WWD Digital Daily

Soho Bound

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Dior Men is bowing in SoHo.

The luxury brand has opened a men’s boutique in a historic castiron building at 107 Greene Street in New York. It is adjacent to the women’s store and is the third men’s-only unit in Manhattan, joining others at Hudson Yards and 57th Street.

The boutique features a clean, contempora­ry aesthetic with light oak wood floors and off-white textured walls decorated with suede panels in Dior’s signature gray and a toile de Jouy pattern. Upon entering the store, an assortment of Dior Men’s leather goods and accessorie­s are displayed in glass cases and on brushed metal blade shelves next to white onyx wall panels.

The ready-to-wear collection is suspended from the ceiling on champagne finished rails.

To introduce the store, Dior commission­ed Yoon Hyup, a New York-based artist known for his line-and-dot work, to design an abstract painting, “Sound of Friday 6,” which will serve as the focal point of the interior. The painting will hang above a staircase that descends into a VIP suite.

Overall, Dior operates men’s boutiques in Beverly Hills and Costa Mesa, Calif.; Las Vegas; Miami; two in Honolulu, one in Mexico and five in Canada.

Dior Men has amassed a large following of late, thanks in part to the designer Kim Jones, who joined the brand in 2018. Jones, who was also creative director at Louis Vuitton and worked at Alexander McQueen, Mulberry, Dunhill, Hugo Boss and Umbro, has a goal to make Dior into the number-one men’s brand in the world. — JEAN E. PALMIERI end, the Italian company has joined the Lion’s Share Fund — the first fashion and luxury brand to adhere.

Led by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme and a coalition of businesses, the fund aims to raise more than $100 million a year within the next five years for animal conservati­on, biodiversi­ty and climate by asking brands to contribute 0.5 percent of their media spend every time an animal is featured in their advertisem­ents.

“The Lion’s Share Fund is an important addition to our conservati­on strategy,” said president and chief executive officer Marco Bizzarri. “Nature and wildlife provide Gucci with inspired creation that is an integral part of our narrative through our collection­s and campaigns. With the increasing threats to the planet’s biodiversi­ty, groundbrea­king initiative­s like the Lion’s Share Fund have the potential to be transforma­tive by organicall­y connecting the business community with direct action to protect our natural habitats and most threatened species.”

Launched in September 2018, the fund has already provided a grant to improve critical radio systems for law enforcemen­t officers protecting wildlife in Mozambique’s Niassa National Reserve. It has also helped reduce the elephant poaching rate in the reserve to zero, and provided a grant to help secure land for endangered orangutans, elephants and tigers in North Sumatra in Indonesia.

“This partnershi­p with Gucci marks the continuing evolution of this innovative fund, which provides a unique opportunit­y for brands across all industries to join forces and help preserve and protect biodiversi­ty across the globe,” said Achim Steiner, UNDP administra­tor. “Wildlife population­s are half the size they were just 50 years ago, and their habitats and ecosystems destroyed at an unpreceden­ted rate due to human activity. The Lion’s Share is an idea that is as innovative as it is simple — and it makes a real impact on wildlife conservati­on.”

Animals appear in about 20 percent of all advertisem­ents in the world, according to Gucci, “yet despite this, animals do not always receive the support they deserve. The Lion’s Share gives brands the opportunit­y to take urgent and significan­t action and play their part in protecting our planet.”

In September, Gucci and parent group Kering revealed they were committing to becoming carbon neutral across the board and throughout their entire supply chain.

Gucci is also taking action and is supporting REDD+ projects and investing $8.4 million in the Peruvian Amazon, in Kenya, in Indonesia and in Cambodia, as reported. (REDD+ stands for Reducing Emissions From Deforestat­ion and Forest Degradatio­n.) — LUISA ZARGANI

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The Tiffany &Co. x Flowerbx collaborat­ion.

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