Pharrell Williams will debut a new line of Louis Vuitton clothing

Nigo and Pharrell Williams are getting back together for his most recent Louis Vuitton collection.

Following days of giving clues, the fashion house has announced that the 51-year-old artist, who serves as its creative director of menswear, has reconnected with his longtime collaborator. He is scheduled to present his fall collection in Paris on Tuesday night.

The Weeknd and Playboi Carti’s “Timeless” was playing while Pharrell and Nigo laid on the ground surrounded by circles of bags, sneakers, and sports coats in an Instagram photo from Louis Vuitton.

The title for the video said, “Men’s Fall-Winter 2025 Show.” At the Cour Carrée du Louvre in Paris, Men’s Creative Director @pharrell and @nigo will unveil their latest collection. Watch the live performance on Instagram or at louisvuitton.com on Tuesday, January 21st at 8 p.m. CET.

“#Nigo #LouisVuitton #LVMenFW25 #PharrellWilliams (sic)”

The two, who are co-founders of the streetwear brands Icecream and Billionaire Boys Club, will also co-host a dinner on Wednesday, 22.01,25, to commemorate the most recent sale that Pharrell’s auction site Joopiter has arranged.

In 2022, under the late menswear creative director Virgil Abloh, Nigo and Pharrell collaborated on a capsule collection for Louis Vuitton.

In addition to serving as creative director for Uniqlo’s UT line and leading the Human Made brand, which Pharrell advises and invests in, the Japanese designer and producer has been creative director of Kenzo since 2021.

In the past, Pharrell praised Nigo as one of his life’s “most amazing gifts” and asserted that his friend had “changed” him for the better.

The New York Times Style magazine quoted him as saying, “My favorite place is Japan.” Nigo, the hip-hop producer and artistic director of Kenzo located in Tokyo, threw me a birthday celebration on my 50th orbit. 

His presence in my life is one of the most incredible gifts. Nigo made arrangements for me to visit his studio, which is essentially a complex spread across five floors of a building, when I wanted to travel to Japan to record something twenty years ago. 

“I thought, ‘Wow, this guy lives what’s in his head,’ because one floor is a showroom, another is a photo studio, and a third is a recording studio.”I was altered by that. I was accustomed to boasting since that was my upbringing. Then I met Nigo, who didn’t say anything. He was not required to. Like the humidity in Virginia, humility permeates Tokyo’s atmosphere.

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