forward. It’s particularly
interesting the way we did
this season – we worked on
ě ǯ” The
ę ¢
away, the next falling into
stores worldwide on May 5
and June 9. “We’
¢
works for us... The way it’s
¡
runway, it feels quite
seasonless – how real people wear clothes.”
It’ buy clothes.
As part of Topshop’s approach to “experiential
retail” – ěǰ Ȭ ¡
for– theȬ
ǰ ǯǯǰ
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specially curated) product ranges and lower
ǯ“
ǰ Ȭ¢ ě
¢¢ǯ
ȬandȬcollect
ǰ ǰ” says
Corinne Suchy, Topshop’s g digital
director ¢
Ĵǯ
And for those who still like ££
Ȭ ¡ǰ ’ ¢
ěǯ
£ǰ head of eȬc at Topshop
ǰ ¢ ¢
set to “synchronise the physical and
digital worlds”, with it now
anǯ
¢ǰ , it’
ǰ
¢ǯ
–a ǯ
Markhǰ it’ Ĵ
ǰ Ȭ ǯ
t’ ,” she says. “This
quick now and there’
or¢– they’ ¢ ¢ǯ ¢
in an instant. The only way
you’ ¢
Ĵěǯ”
T
show in London ¢was
ǯ ’s face it,
¡Ȭ ę ǰ
Dua Lipa, Yara Shahidi and Justine Skye in
ǰ ¢“party
on”– world crisis,Ƿ,
which opened with a ’şŖ
£ “Happy Wkndr” and
closed with a Ȭ ,
at a generation that won’t ¢ Ȭ
right politics or hate culture. “It’s part of our DNA,”
says Topshop’s design consultantǯ
“We like adapting and responding and reacting.”
As the sole designer for the inaugural Kate Moss
Topshop ǻ
stratospheric when it dropped in May 2007) and
ǰ ę
¢ Ȭ
ŘŖŖśǰ
ǯ ŗŝȬŗ
¡Ȭskirt
and cargo pants, gargantuan shearling coats
¢£Ȭ ’30sĚ,
ęǯ
“see now,¢now” portion of
śŖ ǰ
¢
“ ¢
ǰ es chan
it hits the runway. “What feels qu
ǯThere
¢
Astheglobalretaillandscapegets
increasinglycramped,Topshopiscutting
through–andrevolutionising how
Australian women shopintheprocess
FROM
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oq
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s,
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y
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nges
ite
’s
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s
PARTY GIRLS
In the face of a grey
political outlook,
Topshop Unique’s
ŗŝȬŗŞȱȱ
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NEED TO KNOW
40 ELLE AUSTRALIA
Words: Genevra Leek. Photography: Courtesy of Topshop; Imaxtree