Tag Archive for: Brazil

Press Day presented the current collections of Brazilian brands at the New York Fashion Week

Fashion Label Brasil, ABEST and Apex-Brasil’s Brazilian Fashion Internationalization Program, and the Azzi+Co showroom promoted Press Day NY at the New York Fashion Week, NYFW, on September 16th and 17th.

Press Day presented the new collections of Brazilian brands: Betina de LucaCecília PradoJuliana SanmartinLenny Niemeyer, Maria FreringOstra, RoomSerpuiTriyaVanda Jacintho and Waiwai.

The return of the in-person event developed the image of Brazilian brands for 32 visitors from the main media and international influencers and generated 52 clippings on Instagram.

Media and Influencers:

US Publications

The EditorialistVogueWWDWSJCoveteurHarper’s BazaarHearst GroupTown + CountryFinancial TimesCosmopolitanELLEDaily Front RowWomen’s HealthSeventeenElle DecorVerandaBustleGraziaWho What Wear

International Publications

Vogue MéxicoEl TiempoElle BrasilElle MéxicoPeople en EspañolVogue BrasilHarper’s Bazaar BR

Influencers

Ucha Meirelles: Vogue Brasil; Tanya Ortega: Vogue México & Brasil; Cristiane Peixoto: Harper’s Bazaar BR; Julia Kananovich: Fashion stylist; Monica Sordo: Designer; Melissa Vale: Influencer; Jaclyn Palermo: Hearst; Claudia Rondon: Influencer/Fashion stylist; Andrea Zendejas: Hearst Magazine; Camille: Influencer; Titina Penzini: Hola USA; Amanda Rezende: Influencer; Miriam Pritzer: L’Officiel Brasil; Lauren Hanmann: Influencer

The Importance of Press Day

Press Day is an important tool for promoting and positioning Brazilian brands in the international market.

The return of in-person events creates networking experiences and enhances branding for the main medias and influencers in the fashion world.

“The event was excellent. Not only was the curatorship of the participating brands amazing, but also the structure that was set up by AZZI+Co and the quality of the guests. This type of event should happen more often so that opinion makers and journalists can get to know the brands even better,” says Ana Luiza, a representative of the brand Lenny Niemeyer.

About ABEST

Created in 2003, the Brazilian Association of Fashion Designers (ABEST) aims to strengthen and promote Brazilian design and fashion. Its main purposes is to help the development of Brazilian brands with international reach and guarantee the authenticity and creativity of every single one of them, in addition to promoting the Brazilian lifestyle, thus contributing to the growth of all the segments linked to fashion. Currently, ABEST, which is a non-profit organization, has 120 brands from all over Brazil that export products to 57 countries. Moreover, it constantly carries out strategic approaches to expand its penetration throughout new markets around the world and strengthen relations with those it has already conquered.

About Fashion Label Brasil

Fashion Label Brasil, an added value Brazilian fashion internationalization program, was created in 2003 by ABEST in partnership with Apex-Brasil, and its proposal is to position the image of Brazilian fashion abroad, enhancing the image of an innovative and contemporary Brazil. The program has strategic activities – Buyer and Image Project, International Fairs and Fashion Shows, Showroom Project, in addition to special initiatives – to expand penetration in new markets around the globe and strengthen relations with those already conquered.

About Apex-Brasil

The Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex-Brasil) works to promote Brazilian products and services abroad and attract foreign investment to strategic sectors of the Brazilian economy. The agency carries out diversified trade promotion initiatives that are aimed at promoting exports and valuing Brazilian products and services abroad, such as prospective and trade missions, business roundtables, support for the participation of Brazilian companies in major international fairs, visits by foreign buyers and influencers to learn about the Brazilian structure of production, among other business platforms that also aim to strengthen the Brazil brand. Apex-Brasil coordinates efforts to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) to Brazil, focusing on strategic sectors for the development of the competitiveness of Brazilian companies and the country.

#PressDay #PressDayNY #semanademodadeNovaYork #NewYorkFashionWeek #NYFW #BetinadeLuca #CecíliaPrado #JulianaSanmartin #LennyNiemeyer #MariaFrering #Ostra #Room #Serpui #Triya #VandaJacintho #Waiwai

“With the acceleration of e-commerce, what will be the future of physical stores?” Think with Google.

In the article “Physical stores and the (re)connection of people and spaces”, we talk about the role of the physical store as a fundamental element for increasing online sales. Studies carried out by some brands clearly show that omnichannel strategies should become part of the strategy and that there is a direct relationship between the increase in online sales in the same region as the physical store.

“Physical stores will not disappear, but they will be transformed. In this context, the future of online stores is directly related to omnichannel (…) Omnichannel retailers will take the lead. Being omnichannel is no longer a differentiator, it is essential”, Think with Google.

The key is having omnichannel or phygital perspectives. Phygital is a new term that has been used to indicate the integration of physical and online experiences. The best medium takes the consumer’s needs into account.

Isabela Capeto + Melissa Exhibition and Experience

The Melissa Gallery at Oscar Freire Street in São Paulo has a new installation that explores the collab between the brand and the stylist Isabela Capeto and her daughter, Chica Capeto.

“To launch this collab, inspired by the PANCs, Studio Vingú proposes an installation/garden overflowing with sinuous shapes and volumes, from the atrium to the interior of the Gallery. Flowers and zodiac signs float over the exhibition space, creating a floral and luminous atmosphere. A green lounge was also placed in the installation, creating an area to experiment the products. The goal is to bring an urban touch, showing that nature and colors always persevere, even in unpredictable scenarios”, Finíssimo platform.

The installation presents elements that were inspired by PANCs (Non-Conventional Food Plants) and by Brazilian flora in general.

“Specialists and research institutes point out that the trend for physical stores is now to change concepts and become a space for experiences, a showroom to attract customers. In fact, before the pandemic, Melissa was already making investments to transform its physical stores into a provider of omnichannel experiences, connected to other mediums, including digital”, Fíníssimo.

Reversal of paths: digital brands invest in physical retail

This is a recurring theme in current days. The content platform FFW carried out research to understand how the market was behaving and interviewed brands that recently presented new addresses.

A study made by the National Confederation of Commerce of Goods, Services and Tourism (CNC) revealed that 75.2 thousand stores had closed their doors in Brazil in 2020.

Even though everything indicates the future of retail in e-commerce, the fashion market witnesses an opposite path: digital brands invested in opening new physical stores and flagships.

Why to invest in a physical store in current times?

“I think the physical store delivers an experience of immersion in the brand’s universe, which complements the online experience”, says Ana Luísa Fernandes, from Aluf.

“The creation of a new store represents the beginning of a new phase, in which we seek to expand our audience’s contact with the collective imagination of our universe. It is the beginning of the slow and hopeful walk back to physical spaces. After a period of introspection, new relationships with the environment are born”, says Marcella Franklin, from Haight.

“Although digital commerce has shown exponential growth in virtually all segments during this period, we believe that this resumption of commerce is now an opportune time for brands to explore what they really are, along with their values, their purposes, and their essence, through purchasing experiences, personalized service, a differentiated environment, connecting with your customers in every way. There is nothing more suitable for this dynamic of experimentation and engagement than a physical store”, says Gustavo Belloc, from Deus Ex Machina.

Therefore, the physical space is seen as an experience for the new way of consuming.

Is there a new role for physical stores at this point?

“The physical space allows for other layers of dialogue, bringing Haight closer to those who speak to the brand, while we understand the new dynamic of reopening the world together”, Marcella Franklin, from Haight.

“It is not a store, it is an experience”, says Airon Martin, from Misci.

“More than ever, we are talking about experience stores, which is much more than just another physical store”, Ana Luísa Fernandes, from Aluf.

#LojasFísicas #Pandemia #Covid-19 #LojasFísicasPósPandemia #Varejo #VarejoFísico #Omnichannel #Melissa #Isabela Capeto #Chica Capeto #Think with Google #Haight #Misci #Aluf #Deus Ex Machina #FFW #Finíssimo

“The role of a physical store goes far beyond the sale per square meter. The on-site retail is the heart of the connection between brands and people,” says Camila Salek, columnist for Harper’s Bazaar Brasil.

With the reopening of public spaces and greater circulation of people, we are witnessing a search for reconnection, in which experiences play a fundamental role. Thus, the fashion market directs its efforts to attract customers back to their physical spaces and bring them closer to the brands.

Omnichannel is here to stay. That is, the digital space that many brands conquered during the pandemic will not be lost, but even so, brands must, need, and want to provide unique moments to consumers who are looking for these experiences in their physical stores.

Discussions about the future of the post-pandemic physical store

Traditional retail determines the value of your store by the amount of products sold – “sales per square meter.” So, the new retail explores the potential of opportunities in the integrated physical and digital channels.

Some studies made by brands that integrated their channels point to the “Halo Effect:” increase in online sales in the same region as the physical store, that is, the physical space as a stage and media for the brand influences the performance of digital sales through geotargeting.

“Have you ever stopped to evaluate your store’s result as a medium? Retail futurist Doug Stephens, in his latest book called Resurrecting Retail: The Future of Business in a Post-Pandemic World, made a very interesting provocation by saying that brands pay for their ad impressions on digital channels, but do not use the same logic to measure the impression of a campaign or product displayed on physical stores,” Camila Salek.

Reimagining stores for the next retail standard: redefining the store’s role and revamping operations for the post Covid-19 future.

The pandemic changed consumer behavior and the market needs to understand what the new consumer behaviors are.

Strategic imperatives to prepare for the next normal

In order to survive and thrive in the post-coronavirus world, stores must fundamentally change the way they operate on both sides of the P&L (statement of profits and losses).

Strategic Imperatives:

1 – Radically accelerate omnichannel integration: gain a deep and up-to-date understanding of customer preferences; imagine a new function for the stores.

The pandemic has driven new omnichannel initiatives for large and small retailers. The omnichannel integration is the current bet for the new standards that are being set.

“In our survey of US apparel executives, 76 percent said they plan to improve omnichannel integration in stores”, McKinsey & Company.

To initiate this integration, retailers can consider the following actions:

– Redefine the role of the store. More than ever, stores need to deliver customer experiences; looking to deliver a superior product discovery experience and provide access to exclusive merchandise.

– Offer basic notions of omnichannel service.

– Build an omnichannel team.

– Enable personalization of touch points in the store. “If store associates have access to customer data generated both offline and online (for example, data on loyalty and purchase behavior across channels), they can tailor their customer interactions accordingly. Even customers that start and end their journeys online can then receive personalized attention in stores.”

2- Reimagine the point-of-sale operations to reflect the new reality: redefine the cost structures of the store and prepare your workforce for the next normal.

Redefine the cost structure of the store: simplify operations and rebalance cost allocation in order to support the growing volume of omnichannel activities.

– Change the complexity. The leaders of store operations must collaborate with the merchandising function to redefine the frequency of restocking and the minimum stock levels to reflect post-crisis sales and traffic.

– Quickly digitalize and automate work without added value.

– Improve the omnichannel touch points.

– Introduce contactless self-service capabilities for omnichannel transactions. “We’ve found, for example, that 60 to 70 percent of the typical retailer’s returns process can be digitized”, McKinsey & Company.

Prepare the workforce for the next “normal”

A McKinsey & Company survey with specialized apparel and retail executives showed results: 75% indicated that their companies laid off or fired store employees since the beginning of the crisis. During the recovery period, retailers must shape their future workforce to support the store’s new role and improve flexibility of their employees, preparing for potential recurrent and virus-related stoppages.

– Retain pre Covid-19 talents.

– Improve training and integration.

– When rebuilding the store teams, rethink the composition of the workforce.

– Improve employee flexibility.

3- Optimize the store network through omnichannel performance.

“In our survey, 53 percent of respondents said they expect to close underperforming stores in the aftermath of COVID-19”, McKinsey & Company.

Retailers must incorporate their future perspectives (or projections) into their reopening plans – make decisions through an omnichannel perspective of long-term store performance; to better understand the true economic value of a sales point, a retailer should modify the store’s P&L to include its e-commerce arm.

“A forward-looking omnichannel view of each store’s performance should incorporate postcrisis traffic projections and the retailer’s envisioned role for the store”, McKinsey & Company.

#LojasFísicas #Pandemia #Covid-19 #LojasFísicasPósPandemia #Varejo #VarejoFísico #McKinsey&Company #McKinsey #Harper’sBazaarBrasil #CamilaSalek #Omnichannel

“Veja shoes have been innovating within the market of vegan tennis shoes since 2005,” Harper’s Bazaar Italia.

“The nuances have changed, the silhouettes are increasingly being studied, materials are ecological and respect the environment. The productive chain of sustainable fashion trends is extended to vegan shoes. In fact, more and more international brands are focusing on the production of shoes and footwear with low environmental impact. Vegan leather, innovative materials that do not harm nature, with new formulas and shades. Thus, which brands to focus on when it comes to buying trendy vegan shoes? New and established brands that have always strived to make sustainable shoes. Here you will find Harper’s Bazaar selection.”

Harper’s Bazaar Italia presented the associate Veja in the December edition, “Vegan shoe brands on the verge of being discovered in the winter of 2020.”

#Vert #Veja #Sustentabilidade #Calçados #Sapatos #Vegano #Ecológico #Harper’sBazaar #Harper’sBazaarItália

Lapima Cora Atlantic Água With Blue Gradient Lenses by Lapima december

Forbes presented the Lapima Cora Atlantic Água With Blue Gradient Lenses in the selection “the Best Handbags And Accessories To Give Your Style That Holiday Boost”.

“Acetate Água, which in Portuguese means “water”, brings the nuances and movement of water, with the blending of blue and transparency.”

#lapima #moda #fashion #joias #forbes

Nicole Kidman with Ana Khouri jewelry

Nicole Kidman with Ana Khouri jewelry at the premiere of the new movie “Being the Ricardos” by Vanity Fair Spain.

#anakhouri #nicolekidman #moda #fashion #joias #jewelry #BeingtheRicardos

Harry Styles with Akra Collection by Dazed

Akra Collection by Harry Styles on the cover of alternative style and culture magazine Dazed & Confused.

“Today, Dazed magazine continues to champion radical fashion and youth culture, defining the times with a vanguard of next generation writers, stylists and image makers.”

#Akra #Akra Collection #HarryStyles #Dazed #Dazed&Confused

“The unique designs, the plurality and the varied cultures mean the creations are unique. Discover the best of the country’s trends and innovations.”

Apex-Brasil (Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency),  ABEST (Brazilian Association of Fashion Designers), Abit (Brazilian Textile and Apparel Industry Association), and Abicalçados  (Brazilian footwear Industries Association) promoted Brasil Fashion Now to position Brazilian fashion brands in the international market.

“BFN is a democratic project, an excellent opportunity for brands. For those who have never had any experience with the international market, it offers an enormous learning experience about what it means to take the step towards internationalization, from several important perspectives – such as, for example, seasonality, brand building, collection, price composition, and vocabulary. Even the participation in physical events does not provide this kind of understanding. For brands that already have some type of distribution, the project is an opportunity to be in a channel that serves all the needs for continuity and expansion of your business in a consistent way, cutting steps along the way, reducing costs, and improving processes. With the continuity of the project, now in its third edition, we can see the realization of these relationships that have been cultivated, boosting Brazilian brands around the world”, Manoela Amaro, CEO and Co-Founder of BLANC.

Originality, Plurality, Varied Cultures

Brasil Fashion Now explores all of the originality, trends, and innovation of Brazilian fashion through the international B2B BLANC Fashion platform. Also, the second edition of the event (BFN2), from March to September 2021, presented Brazilian brands: Akra Collection, Andrea Bogosian, Andreza Chagas, Augusta, Catarina Mina, Haight, Inti Brand, Lily Franco, Maneca, Meerk, Osklen, Roberta Mattos, Room, Sy&Vie, Wee (Fashion Label Brasil); TIG and Belier Belier.

BLANC Platform

“BLANC is a powerful sales tool used by prominent brands around the world. It supports online businesses by helping them expand their sales to global markets, offering a wholesale management solution. BLANC proposes an innovative way to shape companies for digital wholesale.”

​​The platforms offers an intuitive interface to support strategic decisions and is a way to showcase creativity in a structured and professional manner to retailers around the world.

Digital Promotion and Exhibition for the International Market

Brazilian brands promoted results in the total amount of USD 94,669.00 and USD 444,000.00 for future expectations.

“The project focuses on the digital dissemination of Brazilian brands in the international market, in addition to strengthening their performance and sales through a customized commercial reach.”

About ABEST

The Brazilian Association of Fashion Designers, created in 2003, aims to strengthen and promote Brazilian design and fashion. Its main purpose is to help the development of Brazilian brands with international reach and guarantee their authenticity and creativity, in addition to promoting the Brazilian lifestyle, thus contributing to the growth of all segments linked to fashion. Currently, ABEST, which is a non-profit, has 120 brands from all over Brazil that export products to 57 different countries. Also, it constantly carries out strategic actions to expand its penetration in new markets around the world and strengthen relations with those that are already established.

About Fashion Label Brasil

Fashion Label Brasil, a Fashion Internationalization Program of Added Value, was created in 2003 by ABEST in partnership with Apex-Brasil, whose proposal is to position the image of Brazilian fashion abroad, enhancing the image of an innovative and contemporary Brazil. The program has strategic activities – Buyer and Image Project, International Fairs and Fashion Shows, Showroom Project, in addition to special activations – to expand penetration in new markets and strengthen relations with those that are already established.

About Apex-Brasil

The Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex-Brasil) works to promote Brazilian products and services abroad and attract foreign investment to strategic sectors of the Brazilian economy. To achieve these goals, Apex-Brasil carries out diversified trade promotion actions aimed at promoting exports and valuing Brazilian products and services abroad, such as commercial prospective missions, business roundtables, support for the participation of Brazilian companies in major international fairs, visits by foreign buyers and opinion setters to get to know the Brazilian productive structure, among other business platforms that also aim to strengthen the country’s brand.

#BFN2 #BFN #BrasilFashionNow #FashionLabel #FashionLabelBrasil #FLB #Apex #ApexBrasil #blanc #blancfashion

Three FLB brands participated in the SPFW 52nd Edition

São Paulo Fashion Week presented the 52nd edition in a hybrid format, 27 in-person shows and 24 fashion films, from November 16th to the 21st.

The event at the Brazilian Cultures Pavillion, at the Ibirapuera Park, promoted ABEST member brands: Ronaldo Fraga, Modem, Lilly Sarti, Misci, Neriage, Depedro; the Lenny Niemeyer brand presented Lenny Niemeyer 30 years old at Caminho Niemeyer, in Rio de Janeiro; and associate Manolita developed four new models for the Aluf brand fashion show.

Misci

“I SAW YOU AT FUXICO LANCHES. It was another world inside. There were people from all over the country. The same shapes, the same colors. There was even a gringo speaking Portuguese and dancing forró after two and a half Heinekens.”

Misci presented the 22 FUXICO LANCHES winter collection at the brand’s first physical fashion show.

“We have seasoned mayonnaise

A dive into a pictorial context and setting that is part of the Brazilian’s daily life, the lanchonetes.

These highly subdued spaces bring together the most diverse types – families, neighbors, and friends, that drunk person from the neighborhood…the list goes on. All of it in one space. These environments also give room to an atmosphere of sensuality and romance that is impacted by music and perfumes from the many people who pass by.

Each with its own personality, each with its unique spice.”

On Vogue’s website

“Misci, one of the great revelations of the national fashion scene and featured in the SPFW.”

“Misci, led my Airon Martin, is refreshing for the national fashion scene and held its first physical fashion show today. A die-hard fan of Brazil and all of its cultural nuances, he presented jacquards with cotton fringes, matelassé with the brand’s embossed logo and tailoring that was cut with the greatest precision and quality possible – all to the sound of Calcinha Preta and Bonde do Forró; Inspired by cafeterias in the countryside, such as those in Sinop, a city in the State of Mato Grosso, right on the edge of the BR-163 interstate highway where he was born, he once again used only local fabrics.”

On Glamour’s website

“With Sasha Meneghel opening and closing the show, Airon Martin’s brand took São Paulo Fashion Week to the bars and cafeterias by presenting a full collection of tailored sets and dresses that varied in length between midi and (very!) short pieces. It is worth highlighting two typically Brazilian fabrics that stood out in the collection: the patchwork and the fuxico.”

“Even if for many people the fashion world is restricted to a place of refinement that is far from everyday reality, for Misci, a cafeteria, or perhaps a bar, is the perfect space to dialogue with fashion. [..] A captivating presentation, with plastic chairs, a pool table, and a wall filled with beers, all of it in LED.”

On the SPFW’s website

“Misci, a design brand by Airon Martin, dives into the universe of cafeterias and bars in Brazil, and in its atmosphere of sensuality and romance, in order to launch the Fuxico Lanches collection.

Despite the theme, the soundtrack with classics of popular romantic music, and the backdrop with stacked plastic chairs, the clothes display clean shapes and geometric, architectural details.”

Depedro

The fashion film for the debut of the Depedro brand at the São Paulo Fashion Week represented the colorful and multicultural essence of the Northeast region of Brazil, through the INCELENÇA theme.

“Mysteries of life and death, sung by rural women, aligned with the meaning of the sun, courage, and endurance.”

Incelença is the result of work that involved many hands, looks, and presences. The collection was born with the purposes of multiplying the example and stories of women who inspire us. To bring the project to life, we called on a team of professionals who dove in headfirst and turned life and death into poetry.”

On Vogue’s website

“Marcus grew up watching his grandmother Francisca cultivate cotton, weave the yarn, and hand sew and embroider pieces at home. Later on, as an adult, he realized that many of the works he had followed during childhood were disappearing. “Four years ago, these techniques were only applied to bed, table, and bath products. As the added value was low, the artisans stopped executing and passing this knowledge on to the next generations.”

“So, he decided to create some pieces of clothing that incorporated these traditions. Demand was greater than he expected and, since then, he has remained firm with the purpose of training dressmakers and making a brand with social impact. Today, the label employs a network of 250 artisans spread across five cities in the northeastern sertão region.”

On the SPFW’s website

“On the eve of participating in the SPFW’s N52 edition, Marcus Figueirêdo, Depedro’s creative director, said in an interview that he was about to fulfill his greatest dream, ‘to bring art and fashion from Seridó, the sertão, and the state of Rio Grande do Norte, to the runways of the world.’ Incelença, a film that celebrates the strength of female artisans.

Items from the men’s wardrobe are bathed in religiosity, with prints of icons such as Nossa Senhora Aparecida and Jesus’ Heart. Crochet and precious lace from the region transform basics into luxury items. To the sound of violin and fiddle, a voice sings: “the hand that sews and heals, is the hand that brings the bread. In the other hand, prays the rosary, asking for protection.”

Lenny Niemeyer

Lenny Niemeyer presented a collection that revisits all of her creative production, with a futuristic look, to celebrate the brand’s 30 years.

“Our creative process regarding the prints was born out of an experimental shooting, where models dressed up in runway looks from my 30-year trajectory danced and were portrayed using light, shadow, and effects,” Lenny Niemeyer.

On Vogue’s website

“After five days of fashion shows in São Paulo, the N52 edition of the SPFW ends this Sunday, in the state of Rio, with the celebration of Lenny Niemeyer’s 30-year career at Caminho Niemeyer, in the city of Niterói. Seeking to take on a refreshing look at its history, the creative process was based on delving into archives and first producing an experimental shooting with the favorite pieces.”

On Glamour’s website

“Officially closing the SPFW N52 was Lenny Niemeyer, who celebrated 20 years as a brand in an emotional presentation at Caminho Niemeyer, in the city of Niterói. Alongside stylist Daniel Ueda, the label brought a beachwear style with classic characteristics of the brand, which now looks at its history in futuristic pieces and prints.”

On the SPFW’s website

Line-up SPFW N52:

11/16
3pm P. Andrade – Pinacoteca

11/17
3:30pm Cria Costura Project – In-person
4pm Marisa + Mama Di African Colab – Digital
4:30pm Ronaldo Fraga – Digital
5pm À La Garçonne – Digital
5:30pm Torinno – In-person
6:30pm Anacê – Digital
7pm Mnisis – Digital
7:30pm SPFW N´GAME – In-person
8:30pm Aluf – Digital
9pm Modem – Digital
9:05pm Lilly Sarti – In-person

11/18
3pm Sankofa: Ateliê Mão de Mãe – In-person
3pm Sankofa: Meninos Rei – In-person
4pm Ronaldo Silvestre – Digital
4:30pm João Pimenta – In-person
5:15pm Rocio Canvas – Digital
6pm Weider Silveiro – In-person
6:45pm Von Trapp – Digital
7:15pm Bold Strap – Digital
7:45pm Walério Araujo – In-person
8:30pm ÀLG – Digital
9pm Ellus – Digital

11/19
10am Ponto Firme – Escola Ateliê Estudio Ponto Firme
12pm Fernanda Yamamoto – Centro Cultural São Paulo
3pm Sankofa – Santa Resistência – In-person
3pm Sankofa – Naya Violeta – In-person
4pm ÃO – Digital
4:30pm LED – Digital
5pm Misci – In-person
6pm Gloria Coelho – Digital
6:30pm Neriage – In-person
7:15pm Martins – Digital
7:45pm Igor Dadona – Digital
8:15pm Handred – In-person
9pm Irrita – Digital
9:30pm Lino Villaventura – In-person

11/20
11am Esfér – The Force
12pm Baska – Casa Panamericana
3pm Sankofa: Az Marias – In-person
3pm Sankofa: Mile Lab – In-person
3pm Sankofa: Silvério – In-person
4pm Corcel – Digital
4:30pm Fauve – Digital
5pm Angela Brito – In-person
6pm Lucas Leão – Digital
6:30pm Depedro – Digital
7:30pm Apartamento 03 – In-person
8:15pm Bispo dos Anjos – Digital
9pm Renata Buzzo – Digital
9:30pm Isaac Silva – In-person

11/21
4pm Lenny Niemeyer

#SPFW #SãoPauloFashionWeek #N52 #SPFWN52 #Ronaldo Fraga #Modem #Lilly Sarti #Misci #Neriage #Depedro #Lenny Niemeyer #Manolita

Rihanna with Prasi jewelry

Rihanna with Mangueira Fatto a Mano Necklace by Prasi.

#prasi #rihanna #moda #fashion #joias #jewelry

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