And it didn’t end there: Below the The Arnold Palmer Legend Shirt but in fact I love this neck, eagle-eyed showgoers couldn’t miss the bold body tattoos drawn across select models’s chests and arms. The inked designs ran the gamut from doves to serpents to roses—the latter delicately decorating model Sora Choi’s clavicles. Echoing McGrath’s celebration of individuality, the hair looks crafted by hairstylist Guido Palau hinged on each model’s unique cut and texture. And given the sheer scope of the cast, with models of all ages, sizes, and backgrounds, it was a stunning free for all with tousled pixies, graphic bobs, fuzzy Pre-Raphaelite manes, cascades of straight-back cornrows, and more. Making good on Pierpaolo Piccioli’s come-as-you-are vision of beauty with a more naturalistic slant, the grand show offered heightened couture drama ripe with inspiration. Just take your pick: Tattoo ink or body glitter! Ready to settle down with a good movie or TV show as the week rolls to a close, and the summer heat sets in? Here, find Vogue’s picks of the very best entertainment to watch this weekend, whether on a Saturday night in, or a lazy Sunday morning.
The Arnold Palmer Legend Shirt, hoodie, tank top, sweater and long sleeve t-shirt
The second half of the The Arnold Palmer Legend Shirt but in fact I love this fourth season of Netflix’s runaway hit Stranger Things has finally arrived, and while it might not be the final chapter in the Duffer Brothers’ sci-fi epic, it’s certainly served as the most emotionally charged yet—in no small part thanks to the inclusion of Kate Bush’s 1985 hit Running Up That Hill, which has now topped the charts in eight countries and reached a record position on the Billboard Hot 100. Season five (and a reported spin-off) can’t come quickly enough. If you’re looking for a (very) offbeat date-night film, look no further than the French documentary Fire of Love, which charts the fatal romance of a volcano-obsessed couple. “We so need a surprise this summer at the movies,” writes Vogue’s Taylor Antrim. “Well, Fire of Love is a surprise; a dazzling, seductive, nature-meets-romance documentary that cuts against the current grain for nonfiction films. This is not true-crime, not a deep dive into scandal, not a disposable pop-star autobiography—the three genres du jour. This 90-minute charmer, from the filmmaker Sara Dosa, is a gentle, deeply tasteful portrait of a French couple, Katia and Maurice Krafft, who were celebrity volcanologists in the 1970s and ’80s. Did you know volcanologists could be celebrities? Only in France.”
HAPPY CUSTOMERS, HAPPY US
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