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The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Rain ruining your outfit? Here are 10 stylish and practical ways to look good in wet weather

Rain might be a given, but soggy ensembles don’t have to be. Our fashion expert shares her top tips for staying puddle-proof and polished • The best women’s waterproof jackets for every type of adventure, tested Rain in the UK isn’t so much a weather event as it is a national characteristic, from misty drizzle that clings to your hair and glasses to the sudden downpour that soaks you to the bone.

The British weather may never lose its talent for inconvenient timing, but that doesn’t have to rob you of your style. The key to a good wet-weather wardrobe?

Incorporating a few pragmatic purchases into your everyday wear (along with prepping what you have already) so that when the heavens inevitably open, at least you’re well armed. Continue reading...
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: the number-one rule for coats this winter – make it long

There are a totally different set of rules for jackets, but a coat should be well below your knees I shouldn’t tell you this, because I’m effectively doing myself out of a job, but there’s really only one thing you need to know about fashion this season. I mean, there are a thousand and one ways to tie a scarf or curate your necklaces or layer your knitwear – and I fully intend to bend your ear about all of them over the coming months – but at a pinch you could follow this single dictum, ignore absolutely all of the rest of it and be good to go.

Your coat needs to be long. That’s it, that’s the big news.

If your coat reaches almost to your ankles, you will look as if you know your stuff style-wise. Like your hairstyle or the width of your jeans, the length of your coat is one of those details that is a fashion tell.
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Baggy, skinny … or neither? Why ‘Goldilocks’ jeans are having a moment

Straight-cut denims are fast becoming the timeless antidote to fashion’s relentless trend cycle When it comes to fashion power struggles, there is no greater battle than the one between baggy and skinny jeans. But now a new style is emerging, or is it an old one?

Goldilocks jeans – ie straight cut – have made a comeback. Think Robert Redford in Three Days of the Condor, rather than Jeremy Clarkson’s bootcut Top Gear era or an indie band’s painted-on pip-squeezers.

Continue reading...
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Asymmetric hemlines, applique and lace: the 30 best party dresses for Christmas and beyond

Our styling editor shares her favourite looks for getting dressed up to the nines • The best flat shoes for party season It’s party season, a time of year that either fills you with sartorial dread or has you screaming with excitement as you get to wear yet another embellished dress to the pub on Friday night (‘tis the season after all). I spend most of the year wearing navy trousers and oversized shirts, but there’s something about a party dress that speaks to my inner J-Lo.

Give me applique flowers, cowl necks, asymmetric hemlines and lace edging, perhaps with an oversized blazer or knee-high boots. The options are endless and, in my opinion, during the silly season, the usual rules don’t apply.

Here are the best party dress picks for December and beyond. Continue reading...
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: my top tips for gifting clothes this Christmas

Clothes can be tricky presents to pick, but follow my simple rules and you’ll have your shopping all wrapped up Once upon a time, Christmas shopping meant grabbing the newest album release or an old-favourite DVD box set, wrapping it in glitter paper, depositing it under the tree and putting your feet up with a highlighter pen to annotate the Radio Times. Now that music and film lives in the cloud, we’ve turned to clothes as the new go-to gift.

But choosing them for another person is a high-risk endeavour. How can we boost our chances of getting it right?

Because we do really, really want to get it right. Kids just want Santa to bring them the swag, but one of the things that happens when you become a grownup is that you care more about whether other people like the gifts you’ve given them than you do about what you receive.
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Does the word luxury mean anything now?

With Balenciaga’s new range embracing a term that the fashion industry once shied away from, the era of quiet luxury may finally be over Is luxury an £8m Birkin bag ? Logging out of social media ?

A Japanese toilet with a pre-defecation misting function? A three-figure lipstick ?

A morning bath? Or even a £9,000 stainless steel coffin that looks a bit like Elon Musk’s “luxury” Cybertruck ?
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Wear it loud, wear it proud: how marchers for Gaza are bringing ‘protest dressing’ up to date

Fashion has always been political. Now, demonstrators are putting pro-Palestinian slogans and symbols on their clothes – and not just for marches It’s early afternoon at the latest national march for Gaza in central London.

A man is wearing a sweatshirt bearing a photograph of Hind Rajab, the five-year-old girl who was killed in the Gaza conflict last year along with family members and the paramedics who tried to save her. He doesn’t want to be named.

But it is, he says, his attempt “to keep her memory alive, until we get justice … Whether it takes one month, one year, 100 years, I’m not giving up.
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Elegant, determined, a little unknowable: Giorgio Armani is gone but will never be forgotten

The designer reinvented power dressing, redefined what it meant to look modern and was the architect of how we dress now Giorgio Armani dressed all of us. Whether or not you ever had the money for a jacket with an Armani label, you wore a jacket that he invented.

He was the mastermind of contemporary style, the architect of how we dress now. If you have worn an unstructured suit with a T-shirt to a wedding; if you have worn muted neutrals to work; if you have thought it might be chic to paint your living room grey: that was Armani.

Armani was working until his final days. Invitations had already been sent out for his next show, to be held on 28 September in the 14th-century courtyard of Milan’s Palazzo Brera.
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Diane Keaton’s style: she dodged the stamp of the machine

A world-class beauty who didn’t lead with her looks, she broke all the rules of celebrity dressing with a sunny smile Diane Keaton dies aged 79 Peter Bradshaw on Diane Keaton Diane Keaton interviewed in 2023 A life in pictures Personal style is the best kind of style there is, and no one did personal style better than Diane Keaton. Her signature look was shirts and ties, snappy waistcoats and baggy trousers, an idiosyncratic version of menswear that was somehow both elegant and goofy.

It was part Beau Brummell and part Charlie Chaplin. “Borrowed from the boys” does not do it justice; she made it entirely her own.

The charm of her wardrobe was that it was exactly her. She was a world-class beauty who didn’t lead with her looks.
The Guardian — Fashion • Jan. 12, 2026, 2:34 a.m.

Bath mats, candles and underpants: would Basquiat have loved or hated all the merch?

New book The Making of an Icon examines artist whose works have become almost ubiquitous It seems like a new Jean-Michel Basquiat fashion collaboration drops online most weeks, from a £20 Uniqlo crew neck T-shirt to a kimono or a sports bra. But more than 35 years since his death in 1988, would the New York artist have been flattered or horrified by the mass marketing of his art?

Basquiat’s premature death at 27 means that questions will remain as to whether he would have signed off on things like bathmats on Redbubble or Ligne Bath’s Trumpet candle . How would he, for example, have felt about a Basquiat collaboration with MeUndies underpants – with the tagline: “Jean-Michel Basquiat … taught us all to look inward and find our authentic self.

MeUndies always strives for authenticity.” Continue reading...
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