Jonathan Anderson - Designer, Creative Director of JW Anderson & Christian Dior | Page 30 | the Fashion Spot

Jonathan Anderson - Designer, Creative Director of JW Anderson & Christian Dior

I see there's an even wider range of new Book Totes that includes Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, Flaubert's Madame Bovary and James Joyce's Ulysses, often based on the look of the first editions of each title (i.e. pre-existing designs).

I can't remember where I saw it said - that they look like museum gift shop totes that you'd give as a present to an English teacher.

In some cases, it might even be cheaper to buy the actual first edition than the Book Tote.
 
Well I guess kudos to Chanayka embroidery team skipping this season as it Did Not have to embroider the seasonal runway venue installation for Maria Grazia LOL
Speaking of the so much advertised "focus on quality" statement (bshit) from Delphine, I Wonder if she and Jonathan are gonna stop the collaboration. I mean, getting your embroidery activities outsourced to India just to save on labor costs feels a bit hypocritical when you're starting your main focus is quality...
 

Puck news​

Dior Than Meets the Eye​

The industry breathed a sigh of relief when Jonathan Anderson’s Dior was good and featured things people actually might want to buy. But one hit collection can’t save an industry battling numerous headwinds—the changing behaviors of Chinese consumers, the price misalignments, the downstream effects of secondhand retail, etcetera—and Anderson’s inspiring debut has only crystallized this reality.
Jonathan Anderson

So much attention has been lavished upon Jonathan Anderson, who finally made his debut on Friday afternoon at LVMH-owned Dior. Photo: Giovanni Giannoni/WWD/Getty Images
June 30, 2025

Last week in Paris, a few people asked me what I was going to do with myself now that all the major designer appointments have been settled. I laughed and acknowledged that this may seem to be the case, but the reality is far more insidious. This round of musical chairs was merely a symptom of a far larger crisis gripping the industry—and one that isn’t abating anytime soon. At this point, we seem to know the fundamental questions: Is luxury all but fully consolidated, relegating the next generation of creative directors to serve as caretakers of these businesses rather than innovators? Or can brands like Louis Vuitton, which generated an estimated €23 billion in 2024, double in size once again?

Market forces will dictate the answers, but so will individual talent. Which is why so much attention has been lavished upon Jonathan Anderson, who finally made his debut on Friday afternoon at LVMH-owned Dior. His menswear show was a genuine success, all the way down to the superficial details: the return to the lowercase typeface; the placement of culturally relevant celebrities in the front row (Josh O’Connor, A$AP Rocky, Daniel Craig) and in advertising campaigns (Kylian Mbappé); and, of course, the compelling story told through clothes on the runway.
And then there was also the delicate daisy-chain necklace, designed in collaboration with Victoire de Castellane and worn by C.E.O. Delphine Arnault, that manifested Anderson’s political wherewithal. De Castellane, who has designed high jewelry at Dior for 25 years, has always collaborated with the ready-to-wear designers. But she appeared distanced from Maria Grazia Chiuri’s work during her nine-year tenure. Returning de Castellane—a French aristocrat, much admired by the once–middle class Arnaults—into the fold straight away demonstrated Anderson’s ability to not only manage high-altitude corporate politics, but also use them to his advantage. “J.W. understands that LVMH is like the government,” an executive said to me. “Top talent (elected officials) come and go, but the permanent bureaucracy is not like the deep state; it cannot be purged by DOGE.”

One LVMH insider suggested the daisy, which was also available as a ring, could be the brand’s answer to Van Cleef & Arpels’ Alhambra. Given how luxury customers are favoring fine jewelry, this seems like the right strategy. If Anderson and Arnault are going to grow annual revenue to €14 billion—which, as I’ve reported, is the goal—they’re going to have to sell a lot of necklaces.


Post-Luxury​

This was also the first time in a long time that I saw individual items on the runway that were deeply desirable to a range of customers. As with Anderson’s campaign starring Mbappé, the clothes were both familiar and new—and the right mix of feminine and masculine. There’s so much talk of genderless fashion, but this was truly a collection that anyone could relate to.
People will buy the slip-on sneakers dotted with shamrocks (a nod to Anderson’s Irish roots); the green half-zip; the blue shirting; the bar jackets (undoubtedly big for women next season, too); the little bar shorts (undoubtedly big for the GLP-1 crew); and the jeans. The details—a tiny embroidered logo here, a ladybug up the sleeve there—make everything feel just a tad more special. (Although I’d argue that Anderson and Arnault’s talking point, underscoring the quality of the product, felt a little much; Dior’s baseline should be the highest quality.) No matter, I had gay men, straight men, and plenty of women, too, reaching out to say they wanted a piece of it. The preppy, Latter-Day Saints canvassing uniform will also quickly trickle down to the high street. There’s currently a dearth of lightweight, non-stretch chinos for men available on the market, and Anderson might single-handedly change that.
Of course, the big question is whether men will be willing to shell out—or just settle for a tie. As with all luxury houses, the challenge is creating stuff that people are willing to pay an exorbitant amount for.
The pricing, like that of Anderson’s predecessors, is high—€2,100 for a cable-knit sweater, €1,100 for a tuxedo shirt, €2,500 for the mini, very meta, Book Tote—mostly in line with Prada and other in-demand brands. And yet, a large portion of consumers may still feel that they are prohibitive. People with the means, the ultra-high-net-worth individuals who drive a significant percentage of sales, can afford four-figure jackets and six-figure coats. But you need the fashion enthusiasts to buy in first—the kids who can only afford the ties, which are going for €250, and maybe a pair of sneakers—in order to convince the wealthier followers that it’s a worthwhile endeavor.

As I gleaned from my time last week in Paris, the industry’s company town, a speedy recovery for luxury is far from certain. Everyone talks about the changing behavior of Chinese consumers, the price misalignments, the effect of secondhand retail on the appetite for new products. What it all comes down to, though, is that fashion is not at the center of the culture like it was a decade ago. After all, nothing is any longer in the dawning, post-monoculture era. As one retailer said to me after we exchanged notes about the Dior show, “The luxury customer everyone is talking about isn’t buying luxury now, but they’re still shopping.”
That’s a big problem for Kering, which has centered its entire business on high luxury. And it’s not going to be easy for LVMH, either, as many of their brands experience double-digit decreases in sales and analysts begin delicately scrutinizing Bernard Arnault’s entire strategy of stringing all those disparate businesses together. (When was the last time you heard an HSBC analyst give LVMH business advice? Never, at least before last week, when Erwan Rambourg suggested they might consider offloading the high-performing Sephora.) My sense is that the Arnaults will stay the course, for now, and see if the Anderson experiment bears out their thesis that creativity can still fuel enough commerce to satisfy customers and shareholders, alike.
 

Anderson Apotheosis: JW Remodels His Own Brand​

Days after his debut for Dior, the designer speaks exclusively to Tim Blanks about rebooting the JW Anderson label with a supremely idiosyncratic cabinet of curiosities, from garden tools to diamonds.
Jonathan Anderson is relaunching his namesake label with a supremely idiosyncratic cabinet of curiosities, from garden tools to jewellery.

Jonathan Anderson is relaunching his namesake label with a supremely idiosyncratic cabinet of curiosities, from garden tools to jewellery. (Courtesy)

By Tim Blanks
03 July 2025
BoF PROFESSIONAL


It’s no wonder “in a weird way” is one of Jonathan Anderson’s favourite expressions. It seems to be how things happen to him. In the two decades since he graduated from the London College of Fashion, his career has traced a surreal arc from idiosyncratic independent to fashion figurehead. Last week was his debut at Dior. This week he relaunches his own brand with a completely new concept.

On the surface, the two exercises couldn’t be further apart. In a weird way, they couldn’t be closer, joined at the hip by Anderson’s own obsessive, compulsive drive. “I love work,” he crows. “I could do 24 meetings in a day. I love doing what I do. Is it scary? Of course, it’s scary.” But there’s never a moment when he manifests nerves, even in the hours leading up to his first show for Dior, when industry anticipation was running as high as I can ever remember it, even as he had hundreds of balls in the air with his own brand JW Anderson.

He acknowledges the risk of stopping JWA, slowing everything down and then rebuilding it. “Maybe I’m maturing as a person,” Anderson rationalises. “I like to be able to prove something. If I don’t feel like the underdog, I will never work. So, in a weird way, we had to rebuild a platform to become the underdog again. Why? Because, if not, I can’t get up in the morning.”

He spent a good year or so analysing what those impulses actually meant. “I was thinking of Terence Conran. I love Shaker furniture and I’d been doing some research for myself on how it arrived in Britain through Conran. It became such a trend, and then infiltrated into design systems.” But if Conran revolutionised the way people thought about their homes in the ’60s and ’70s, Anderson’s ambition is more humble. “I think it’s maybe how people see their desk or their coffee table. For me, it’s more about the storytelling that you can do with an object, more of an intimate kind of thing, like, I bought this stick chair, and look at this amazing wood, and it’s made in this country, and the guy only makes two of them a year. It’s a nice story to tell, which is not just about how much something costs.”




JW Anderson stick chair
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
He listens to people like Adam Curtis, the documentarian guru of pre-apocalypsism. Curtis’s “Hypernormalisation” is his favourite documentary. “I’ve always wanted to meet with him. We were talking about everything. He thinks we’re heading towards this time… it won’t be about modernity, as in new fashion or new art. It will be heading towards a different time period, like when Gothic Revival, which was ultimately from 13th century architecture, came to dominate the world in the 19th century.” Anderson’s own project tends to the kind of connoisseurship that shaped the golden years of the Wunderkammer, the 1700s, the 1800s, before museums became receptacles of human civilisation, when wide-eyed, well-heeled aesthetes would collect extraordinary objets for their own cabinets of curiosities “as a way to showcase… a fascination with the diverse and sometimes bizarre aspects of the world.” (Thank you, Wiki).

Anderson had an early education in such a magpie sensibility. His grandad would take him antiquing when he was a kid. At university, he worked in Sam Roddick’s visionary sex shop Coco de Mer. “In a weird way, Coco de Mer was a very good example of a curated fetish shop,” he recalls, “where you could buy anything from Betany Vernon’s sex toys through to a first edition of ‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover.’” His other job was working at the equally curated store 202 Westbourne Grove, where he observed how the buyer would acquire a mirror for €2000 ($2,360) and pass it on to customers for £70,000 ($95,000).

The major criterion for his own collection is that everything has to have a story. There will be around 560 items when the website launches on September 1. And once something sells out, it’s gone. Maybe 200 items will carry over, but seasonality is less of a concern. “Instead of discounting things, we just keep them until they sell out,” Anderson says, “and then we replace them. Because I feel like it’s hard having a small business. It really is difficult. I feel for every single person who starts a business, I’m fortunate to have LVMH, but at the same time, we’re still a small business with the pressure of a marketplace that is just collapsing. So I’m thinking, ‘Let’s get the Murano glass guy to make the hardest thing that shows his skill, but in something which looks timeless. Or let’s get the best person in the world to reissue the Charles Rennie Mackintosh stool.’”

Translation: The “Murano glass guy” is Marcantonio Brandolini and Anderson has charged his company Laguna-B with creating pieces in an opaque green glass which they don’t usually do. The Charles Rennie Mackintosh stool is recreated by a Mackintosh conservator in the black-stained oak he favoured, also available in white and a natural oak. Understandably not cheap, given the degree of expertise involved.

JW Anderson sweater in a ceramic bowl
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
Andrew Bonacina, formerly director/curator at the Hepworth Wakefield museum in West Yorkshire, is putting together an art programme that, in some JW Anderson stores, might mean one single expensive masterpiece, in others, a series of mini-exhibitions of up-and-coming artists throughout the year. That was one thing that always struck me about Anderson’s curation of art in Loewe’s stores. The selection, say, of a piece of Matthew Ronay sculpture in London or the glorious wall of Howard Hodgkin in Madrid suggested a personal engagement that would be hard to quit, if ever the day of disengagement should come. “Loewe will exist in part of my vision for as long as it needs to, you know,” Anderson says now, “but in a weird way, what I realized is when you leave something, it’s very difficult. I was trying to comprehend leaving something which I had built in my vision, like I built the entire aesthetic, right down to the Craft Prize, around all the things that I love. The good thing is it’ll go, you know, and we will continue with JW, doing the thing that we’ve been doing, which is putting art into British institutions. We just helped put a painting of Andrew Cranston into a museum.” Or, as CEO Jenny Galimberti puts it, “Loewe was him, and so now this is him.”

And gloriously, perversely so.

“Everything has a little weird meaning to it,” Anderson says. “I think it is just as accurate as when I did the ruffle shorts. It’s the same energy, because ultimately, the ruffle shorts were in a wool that was made in Britain that I was completely obsessed by, which was the same wool that was on the little coat on Paddington Bear when I was a kid. So that threw me into the thing. And now it’s, What is that in a tea cup? What is that in a pen? What is that in honey?”

JW Anderson bat chain
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
It’s like Citizen Kane and his sled named Rosebud, the single plangent memory that unleashes a lifetime. Except that with Jonathan Anderson, everything is Rosebud. The tea cup is by potter Lucie Rie. His collection of her work is one of the world’s best, so this launch of a couple of her original designs, coffee cup as well, 3D-printed from her archive in the Sainsbury Centre, is probably his pride and joy. Wedgwood said no when Rie originally proposed these designs decades ago. Anderson has all the original correspondence. It took him a while to convince the company they’d made a terrible mistake. “I know that I want a set of Lucie Rie,” he says now. “I’ve made them in a selfish act for myself.” They’re expensive — a cup and saucer will retail for £1000, and only a hundred will be made. They’ll probably sell in minutes, such is Rie’s audience of collectors. The profits will go to a foundation to preserve the legacy of Rie and her partner Hans Coper, to produce a catalogue raisonné, and to provide grants for young artists.




The pen is made by YARD-O-LED, who are the oldest penmaker in the UK. They’ve also remade a mechanical pencil for JWA. Originally invented and patented in the early 1800s, it’s engraved here with an Oscar Wilde quote: “The secrets of art are best learned in secret…”

The honey is from Houghton Hall, the stately Norfolk home of the Marquess of Cholmondeley. “Someone I always adore for doing random things is Giorgio Armani, he did honey once,” Anderson free-associates (free association is one of the singular pleasures of this particular project). “So when I was at Houghton Hall, and I was meeting with Rose, they had honey, and I was like, Okay, I love her, and I love them both, and I just think they’re so chic, and I was like, well, I want the honey, because maybe if I have the honey, I would feel like that. And it’s all that thing, it’s sort of odd, our relationships to certain things, going back to Warhol. And Warhol, for me, as cliché as it will always be, is one of the most modern thinkers in the last 500 years, because I think he was able to do this. And at the same time, it was always sharp.” The jars of honey are capped by squares of traditional honeycomb-patterned Norfolk linen from a weaver named Max Mosscrop. (You can really go down a rabbit hole with this stuff.)

Gold chain
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
And that’s Anderson’s ambition with his project. It’s the power of the object to hold layers of meaning, be it a Marilyn portrait or a jar of honey: Now that is fetishism at a cargo-cult level. Or, muses Anderson, “In a weird way, it is about obsession. Warhol was so powerful as the starting point of object, obsession, fame. I remember when I was very, very young, I was obsessed by Andy Warhol to the point where I wanted to buy the wallpaper of the cow. And when the internet started, there used to be online websites where you could do that. Never did, obviously, but I think that will always be in me, this search to find things you know or to bring things together. You know, that’s why, in my house, nothing never stays still. It’s like a never-ending project.”

And there’s the core of the quest. As it was with Warhol, where someone paid hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction for a collection of the artist’s cookie jars, the power of curatorial personality — Anderson’s in this case — infuses and elevates banality. Nothing clarifies that notion more for me than the collection of garden tools on offer at JWA, 200 in all, spades, trowels, hoes, immaculately refurbished by another of Anderson’s gifted obsessives whose tool collection had reached a scale where his wife was begging him to divest. A common garden spade, oiled and gleaming, makes me want to get out and dig, but it would also make a perfect Duchampian readymade. Anderson does have a track record with Dada and surrealism, after all. There’s a complementary collection of antique watering cans. Don’t bother trying to find a logical connection between them and Dean Sameshima’s luxuriously embroidered “Anonymous ******” jumper or “Anonymous Trade” sweatshirt. You’re inside someone else’s head here.

JW Anderson trowel
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
“I needed to find a vehicle that was everything that’s personal to me, no matter what it is,” Anderson explains. “It’s a weird obsession. It’s ultimately me selling myself as these are things I like.” And not just that, but things he always wanted to do. Like chunky gold jewellery. Or real jewellery, which comes to JWA courtesy of a gemhunter named — what else? — Classical Gem Hunter. There will be diamonds. “I just want five pieces per store, and we do them on beautiful chains. Or a beautiful ribbon. We don’t need to remake that idea. You just have to bring it to people, and show that I’m obsessed by this person who finds things. It’s not about ownership. It’s more about, ‘Here it is and I think it looks great.’”

Anderson casts his mind back to the spade guy. “There is no point in over-complicating it, you know? So, in a weird way, the JWA becomes a seal of approval. It’s like, we approve this product, we approve this message. It’s a fashion royal seal.” He laughs. “I’m hoping that people are going to look at it and have this fetish to want to buy it.” The obsession carries through to the packaging: the boxes, a year in the making, have an aristocratic heft (that royal warrant thing again), everything else comes in potato sacks, or it’s wrapped in the paper used to wrap fish and chips in seaside towns. “But by redoing it, you kind of get this preciousness.”

He feels there are kindred spirits for his concept. “Just maybe not in fashion. I think Rose Uniacke is very good at how she creates. And there are places in Japan that I go to. I have no idea of their names.” Uniacke is a significant namecheck because her shop on Pimlico Road, a kind of interior designer’s row in London, will be a neighbour of Anderson’s latest outlet, which is maybe his clearest statement of intent with his brand revamp, because it will be the closest to the kind of world-building that is second nature to people like Uniacke.

In the meantime, everything is changing in JWA’s universe. The logo has been tweaked to chic. Every store is being completely renovated with softly opulent Uniacke velvet walls defined by a dado rail where all the merchandise will be suspended, Shaker-like, on pegs. That dialogue between excess and austerity is particularly Andersonesque. Architects Sanchez and Banton are of Jonathan’s generation, but more commercial than fashion. They’re good at practicalities, tight and tidy, so there is a solid functionality in fittings. Shelving is hung from the pegs along with everything else. It’s all for sale, and customisable.




As the concept rolls out globally, each shop will ultimately be its own little world, shored up by the work of local artisans. But the corner store in Pimlico will probably be the one where JWA’s idiosyncrasies find their fullest expression. In summertime, there might be garden furniture. Or asparagus. Jonathan is obsessed with asparagus. He also loves the idea of someone marching in and ordering six stick chairs for their dining table. “This, for me, will be the day that I open a bottle of champagne. Because that’s exciting to me. And then, at the same time, they can buy a beautiful cashmere sweater that says ‘Anonymous ******,’ as a kind of conceptual act, a fashion object, an art object.

JW Anderson satchel
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
Or maybe they’ll be drawn to explore the rest of Anderson’s offering. Oh look, a stork scissor from Ernest Wright in Sheffield. Didn’t they stop making those a century ago? Good lord, is that a Lucie Rie teacup? And what the hell is coffee-tea? (It’s exactly that, a hybrid created by Postcard Teas that’s the make up of tea but the taste of coffee.)

The big question is on its hind legs, begging: what’s the object that speaks to Anderson the most? “The handwoven damask silk shorts,” he answers instantly. “I was restoring a Chippendale chair and I needed to get fabric for it and I was looking at the Dumfries House renovation because Prince Charles had commissioned all the artisans in Britain who historically would have made things like the type of silk Chippendale would have used, the exact silk that I’m obsessed by. We found the supplier and I said, ‘OK, we need to order this fabric, in the three colours, a blue, a yellow, a green.’ For me, this is as fetishistic as anything you can get. It’s expensive because it is incredibly difficult to do. It is what you would use on walls and chairs, and I love the idea of the walls, the chair and the guy on the chair in the shorts, with the slipper.”

The fetishism extends to the label on the shorts. “When I first started my brand, way before it became a brand, I used to sell jewellery in a shop called Toosee, and the very first label that I ever had was a copy of a Paquin label from the 20s. I had bought this black blouse by Paquin and inside was a triangular label which was the standard way of doing labels in the 20s. And when we were researching this project, I thought we should go back to this original label, when I was not what I am today.”

For the look book, which will be the way most people encounter his re-brand, Anderson selected a 35-strong cast of longtime collaborators and people he admires. People curation: quintessentially Warholian. So there’s his partner, artist Pol Anglada, and collaborator, director Luca Guadagnino. There is artist Enrico David and musician Oliver Sim; actress Hailey Gates, and the dancer from Anderson’s Drink Your Milk campaign. Bella Freud he met years ago at a party when her father Lucian asked him for a cigarette. There are also instructive little videos matching Anderson’s characters with his various objects. Joe Alwyn clearly knows his way around a honey dipper.

Filmmaker Luca Guadagnino
JW Anderson (Courtesy)
“I need to learn here, and I need to re-learn what I love in myself,” Anderson muses. “This project feels honest to me. This is exactly where I should be right now. Yes, JW Anderson could do a fashion show. And we may do a fashion show when I feel like there is a need to do one. But I don’t want people to be like, ‘Oh, another fashion show.’ I would rather someone goes in and is, like, ‘Why do I feel the urge to buy a pot of honey?’”

Joe, pass the dipper please.
 

EXCLUSIVE: Craft Is King, Says Jonathan Anderson, Who’s Putting the Focus on Makers at the New JW Anderson Brand

Anderson said his rebranded JW Anderson label takes in his passions — "art and fashion and interiors and making" — and feels a lot like escapism.
BySAMANTHA CONTI
WWD.com

JULY 3, 2025, 12:01AM
A look at the JW Anderson couture fall 2025 collection.

A look at the JW Anderson couture fall 2025 collection. VIRGINIE KHATEEB/WWD


LONDON Jonathan Anderson isn’t pausing for breath. Having made his debut with menswear for Dior last week, he’s ready to reveal a new look and approach for his signature label, JW Anderson, and it’s all about heritage, craft and his personal passions.
Instead of seasonal fashion and accessories, the new JW Anderson will offer luxe wardrobe staples, jewelry, sunglasses, art, craft and items for the home.
Anderson is planning to reveal the new concept, and creations, during the couture shows in Paris on Monday, at Galerie Joseph in the Marais.
The designer is going the full mile with the rebranding, a project he’s been working on for the past year together with the JW Anderson team. In August, he’ll be shutting the JW Anderson stores in London and Milan for refurbishment, and will reopen them in September with the new concept.
The stores will become his own “cabinet of curiosities,” and hubs of local craft, while the JW Anderson website is being revamped into something “different — and simplistic,” the designer said in an exclusive interview.
Jonathan Anderson

Jonathan Anderson COURTESY OF DIOR

There are more stores in the pipeline, including one on Pimlico Road in London’s Belgravia, a destination for high-end furniture and design. He also plans to open stores in New York and Paris. Each one will be like a fashion show, he said, offering a “slow-moving feast” of creativity and ideas.
The rebranding, Anderson said, was inevitable and already in the works before he was named creative director at Dior, the first designer under LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton ownership to take on men’s, women’s and couture.

“I wanted to rearticulate my own brand. When I started it, I had come out of university, I’d worked on the windows at Prada. I was more angsty. I had to fight my way to get where I am today,” said the designer, who launched his eponymous label in 2008 with menswear, and began showing women’s two years later.
He used JW Anderson as an experimental space, drawing on inspirations as diverse as “Wallace and Gromit,” “Carrie,” and the graphic iconography of Michael Clark, the pioneering dancer and choreographer — and one of his heroes.
“When I turned 40 last year, I decided that I wanted to change the brand. And I wanted to kind of work out, ‘Who am I today?’ I also wanted to consolidate everything I had done, and then add on all the things that I enjoy today, which is art and fashion and interiors and making,” said Anderson.
A look at the J.W. Anderson Couture Fall 2025 collection.

A look at the JW Anderson’s latest collection, which will go on show in Paris on July 7. VIRGINIE KHATEEB/WWD

Craft has always been top of mind for Anderson, a collector of art, antiques, ceramics and wood-turning pieces.
In 2022, he told the WWD Apparel and Retail CEO Summit that sometimes the idea of luxury “can be quite frightening” to some “and I feel like craft is a very good way of breaking down the realities of it, and showing the process. I think the more that we understand how things are made, the more we can ultimately” see their value and merit.
During his tenure as creative director of Loewe, Anderson let his passion for craft run free. He worked with artists, sculptors, and even the Japanese animation experts Studio Ghibli on shows, campaigns and exhibitions.

In 2016, he established the Loewe Foundation Craft Prize, which pays tribute to the Spanish brand’s roots as a leather-making collective and supplier to the Spanish royal crown.
“Loewe was ‘me,’ but I don’t want to replicate it” at the new JW Anderson, he said. “I wanted to work out why I was interested in [craft]. For me, it’s about the still life, and this idea of connoisseurship, of going into depth with an object or a maker.”
Anderson said his aim is to make the “perfect” cashmere sweater in Scotland, “and then understand the people behind it. I want to find things that I love, or what I wear myself, and then articulate them in the world we are in today.”


Anderson also wants to look at “the imperfections in things and make it a personal story.” He said the JW Anderson pieces are about “London, growing up in Ireland, and all of the primitive things that are about me. I want to build this into a world. It’s about the long term.”
He added: “If we make a sweater, then we will issue a different color only when we need to. Also, I don’t want to let go of some things, like the Loafer bag,” said Anderson, referring to his design inspired by the vamp of the shoe, which launched for spring 2025.
“Things don’t have to be a success overnight. It’s about enjoying a design and sticking with it. It’s a slower process, and finding fetish within things. And it’s very much how I see my home, and my world,” he said.

Anderson also looked to the late, legendary Terence Conran, the designer, retailer, restaurateur and lifestyle pioneer who changed the way postwar Britons furnished their homes, and wondered what the Conran store would look like today.
He’s been working with Wedgwood to make teacups and saucers designed by the British ceramicist Lucie Rie, but which never went into production.
Proceeds from sales will be divided between supporting the work of the Lucie Rie and Hans Coper Foundation and providing scholarships and grants to support emerging artists in the field of ceramics and related fields.
Anderson has also been working with the London-based Postcard Teas on a new kind of dark roasted tea that tastes like coffee (another obsession of his) and with Ferguson’s Irish Linen on a series of dish cloths with different messages and colorways.
The JW Anderson stores will stock Windsor chairs handmade in Lewes, East Sussex, England, by a company called Hope Springs; Murano glasses from Italy, and replica wooden Mackintosh stools made in Perthshire, Scotland.
A look at the J.W. Anderson Couture Fall 2025 collection.

Vintage farm tools from the branded JW Anderson collection. VIRGINIE KHATEEB/WWD

The London stores will offer vintage watering cans made from French copper and antique gardening tools restored by Garden & Wood Ltd.
“I have bought from them for many, many years. They find and restore rare gardening equipment, and have the details of where everything was manufactured. The watering cans are incredibly rare,” said Anderson.

“What’s important for me is that [the gardening tools] are very, very well-made and, because of that, they’ve lasted so long. Sometimes we have to cherish the idea” that some things become better with time, and a new context, he said.

Anderson said Garden & Wood’s founder, Edward Green, knows the history of garden equipment in Britain, every supplier, and where everything was made.
The tools, he said, “are still completely usable, and that is the point. They can be decorative, but at the same time they are completely functional objects,” he said.
Anderson is also pursuing his long-held dream of working with gold. He’s making link chains with Lucie Gledhill Jewellery in London. Every link is individually made, soldered, and shaped by hand.
Even the jars of Houghton Hall honey have serious provenance. Each lid will be wrapped in fabric crafted using traditional 18th-century weaving techniques.
Anderson wants people to examine every object in his new shops carefully. “Everything may look simple, but each thing has got a complexity to it. It’s either something I’ve always wanted to do, or something that I have an obsession with,” he said.
Anderson is forging closer ties with his longtime fabric suppliers as well. He’s sourcing boiled wool from the Yorkshire fabric mill Moon; waxed cotton from British Millerain, and silk grosgrain fabric from the weaver Stephen Walters. He’s using that grosgrain for the lapels and side leg details of JW Anderson tuxedo suits.

A look at the J.W. Anderson Couture Fall 2025 collection.

Books from the rebranded JW Anderson collection. VIRGINIE KHATEEB/WWD
Tartans come from Lochcarron of Scotland, a textile company specializing in tartan fabrics and traditional Highland dress. Denim is developed and made in Japan, while the damask is made by Britain’s Humphries Weaving, which specializes in historical reproductions for silk wall interiors.
The list goes on, both for objects and fabrics that will intermingle on the shop floor, and online. Anderson said there might even be a runway show every now and again.
“When we feel like there needs to be a show, we will do a show. It could be in a year or two, or in three months. But only when I feel like there is something to say within my own brand,” said Anderson, adding that it was important for him to keep the JW Anderson team, which he describes as a “little family of very, very talented people,” close, and working toward the same goal.
A look at the J.W. Anderson Couture Fall 2025 collection.

Looks from the rebranded JW Anderson collection. VIRGINIE KHATEEB/WWD

Fashion is still part of the mix. The presentation Monday will showcase some of JW Anderson’s greatest hits, including striped polo tops, a supersized Loafer bag, and skirts propped up with little panniers, a fun look the designer sent down the runway for spring 2025.
Colors are vibrant and include emerald for swimming style trunks; apricot for slip-on shoes, and bright white frames on a pair of exaggerated cat-eye sunglasses.
Anderson’s hours may be long, but he’s clearly energized by the work and likes the fact this new project is completely different from Dior. “I like being this sort of bipolar character, a kind of split personality. For me, it’s like escapism, and I’m really proud of the project,” he said.
 
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The quick explanation of the JW. Anderson rebrand, to be revealed on July 7 in Paris:
- new branding featuring an altered logo and deep green brand colour
- a shift away from seasonal collections in favour of a wardrobe and lifestyle approach
- a refurbishment of the London and Milan flagships coming in September with a “cabinet of curiosities" concept
- a gradual opening of new flagships in London, New York and Paris
- several collaborations with numerous artisans, artists, craftsmen and makers
 
Clever move from him.
Maybe he will be the one who finally find a balance between his brand and working for huge brands.
He should do like Ferre and open a store not so far from a Dior store lol.

The packaging and logo rebranding he shared in snippets is already promising.
 
I have to admit that while I love his work, his interviews or papers that quote him are always very tricky to read. I always have the feeling that I’m reading a bunch of nothing while it could so simple to go to point.
That Tim Blanks piece made me question all my English.
 
I have to admit that while I love his work, his interviews or papers that quote him are always very tricky to read. I always have the feeling that I’m reading a bunch of nothing while it could so simple to go to point.
That Tim Blanks piece made me question all my English.
Coming from a native English speaker: it's not you, it's them.
 
Tim Blanks and JW is a rather harrowing combo in the written context. In a weird way… I got very little out of all that.

But the shift makes sense, even if I think it’s a little bland. What I could decipher is that it seems similar to an overpriced lifestyle boutique. Where I work and live, there’s practically one on every corner. That is his clientele now though as he’s matured and since Loewe.
 
I see there's an even wider range of new Book Totes that includes Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, Flaubert's Madame Bovary and James Joyce's Ulysses, often based on the look of the first editions of each title (i.e. pre-existing designs).

I can't remember where I saw it said - that they look like museum gift shop totes that you'd give as a present to an English teacher.

In some cases, it might even be cheaper to buy the actual first edition than the Book Tote.
My initial thought was that they look like something you can get on Etsy. As much as I hate the book tote, at least under MGC the prints were usually nice. This new design is barely suited for Moschino, let alone Dior (of course the bag in general isn't suited for a brand like Dior). I didn't think that bag could look any cheaper but he managed to do it.
 

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