The Latest Dispatches From the Fashion Frontier
Welcome to Issue : your curated runway into the newest, sharpest, and most thoughtful pieces fmmé has to offer. This isn’t a checklist of trends or a highlight reel. It’s where we publish our definitive features, essays, interviews, and explorations that push past surface‑level style and into ideas worth lingering on.
Each issue is a chance to slow down in a world that scrolls fast, to think deeply about the forces shaping fashion and culture and to discover perspectives you didn’t know you were missing. Whether it’s dissecting runway movements, spotlighting unheard voices, or unpacking fashion’s cultural intersections, Issue is where fmmé’s voice truly speaks.
Start here. Read widely. Stay curious.
Why Micro Bags Are Out and The Oversized Is In
At Copenhagen Fashion Week this August, editors and street photographers noticed something impossible to ignore: bags are getting bigger. On the runways, Ferragamo and Louis Vuitton sent out models with large clutches that demanded a two-hand hold, while in the front row, guests tucked oversized suede pouches beneath sharply tailored coats. The message was clear after years of pretending we could fit our lives into Jacquemus micro-minis; fashion has swung hard in the opposite direction. The oversized clutch has emerged as a trend and a cultural correction. It is practical, sculptural, and designed for a world that craves both beauty and function in equal measure.
The September Issue of Vogue: The Issue That Refuses to Fade
When Vogue's September issue landed in 2012, it was a literal doorstop. 916 pages with Lady Gaga on the cover, the heft of glossy paper echoing the weight of cultural power. Thirteen years later, the September story looks entirely different. Emma Stone fronts the 2025 package, but the magazine is no longer bound to page count. Instead, it is built around a couture-inspired capsule by Nicolas Ghesquière, photographed by Jamie Hawkesworth, and extended into films, podcasts, and behind-the-scenes reels. The September issue still exists, but its power is no longer measured by how high it stacks on the coffee table.