WWD Digital Daily

Moynat’s New Designer Comes From Louis Vuitton

- BY MILES SOCHA

PARIS — Signaling a new developmen­t phase for Moynat, the French leather goods specialist has tapped a veteran design talent from Louis Vuitton, WWD has learned.

Nicholas Knightly, Vuitton’s design director for leather goods since 2004, joins Moynat effective July 1.

According to an internal announceme­nt seen by WWD, Knightly will be responsibl­e “for the complete creative offer for leather goods. With his design team, he will contribute to the continuing renewal of Moynat while at the same time working closely with the developmen­t teams.”

He succeeds Ramesh Nair at the design helm. Nair was recruited from Hermès when luxury titan Bernard Arnault revived the almost forgotten brand in 2011 via his Groupe Arnault holding and set up shop on the Rue Saint-Honoré steps away from Goyard, another 19th-century trunk-maker restored to glory.

The announceme­nt notes that Nair

“is leaving to pursue personal projects. We thank him for his contributi­on to the developmen­t of Moynat.”

Moynat also recently named a new chief executive officer prized for her merchandis­ing muscle and track record in digital excellence. Lisa Attia, previously senior vice president, merchandis­ing and image for the Europe and Middle East regions at Sephora, took up the role on March 1 and reports to Sidney Toledano, chairman and ceo of LVMH Fashion Group and chairman of Moynat.

Attia was instrument­al in raising the desirabili­ty of Sephora via product offerings, improved digital communicat­ions and in- store experience­s, LVMH said at the time of her appointmen­t.

LVMH has a reputation for grooming management talent and promoting from within. But this is one of the rare instances when a brand within Arnault’s vast luxury universe recruited a top creative figure from within.

While best known for his long and fruitful career at Vuitton, Knightly’s résumé also includes a stint as the creative director of Mulberry from 2002 to 2004, when he designed its popular Bayswater bag. He has also been head of design at Margaret Howell, creative director at Renown Look, and a consultant designer at Whistles. He lectured in fashion design at the University of Westminste­r in the mid-Nineties.

A graduate of Ravensbour­ne College of Art and Design, Knightly launched into fashion in 1991 with an eponymous company he operated for five years. Something of a boy wonder on the London fashion scene at the time, he was an early proponent of athleticwe­ar as fashion, and also known for his slinky jersey dresses.

In 2015, drawing on his extensive experience designing leather goods for heritage brands, Knightly also launched his own handbag label, Mallet & Co., while continuing to design for Vuitton on a freelance basis from his home in the U.K.

Knightly joins an elite handbag brand that has quietly establishe­d a global retail footprint spanning about 27 boutiques and shops-in-shop. Moynat prides itself on an artisanal approach based on rare raw materials and haute savoir-faire, and less of the fireworks and razzmatazz of other brands in Arnault’s family-controlled empire — which includes Dior, Givenchy and Fendi. (Moynat is not a subsidiary of LVMH but is controlled by the familyowne­d Groupe Arnault.)

Besides planting flagships in metropolit­an cities like New York, London and Tokyo, Moynat has relied on pop-up operations at marquee department stores — Isetan in Tokyo, Dover Street Market in New York and Boon the Shop in Seoul — to build awareness and tout its haute Madein-France craftsmans­hip. This method echoes the “caravan” approach Moynat employed more than a century ago, when it showcased its innovation­s at world fairs and auto shows.

Founded in 1849, Moynat is five years older than Vuitton and was best known for its lightweigh­t, waterproof trunks for automobile­s.

Ladylike top-handle handbags have been at the core of the business. Its best-selling Réjane bag boasts curved sides, while the top of the Limousine bag echoes the shape of trunks propped on the roof of a car. Leather Réjane bags retail for about 4,000 to 5,000 euros, while logo canvas totes, a newer product range, start at 1,100 euros.

Sources describe the brand as wellpositi­oned to make further inroads in China, a linchpin luxury market.

Over almost a decade at the brand,

Nair plied a discreet, refined architectu­ral style with occasional touches of whimsy and humor. Moynat made a rare splash in 2014 when it invited Pharrell Williams to create a capsule range of handbags shaped like vintage steam locomotive­s — caboose included.

Moynat was one of the rare malletiers to be cofounded by a woman, Pauline Moynat, a merchant who teamed with the Coulembier family of artisans, and who was one of the first to set up a boutique at the foot of the Avenue de l’Opéra — the Champs-Élysées of its time — in 1869.

Nicholas Knightly has been Vuitton’s creative director of leather goods since 2004.

 ??  ?? The Moynat store in Paris.
The Moynat store in Paris.
 ??  ?? Moynat’s Gabrielle bag.
Moynat’s Gabrielle bag.

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