nearly 2 million jobs, the sector is a critical driver of growth.
From the runways of London Fashion Week to British automotive engineering excellence, British design sets international trends and drives economic growth. Spanning everything from traditional craftsmanship to cutting-edge digital design, British creativity helps shape the world, Intellectual Property Office said in a release.
“From Mini to Burberry and the London Underground map, British design is renowned worldwide for its creativity and innovation. These reforms will help remove barriers and make it easier for designers of all shapes and sizes to protect their creations – cementing our position as one of the world’s leading destinations for design investment and innovation,” Feryal Clark MP, Minister for Intellectual Property said in a release.
The consultation addresses key challenges: a patchwork of overlapping rights causing confusion, abuse through dishonest filings, post-Brexit complications, and outdated rules failing to protect modern digital and AI-created designs.
Proposals include fighting design theft through enhanced search and examination powers, stronger bad faith provisions, and the rejection of filings that lack novelty.
Another focus is on streamlining processes by harmonising procedures, consolidating unregistered rights, providing clearer guidance, and introducing deferment provisions for up to 18 months. The proposals also aim to resolve Brexit-related issues by offering practical solutions for designs that lost automatic UK–EU protection.
In terms of enforcement and justice, a new small claims track within the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court is suggested to enable affordable resolution of design disputes. Finally, to modernise for digital innovation, the proposals recommend accepting CAD files and video evidence, updating definitions, and reviewing the scope of protection for AI-created designs.
“Design is at the heart of everything we do as a creative nation. However, protecting brilliant design ideas has become unnecessarily complex. If you’re a small business or start-up with an innovative idea, you shouldn’t need extensive legal expertise just to navigate the system. That’s why we’re consulting on simplifying our designs framework. We want to remove the barriers that hold back creators and make protection straightforward and accessible. Because when we get this right, we’re not just supporting individual designers – we’re building the foundation for the next wave of British innovation that will drive growth right across the country,” Chris Bryant MP, Minister for the Creative Industries, said.
Officials say these changes could deliver the most significant reform in decades, ensuring Britain’s designers are equipped to compete globally. Consultation responses will help shape final policy options for Ministers.
“The UK Fashion & Textile Association welcomes this consultation and is committed to working with the IPO to ensure robust design rights and effective protection mechanisms that support UK creatives and help build a world-class design rights framework,” Paul Alger MBE, international business director, UK Fashion and Textile Association, said.
“The British Retail Consortium welcomes the Government’s consultation on modernising the UK’s design protection system. Design is fundamental to retail success – from innovative packaging and store layouts to digital interfaces that enhance the customer experience,” noted Helen Dickinson OBE, CEO of the British Retail Consortium.
The Government has launched a 12-week consultation to modernise the UK’s design protection system, worth £100 billion (~$135.08 billion) annually and supporting 2 million jobs. 
Proposals target design theft, simplify complex rights, resolve post-Brexit challenges, and strengthen digital and AI protections. 
Running until November 27, 2025, the review invites input from designers and legal professionals.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (HU)
Fashion
Amiri named formalwear partner of FC Barcelona
														
                                    Published
                                    
                                        
                                        November 3, 2025
                                    
                                
Los Angeles-based fashion house Amiri is to design the formal wear of FC Barcelona – the current Spanish Liga 1 champions, and one of the most decorated clubs in the soccer world.
The winner of a record 80 domestic trophies, and of 23 European and worldwide titles, Barcelona is one of the most glamorous clubs on the planet. Its players have won the Ballon d’Or, the most prestigious individual prize in association football, the most for any professional team. Including 12 times for male players – like soccer legends Lionel Messi and Johan Cruyff – and three times for women players.
 
“The Amiri x FC Barcelona partnership begins with the 2024/2025 season, marking the start of an ongoing collaboration between Amiri and FC Barcelona. Both sides view it as a long-term relationship — one rooted in shared values of innovation, craftsmanship, and global excellence,” Amiri told FashionNetwork.com.
Founded in 2014 by Mike Amiri, a Beverly Hills High School graduate, the brand Amiri began specializing in stage outfits for musicians in California, before developing a first capsule collection.
 
By 2018, Amiri began staging runway shows during the Paris menswear season. One year later, Renzo Rosso’s OTB took a minority stake in the LA brand. 
 
By 2020, Amiri had opened its first flagship on Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, while Amiri was nominated four times for Menswear Designer of the Year at the annual CFDA Awards in New York.
 
Today, Amiri boasts a network of 31 boutiques, and retails in over 150 sales points in the U.S., Europe, Gulf and Asia.
 
The linkup with Barcelona, “marks the first partnership of its kind for Amiri, uniting with a global icon in sport, and bringing a distinctly Hollywood vision of modern luxury to one of the world’s most celebrated football institutions,” the brand noted.
 
This partnership also unites a 21st-century label and a club with 125 years of history, respecting tradition and heritage.
 
The brand will provide FC Barcelona custom suiting for all players, across both their men’s and women’s teams, alongside club executives and leadership. 
 
“The tailoring created for FC Barcelona is exclusive to the club and will not be available for public sale. Each piece was made-to-measure for the players and staff, combining Amiri’s signature relaxed Californian tailoring with nods to the club’s heritage through custom pinstripe fabrics and deep navy tones,” Amiri told FashionNetwork.com.
 
Inspiration is drawn directly from the colors of the players’ strip. Dressed in rich blue and garnet for over a century, the club is also known as equip blaugrana – the blue and garnet team. Marrying signature Amiri style with the distinct identity of FC Barcelona, for the Winter season Amiri uses the club’s deep navy blue as the primary shade on precisely tailored wool six-button overcoats, as well as tailored jackets – double-breasted for men, single-breasted for women – and gently flared trousers in a fine white-on-navy pinstripe wool. 
 
For summer tailoring, pinstripe also appears on a new shirt-collar classic blouson, an iconic Amiri style inspired by sportswear, translated to formalwear, and here returned to sports, detailed with MA Monogram embroidery on the breast pocket. 
 
Lightweight, sports-silhouette knits with contrast MA Monogram and tonal FC Barcelona embroidery round out the wardrobe for summer, while for winter pinstripe poplin shirts are teamed with a garnet and blue-striped tie and gold bar tie clip. 
 
                            
Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
Kimberly-Clark acquires Neutrogena-owner Kenvue
														
                                        By
                                        
Reuters
                                    
                                    Published
                                    
                                        
                                        November 3, 2025
                                    
                                
Kimberly-Clark is laying down $40 billion to buy Kenvue in a massive deal that has puzzled some investors as the Tylenol maker struggles with weak sales, lawsuits and White House attacks linking its painkiller to autism.
Shares of Kimberly-Clark dropped sharply after the Monday announcement as stockholders scrutinized the 46% premium being paid for the former Johnson & Johnson unit that has had a turbulent year: Kenvue ousted its CEO in July and has been under fire from President Donald Trump over unproven claims that Tylenol use during pregnancy can cause autism in children.
Kenvue shares, which had dropped sharply since Trump’s comments, jumped as much as 19.6% on Monday. Many investors have been awaiting a sale of all or parts of the company for months, following activist pressure.
Kimberly-Clark had admired Kenvue for years, going back to when it was still part of J&J, and viewed it as a target, but deal talks between the companies started after Kenvue announced it was reviewing strategic alternatives and the departure of its CEO over the summer, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets, said the market reaction suggests some investors believe Kimberly-Clark “may be buying damaged goods”.
Despite the concerns, Kimberly-Clark forecast $2.1 billion in annual cost savings from the deal, with the addition of Kenvue’s vast portfolio of brands from Listerine mouth wash to skincare names like Aveeno and Neutrogena expected to bring in annual revenues of roughly $32 billion for the combined company.
Both companies sit side by side on store shelves, so the scale and distribution logic make sense even if the Tylenol overhang remains a shadow any buyer would rather avoid, said Kimberly Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners.
“Kimberly-Clark will take on potential litigation risk for the Tylenol brand… This is hard to quantify,” said TD Cowen analyst Robert Moskow.
There are concerns around Kenvue’s potential legal exposure to hundreds of private lawsuits alleging the company hid supposed links between Tylenol and autism or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children.
While U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently said there is no conclusive evidence of such a link, he called existing data “very suggestive.”
U.S. sales of Tylenol fell 11% between September 20 and October 4 after the Trump administration’s remarks, BNP Paribas analyst Navann Ty said in a note last month.
Kenvue is also battling litigation tied to its talc-based baby powder products.
“Most investors expected Kenvue to sell off select brands, not the entire company, given the Tylenol and talc overhangs. But Kimberly-Clark likely saw long-term value in a strong brand portfolio trading at a steep discount,” said James Harlow, senior vice president at Novare Capital Management.
Kenvue investors cheered the deal.
One long-term investor who has spoken with the board and management over the last months called the deal “awesome”, while some others said the price was not as good as they would have hoped for two months ago, before the company came under fire from the White House.
“They did have a long slog ahead of them … I think they must have looked at the situation and … had the opportunity to sell the whole company. That’s the most simple of transactions,” Harlow said, adding that selling off individual brands would have taken a long time.
Kenvue has long struggled with weakness in its core businesses, especially the skin health and beauty segment – a challenge activist investors have previously flagged. The company said on Monday third-quarter sales at the skin health segment fell 3.2% to $1.04 billion.
“One of our challenges at Kenvue right now is we’re living in between, which is no place to live – in the murky middle,” said Kirk Perry, who was named permanent CEO of Kenvue earlier in the day.
Kimberly-Clark is also navigating a consumer goods environment increasingly fraught with a more value-seeking shopper, forcing companies, including sector bellwether Procter & Gamble to invest in smaller pack sizes, and trim underperforming business units.
It sold a majority stake in its international tissue business to Brazilian pulp maker Suzano, as part of a restructuring, proceeds from which are expected to help the Kenvue buyout, the company said on Monday.
“Kimberly-Clark has been discussing its ‘transformation’ for some time now, but do think this feels like very early days to be nearly doubling the size of the company,” Barclays analysts said.
Kenvue’s shareholders will receive $3.50 per share and 0.15 Kimberly-Clark shares for each Kenvue share held. That implies an equity value of $40.32 billion, according to Reuters calculations.
The deal, expected to close in the second half of 2026, will be financed through a mix of cash and debt, with committed funding from JPMorgan Chase Bank.
Either party may be required to pay a $1.12 billion termination fee in cash if the deal falls through, according to a regulatory filing.
Upon closing, Kimberly-Clark’s CEO Mike Hsu will take over as the top boss and chairman of the combined company.
                            
© Thomson Reuters 2025 All rights reserved.
Fashion
Fashionphile taps Martha Stewart as 2025 holiday brand ambassador
														
                                    Published
                                    
                                        
                                        November 3, 2025
                                    
                                
Luxury re-commerce platform Fashionphile has named entrepreneur, author, and media icon Martha Stewart as its 2025 holiday brand ambassador.
In this role, Stewart stars in the company’s latest holiday campaign and has curated an exclusive collection of her favorite accessories, now available to shop on fashionphile.com.
“As the face of our 2025 Holiday brand ambassadorship and the ultimate authority on quality and timeless taste, Martha Stewart is uniquely positioned to speak on the enduring value of luxury resale,” said Sophia Tsao, chief digital and marketing officer of Fashionphile. “Martha is the quintessential face of the Holiday, so who better to partner with this holiday season.”
The campaign, photographed by Claire Leahy and styled by Paolo Nieddu at the company’s New York City flagship, captures Stewart’s signature polish, while highlighting Fashionphile’s collection of luxury handbags and accessories from brands like Chanel, Hermès, Louis Vuitton, and Goyard. Likewise, in a short video, Stewart reflects on the ease of buying and selling through Fashionphile’s circular marketplace and the platform’s commitment to sustainability.
“Shopping on Fashionphile feels a bit like discovering a secret archive — elegant, storied, and beautifully organized. Each item tells you something about the world it came from. One can shop with confidence knowing everything is so carefully authenticated,” Stewart explained.
The collaboration marks Fashionphile’s third ambassador partnership, following campaigns with Emma Roberts and Nicole Richie. Most recently, in October, the company acquired Luxe Collective, marking it entry into the UK luxury resale market.
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