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Nick Remsen

vogue.comUSA
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Runway ShowsLuxury BrandsLifestyle DesignSports Culture
About

Nick Remsen covers fashion for Vogue through the lens of how collections, brands, and personalities connect to wider culture, lifestyle, and sport.

Runway collections and emerging labels

At Vogue he focuses on runway coverage and collection reporting, including menswear shows such as KidSuper’s Spring 2027 collection. His runway pieces give readers more than a look-by-look recap, drawing out the story a designer is telling, the references they use, and how a collection fits into a label’s broader trajectory. He has written for Vogue Runway on houses like Moschino and on accessories labels, applying the same mix of surface detail and strategic context. Across these show reports, his tone is direct and descriptive, but he consistently situates silhouettes, fabrics, and styling within industry trends rather than treating them as isolated looks.

Luxury brands, heritage and leadership

A recurring strand in his work is close attention to the business and storytelling of luxury brands. In his Vogue Runway feature “Overhauling Heritage (With an Edge of Clever Hype): A Conversation With Rimowa CEO Alexandre Arnault,” he frames the luggage maker’s reinvention around questions of heritage, hype, and executive decision-making. The piece looks at how a legacy brand balances archival identity with collaboration culture and marketing theatrics, and he anchors that discussion in a detailed interview rather than pure commentary. This approach—connecting design choices to leadership, positioning, and brand history—distinguishes his coverage from straightforward product writing and shows up in other work where he writes about fashion-adjacent objects like handcrafted furniture and design pieces. He treats these stories as part of the same ecosystem, examining how taste, craftsmanship, and narrative shape the way style-conscious audiences encounter a brand.

Fashion across lifestyle, travel and sport

Remsen’s fashion writing is informed by a broader portfolio that spans lifestyle, travel, culture, and sport. He is a fashion and lifestyle journalist, copywriter, and written communications consultant, and he brings that multi-disciplinary perspective into his fashion reporting. His experience includes more than 15 years covering the intersections of culture, lifestyle, entertainment, and sports, which gives him a natural way of connecting clothes to the contexts in which people actually wear them. He has written travel features that sit alongside his fashion work, contributing to Condé Nast Traveler, and those pieces reinforce his interest in place, atmosphere, and how people move through cities, hotels, and cultural institutions. He has also published style and design pieces for titles focused on interiors and lifestyle, where he writes about topics such as niche handcrafted furniture and decorative objects with the same care for materials and mood that appears in his runway coverage.

Career arc and editorial style

Remsen is a former staff writer at Vogue Magazine, and before that he contributed to international editions of T: The New York Times Style. His work has appeared across multiple editions of Vogue and in other major publications, reflecting a career built on fashion reporting that travels across markets and formats. In prose, he favors clean, unfussy sentences that move quickly between description and context, a style that fits show reviews and executive profiles as well as travel and lifestyle assignments. He often works in a conversational mode when interviewing designers or CEOs, but his finished pieces keep the focus on what those voices reveal about direction, strategy, and taste rather than personality alone. Across outlets, the through-line is a habit of treating fashion as part of a larger cultural and commercial landscape—whether he is writing about a menswear runway collection, a heritage luggage brand, or a carefully crafted piece of furniture.

Also covering this beat

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Aaron Royce

thezoereport.com

Aaron Royce turns runway moments and celebrity event dressing into clear, wearable stories that show readers how trends move from the red carpet to real life. He is a fashion news writer at The Zoe Report, where he covers fashion, trends, celebrity style, and related news across the site. He also works in a fashion news editing role at The Daily Front Row, extending his reporting into the industry’s front row and party circuit. As a contributing and freelance journalist, he writes for fashion and lifestyle magazines including People, InStyle, Marie Claire, and other outlets, with a focus on shopping, beauty, and culture. His reporting centers on fashion’s visual language, celebrity influence, and shoppable outcomes across fashion, beauty, fragrance, jewelry, skincare, menswear, wellness, accessories, shoes, pop culture, and celebrity news.

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Abigail Connolly

yahoo.com

Abigail Connolly stands out for covering celebrity culture and fashion as a visual story about outfits, images, and online reaction. She writes for Yahoo and SheFinds, where she covers celebrity news, fashion, and related lifestyle topics. Her beat focuses on stars, royals, and political figures, with stories on red carpet looks, runway trends, state-visit wardrobes, and social media posts that shape public image. She has written about Oprah Winfrey’s all-white Cannes look, Paris Fashion Week fur, Anya Taylor-Joy’s Dior dress, Melania Trump’s style, and royal figures such as Queen Camilla and Prince William. Her reporting is short, tightly focused, and descriptive, using fan comments, captions, and sourced claims to show how a single look or post drives conversation online.

USA·Fashion
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Aemilia Madden

vogue.com

Aemilia Madden writes about how people actually live in their clothes, blending disciplined wardrobe editing with specific shopping recommendations and a clear point of view on taste and restraint. A fashion and lifestyle journalist, former senior fashion writer at Vogue, and now a freelance writer, editor, and consultant, she focuses on service-driven fashion and lifestyle stories grounded in personal testing, long-term wear, and real scenarios. Her work connects shopping lists, trend coverage, and essays into a focus on more intentional choices about what to buy and how to wear it. She reports through first-person experiments, practical shopping guides, sale roundups, and trend explainers, and her portfolio spans Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Elle, T Magazine, The Cut, The Wall Street Journal, and her newsletter Taeste Bud, where she extends her interest in archival references, obsessions, and inside-the-closet cleanses.

USA·Fashion
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Air Mail

airmail.news

Batsheva Hay writes fashion and culture pieces for Air Mail with the sensibility of a working designer rather than a conventional style reporter. She is the founder of the cult label Batsheva, known for prairie dresses and vintage-inflected, modest silhouettes that rethink traditions of feminine dress. At Air Mail she sits inside style and lifestyle coverage, writing about fashion and shopping from the point of view of someone who designs the kinds of clothes she describes. Her background as a former lawyer shapes a structured, argumentative way of taking apart dress codes and conventions. She focuses on vintage clothing, modesty, subversion, and how old styles gain new meaning. In guides such as her Upper West Side piece, she treats locations as mood boards and supporting characters, using sensory detail and lived-in references to map the cultural influences behind her clothes and the world her label inhabits.

USA·Fashion
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