WWD Digital Daily

Celebritie­s Fete New Tiffany Flagship in Tokyo

Anya Taylor-Joy and Florence Pugh were in attendance for the opening of the brand's Omotesando store.

- BY KELLY WETHERILLE

TOKYO — Tiffany unveiled its newest flagship with a star-studded event in the Japanese capital Tuesday. Actress Anya Taylor-Joy joined the brand's president and chief executive officer Anthony

Ledru to cut the ribbon of the store along the tree-lined Omotesando boulevard, while Florence Pugh and other local and internatio­nal celebritie­s joined for the opening party.

Taylor-Joy was almost giddy with delight at being in Tokyo, saying she had wanted to visit Japan since she was a little girl, and that she was excited to finally have her dream come true.

“It's just the atmosphere — it feels really creative but peaceful at the same time. And there's just a flow — it feels very welcoming. I didn't land and think I was somewhere very far away, I felt very, very comfortabl­e,” she said, adding that she hopes to live in Tokyo some time in the future.

“I think my first introducti­on to Japan was the arts. I grew up watching Studio Ghibli, and I just fell in love with it in that way. And then as the years have gone on I just have really been interested in Japanese cinema. Also, the fashion is amazing. I was vintage shopping today and it's just great,” Taylor-Joy said.

It was Pugh's first visit to Japan as well, and she made the trip together with her brother, actor and musician Toby

Sebastian. The pair had been taking in as much of Tokyo as possible, walking around neighborho­ods such as Harajuku and Nakano and eating foods like ramen and gyoza dumplings.

“It's a pretty magnificen­t place to be, full stop, and then to come with a brand like Tiffany is a wonderful cherry on top. It's been nice to know that we've had three wonderful days wandering around and then we're going to bookend it with an elegant evening here. It's truly a great gift, a great treat,” Pugh said, adding that next time she comes to Japan, she hopes to stay for at least three weeks so that she can visit places such as Kyoto as well.

Taylor-Joy said she was honored that her first visit to Tokyo was with Tiffany.

“I've never cut the ribbon to anything before, so that felt very exciting. And I just really, really love working with this team of people. I know that it's overplayed, but it does feel like a family. And it's a family that has very beautiful, shiny things that they place around my neck. You know what? It's a nice family visit. I think sometimes family visits can be a bit intense, but my family decks me out in diamonds,” she said.

Other internatio­nal celebritie­s in attendance at the event included Hailey Bieber and two members of the K-pop group Enhypen, Jake and Sunghoon.

The Omotesando store is the brand's first Asian flagship to be completely inspired by Tiffany's Landmark store in New York City, and it reflects its latest design concept. More than 8,200 square feet of retail space are spread across two floors, with vaulted ceilings inspired by the famed Tiffany stained glass lamps.

“We know that it's a bit of a different clientele from the other freestandi­ng stores that we have. We have two freestandi­ng stores in Ginza. So it's a bit more of a younger generation, lots of tourists, you have these small streets around where you can have access to the well-known, top luxury brands in the world and at the same time more confidenti­al,” the executive said. “So you can see it's a really unique place, and we were looking for the right building, and all of that was concluded last year, I think in April. So it's been a long process to find the building, and a relatively quick process to open up the store.”

Ledru said he expects there to be a fairly “large plan” of renovation­s, relocation­s and new store openings for the brand over the next three years or so.

“I think that's what the integratio­n to LVMH will bring to the table. We have

a way to invest that I think perhaps the brand didn't have in the past. We were a bit more restricted, but today there is this possibilit­y,” he said.

Tiffany has a history of more than half a century in Japan, having first opened in Mitsukoshi department store in November 1972. Ledru said that while sales fluctuate from year to year, the country is still among the brand's top three markets worldwide. In addition to contributi­ng to the company's sales volume, Japan has been a source of inspiratio­n for the brand, particular­ly for Elsa Peretti.

“I would say the relationsh­ip with

Japan is a love relationsh­ip. It's a lot more than just a large market for us,” Ledru said. “There is a demand for exceptiona­l creations. I think what we're seeing is that the market is moving upward, and if you look at the flagship that we're opening today, I think the message is pretty clear.”

 ?? ?? Ayaka Miyoshi, Anthony Ledru, CEO of Tiffany & Co., Anya Taylor-Joy and Shintaro Kitsuda, president of Tiffany & Co. Japan Inc., cut the ribbon to celebrate the opening of Tiffany & Co.'s new store in Omotesando on Sept. 12 in Tokyo.
Ayaka Miyoshi, Anthony Ledru, CEO of Tiffany & Co., Anya Taylor-Joy and Shintaro Kitsuda, president of Tiffany & Co. Japan Inc., cut the ribbon to celebrate the opening of Tiffany & Co.'s new store in Omotesando on Sept. 12 in Tokyo.
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Tiffany & Co.

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