The new face of Dior Homme takes our ELLE Man questionnaire and shares why he thinks babies smell like piglets.
To mark the launch of a new Dior Homme Parfum, Esquire spoke to its creator, Francis Kurkdjian, and the face of Dior Homme, Robert Pattinson
Robert Pattinson attended one of his first events on the promotional tour for his forthcoming film “Mickey 17” in Seoul on Monday. The actor was joined by Oscar-winning filmmaker and “Mickey 17” director Bong Joon-ho for the press conference.
Taking cues from Christian Dior’s iconic “Ligne H,” or ... resembling a goddess at the foot of the staircase. Robert Pattinson, meanwhile, exuded his trademark brooding charm, drawing ...
On January 24, the Dior Homme show lit up Paris under the artistic direction of Kim Jones. This unmissable event brought together a host of celebrities. Among the distinguished guests, Colombian reggaeton singer J Balvin,
And he was matter-of-fact as ever as he walked through the collection, a radical break from his recent explorations of casual, streetwear-curious splendor. “I've just done really pure Dior,” he remarked, a center of relative calm in the bustling studio.
Tonight, hours after the lights went down on his fall 2025 Dior Men show, friends and admirers of Kim Jones, including Gwendoline Christie, Robert Pattinson, Kieran Culkin, Jeremy O. Harris, David Furnish,
Robert Pattinson turns heads with his awkward attempts at a smile before opting for a steely pout at the Dior show amid Paris Fashion Week.
Turning to the house’s storied archive, Jones was inspired by the Ligne H silhouette conceived by Christian Dior for Fall/Winter 1954-1955, presenting a celebration of men’s couture for the modern day.
British designer Kim Jones unveiled his latest collection for Dior Homme in Paris on Friday, sending some models out with blindfolds and drawing inspiration from the minimalist vintage looks of the 1950s.
The Dior's men's fashion show happened inside the historic Ecole Militaire with the Eiffel Tower looming above.
Kim Jones presented his fall collection for Dior in a black tent framing a white Busby Berkeley-style stairway. The clinically bare setting highlighted fabric and construction, the very fundamentals that set luxury clothing apart from mass-produced garments.