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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Tim Blanks and Imran Amed Reflect on Autumn/Winter 2025

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 14 March 2025

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This season, all eyes were on the debuts of Haider Ackermann at Tom Ford and Sarah Burton at Givenchy. Meanwhile, designs at Alaïa and Valentino continued to push boundaries with daring silhouettes that either stood away from the body or felt purposely incomplete. 


Behind the new faces and unconventional shapes was a deeper exploration of eroticism. From Ackermann’s sensual glamour at Tom Ford to what Tim Blanks calls the “quiet eroticism” of Burton’s Givenchy, designers seemed united by a playful fascination with the body — and a desire to subtly challenge its boundaries.


“Fashion is a very fetishistic art form,” says Tim Blanks, BoF’s editor-at-large. “It has its fixations on the body and the way it fetishizes objects, but fashion is about fetishizing beauty and ugliness. A lot of these different things have been coming up over the last few years.”


Following the conclusion of the Autumn/Winter 2025 shows, Blanks sits down with BoF founder and editor-in-chief Imran Amed to discuss the highlights of fashion month.


Key Insights: 


  • Across the season, there was plenty of body on display. At Alaïa, Pieter Mulier presented striking new silhouettes that played with unusual proportions, creating shapes that stood away from the body. These exaggerated forms, described vividly by Amed as "body condoms," challenged the relationship between clothes and the body. At Duran Lantink, prosthetic pieces humorously toyed with ideas of eroticism. “What are they trying to say with these clothes?” asks Blanks. “There is a new body consciousness and people want to show off their svelte new forms.”


  • Ackermann’s debut successfully merged Tom Ford’s famed sexual glamour with a reflective, intimate approach. “Tom is a sexualist and Haider is a sensualist, but there was a compatibility there in the erotic rigour in both of their work,” says Blanks. “I thought Haider did a wonderful job of doing a Haider Ackermann for Tom Ford collection; honouring the essence of one, but really bringing the dynamism of the new.”


  • Also facing a house with a storied heritage, Burton’s debut collection for Givenchy returned to its earliest codes and patterns. “We haven't seen something that's projecting Givenchy into the future but also really grounded in the past. And I think that's what clicked, because the other attempts were either too much in the future and disconnected from the past, or too much in the past and not taking it anywhere new,” says Amed. “She proved what a great designer she is,” adds Blanks.


  • Watching from home, Blanks was struck by the step-and-repeat that preceded the Off-White show, where attendees arrived in bold, expressive looks from the brand’s current collection. This real-life display of style, Blanks notes, “softened him up” for the actual runway. “You see the clothes on real people, so it's not like, ‘Who would wear this?’” he says. Amed highlights this as an added opportunity to capture customers watching online: “There's a step-and-repeat for what's available to buy now, and then there's the show for what's available for the future.”


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. Welcome to the

0:08.5

BOF podcast. It's Friday, March 14th. It's that special time again when Tim Blanks and I

0:15.2

review the season that was, in this case, the autumn winter 2025 shows. but this season given an unfortunate injury tim joined fashion

0:24.9

month from his laptop instead of the front row providing us with two different perspectives from which

0:30.5

to understand what designers and brands were trying to say this season all eyes were on the

0:36.1

debuts of hider ackerman at Tom Ford and Sarah Burton

0:39.8

at Juvenchy. Meanwhile, other designers continued to push boundaries with daring silhouettes that

0:45.6

either stood away from the body or felt purposely incomplete. Behind the new faces and unconventional

0:52.2

shapes was a deeper exploration of eroticism.

0:56.1

Designers seemed united by a playful fascination with the body

0:59.8

and a desire to subtly challenge its boundaries.

1:04.0

Fashion is a very fetishistic art form.

1:08.1

Obviously, it's fixations, you know, the body and the way it fetishizes objects and so on.

1:14.0

It's a very, it is about fetishizing things, fetishizing beauty and and ugliness and a lot of

1:21.2

different things coming up over the last few years. Without further ado, here's Tim Blanks on the

1:26.8

B-O-F podcast.

1:29.7

So Tim Blanks, this was the first fashion week that we've done without you since you first

1:38.7

joined the B-O-F team. Was that 2015?

1:43.0

Yep.

1:43.8

My first fashion week without you in 10 years, and we missed you

1:47.9

so much. Oh, thank you. That's so sweet. And everyone was asking about you, like, where's Tim,

1:54.4

how's Tim? What's going on with Tim? So for everyone's sake, can you just let us know why

...

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