Liam Gallagher and His Three Children Do Glastonbury Style For Burberry

Plus more of the standout ads of the season.

Jun 5, 2025 - 18:12
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Liam Gallagher and His Three Children Do Glastonbury Style For Burberry
Photograph by Drew Vickers; Courtesy of Burberry

We haven’t even decided what kind of summer this year will bring (Brat round 2? Lorde summer? Addison? Haim?), but the fashion industry is already leaving the warm months behind and looking toward fall. That’s right, the fall campaigns are rolling out just as the winter chill is lifting. And while it might feel too soon, the array of beautiful images, famous faces, and, of course, covetable clothing, jewelry, and accessories on display will have you forgiving these brands for rushing summer along. Check back here often as we track the latest surprise stars and eye-catching images of the season.

Burberry

Photograph by Drew Vickers; Courtesy of Burberry

It’s festival season in England, and Burberry is celebrating with a campaign, or rather, a “collage” as chief creative officer Daniel Lee puts it. “Candid moments capturing off-duty fans and headline acts in between gigs,” he describes Drew Vickers’s images.

Burberry

Photograph by Drew Vickers; Courtesy of Burberry

Faces from the worlds of music and modeling star in the collage/campaign, which is set against a backdrop of sound systems, stages, and, of course, a whole lot of mud. British producer and DJ Goldie makes an appearance, as do Glastonbury regulars Alexa Chung and Cara Delevingne, armed and ready with their Burberry-check rain boots.

Burberry

Photograph by Drew Vickers; Courtesy of Burberry

Liam Gallagher also stars in the images, alongside his three children, Lennon, Molly, and Gene. The Oasis singer models his own Burberry parka created by former creative director Christopher Bailey for the brand’s spring/summer 2018 collection. The design will be reissued for a limited run in stores and online in July.

Gucci

Photograph by Daniel Arnold; Courtesy of Gucci

Emily Ratajkowski goes about her day in Cannes, France—supported in all her tasks by the Gucci GG monogram. The design manifests itself in many ways throughout the campaign, shot by Daniel Arnold. It’s plastering a set of luggage beside her on a yacht, or adorning her mini Ophidia Boston bag as she pulls out a disposable camera.

Gucci

Photograph by Daniel Arnold; Courtesy of Gucci

There’s also the Gucci Giglio, a design that made its debut during the brand’s cruise 2026 show in Florence back in May. The piece, which draws on archival codes and heritage techniques, is utilized by Ratajkowski for an afternoon at the beach, no doubt stuffed with her day’s selection of books.

Bottega Veneta

Photograph by Jack Davison; Courtesy of Bottega Veneta

Bottega Veneta is celebrating 50 years of the house’s iconic leather weave, Intrecciato, with a campaign that pays homage to the technique’s handcraft. Titled “Craft is our Language,” the images star some of the most prominent creatives today, including Jack Antonoff, Lauren Hutton, Vicky Krieps, Julianne Moore, and Zadie Smith. The famous faces are paired with shots of hands—fingers bending into hearts, clutching a glove, grasping another—saying so much with simple gestures.

Bottega Veneta

Photograph by Jack Davison; Courtesy of Bottega Veneta

It’s a celebration of hand gestures as a universal language, one that can connect people across generations, cultures, backgrounds, and contexts. The same can be said for Intrecciato. First introduced in 1975, the woven leather has experienced a fruitful fifty years representing Bottega. In 1980, Hutton even carried an Intrecciato clutch in American Gigolo, marking a turning point for the technique, and making her appearance in the campaign all the more notable.

Bottega Veneta

Photograph by Jack Davison; Courtesy of Bottega Veneta

The history lesson continues with the campaign’s inclusion of Edward Buchanan, who acted as Bottega’s design director from 1995 to 2000, and introduced the brand’s ready-to-wear in that time. Hutton and Buchanan’s appearances in the campaign prove that as the brand’s newly appointed creative director, Louise Trotter, embarks on her journey at Bottega, she will be looking towards its past as she pushes into the future.

Self-Portrait

Photograph by Drew Vickers; Courtesy of Self-Portrait

Self-Portrait’s pre-fall 2025 campaign may be inspired by the ’60s, but it is distinctly modern. Starring K-pop star Jisoo and shot by photographer Drew Vickers, the images feature AI-generated backdrops that feel both nostalgic and futuristic. The result finds Jisoo in a kind of dreamscape, a doll dressed up in her bows and lace, floating between the hyperreal and synthetic.

Self-Portrait

Photograph by Drew Vickers; Courtesy of Self-Portrait

“We’ve always used our campaigns to tell stories, but working with Drew and this kind of technology let us blur the line between what’s real and what’s imagined,” says Self-Portrait founder and creative director Han Chong. “The AI wasn’t there to replace anything, but to build new worlds for Jisoo to inhabit. It felt like the perfect way to reflect the mood of the collection: familiar but surreal, nostalgic but completely new.”

Marc Jacobs

Courtesy of Marc Jacobs

Fans of Doja Cat and Marc Jacobs are in for a treat with the brand’s new pre-fall campaign, which seamlessly blends the adjacent worlds of music and fashion. Not only do the images star the singer, but the accompanying video features a sneak peek of Doja’s newest song “Jealous Type” from her upcoming album, Vie.

Marc Jacobs

Courtesy of Marc Jacobs

The campaign, titled Staycation, stars Doja in and around New York City, showing off myriad Marc Jacobs bags including the Snapshot, Chain Sack, and the newest version of the brand’s Dual Bag.

Marc Jacobs

Courtesy of Marc Jacobs

While many might not think “vacation” when they imagine the hot, concrete streets of NYC, Doja argues location is irrelevant when it comes to getting away.

“Being on vacation isn’t about where you go,” she says. “It’s about how you show up—whether you’re just enjoying the city or soaking up the sun at the beach. This Marc Jacobs campaign is about living life and serving looks. It couldn’t be a more perfect stage to preview my new music, where retro glam meets a little soul.”

Louis Vuitton

Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

Louis Vuitton’s pre-fall menswear campaign takes you on a voyage—one where the journey is just as important as the destination. Creative director Pharrell Williams references the golden age of transatlantic travel, when men dressed up for a cross-continental cruise. But there is still an undoubted modern edge with some distressed textiles and sea-inspired prints.

Louis Vuitton

Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

The collection is split into two chapters: transit and arrival. The transit wardrobe focuses on classic tailoring and legacy sportswear, with colors representing the sunset and sea. It’s relaxed yet refined, featuring naval iconography and materiality that mimics a yacht’s plush yet polished interior.

Louis Vuitton

Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

The arrival wardrobe, meanwhile, looks towards the beach and pool—activities to be enjoyed upon docking. Miami is a key inspiration here, with day and loungewear rendered in pastels and lightweight fabrics. It’s all about the stylish ease of the off-duty look.

Valentino

Courtesy of Valentino

Valentino’s pre-fall 2025 campaign came with a letter from Alessandro Michele titled “The Poetics of Everyday.” In it, the creative director criticizes this “era of violent uproar, of shouting images, of words chasing after other words without ever taking root,” in which we currently find ourselves. The accompanying campaign attempts to provide a more lasting gaze, one “capable of lingering upon the infinitely small, on seemingly insignificant gestures, on those everyday routines that connect us with the pattern of life.”

Valentino

Courtesy of Valentino

In a series of images shot by Glen Luchford, Amelia Gray, Kai Schreiber (who made her runway debut at the Valentino show in Paris in March), Sophie Thatcher, and more are the enigmatic stars. The campaign provides a snapshot into their lives as they frequent a city block. Gray plays with a yo-yo while Schreiber attempts to solve a Rubik’s Cube. Everyone is caught in action by the lens. It’s a “static point of view that may scan the poetical density of what nestles in the ordinary,” according to Michele.